My Library Boss and I accidentally miss-counted hour many hours I'm working in the library, and this week we found out I have 52 hours to make-up if I want that money to go to my college loans!!! Needless to say, I am now living in the library nearly 24/7 for the next week... which means much more reading and probably blog posts, haha :)
Speaking of reading, I just finished some books on William Cameron Townsend. This man was amazing! At age 14 he and his family visited relatives in Fresno and Cam nearly drowned in a riverbed. From then on, he dedicated his life to the Lord and was willing to follow Him... though he wasn't quite ready to become a missionary.
While he was in college at Occidental, he met a vibrant young man named Elbert Robinson- aka Robby (don't really blame him with a name like 'Elbert'). Robby was the campus' YWAM (Youth With A Mission) leader and was involved with SVM (Student Volunteer Movement). Robby often spoke to Cam about missions work, and Cam politely listened, but wasn't interested in it until the Leader of SVM came and spoke at the campus. From then on, he was dedicated to the Lord's work through missions.
I'm not going to tell you all about his life, just the stuff before he became a missionary. This is what caught my eye: when he told his mother that he was going into missions in Guatemala, she said "Cam, aren't there enough challenges and things here for you to do?". I personally have had that asked of me from family members, and it makes following what the Lord has for you a little harder. Doubts spring up in your head of "Well, what if He does want me to stay here?" or "How do I let my family know that this does not reflect how much I love them?".
Cam went through the same thing I sometimes think! When he told his father, it was a little more stressful. His father was deaf from a construction work accident years before, so Cam had to write out everything for him. Mr. Townsend kept pressing his son for detailed information, which Cam didn't have. He just knew he was supposed to go. After many notes written to his father and then crumpled up, his father finally understood when Cam wrote "The greatest need is where the greatest darkness is".
He lived by this. His life, dedicated to reaching people who didn't have the Bible in their language, serving them physically and spiritually, loving them in everyway he could. It was a hard life- but a well spent one in the Lord's work.
Here is a quick synopsis of each book that I read on him
- Cameron Townsend (Janet and Geoff Bange)- This couple does an amazing job on each missionary they write about. Their writings are geared toward teenagers, but are enjoyable for any age to read. Full of facts from Cam Townsend's life and history of the times he lived in, this book is a captivating and easy read.
- Wycliffe in the Making 1920-1933 (Hugh Steven)- This book has amazing indights to the thoughts of Cam Townsend. Hugh Steven has taken Cam's journals and memoirs and written almost straight from them- about 90% of the book contains excerpts of Cam's journals.
- Doorway to the World: The Mexico Years 1934-1947 (Hugh Steven)- Same review as the previous. I want to look into these books and see if there are any more of them. Cam Townsend died in 1982, so there might be more books like these out there.
William Cameron Towsend and friends from the Cakchiquel Tribe Guatemala
... I think my posts are too long...