Background to the English Version #1.2


[image error]


Abide in Christ by Andrew Murray
Background to the English version #1.2

 


Andrew Murray loses his voice

[image error]In 1879, Andrew Murray started to lose his voice. While throat problems are a recurring hazard for preachers, even today, they at least have recourse to microphones. Andrew Murray, by contrast, was forced to project his voice without one.


Although he had complained of hoarseness on many occasions while on evangelistic tours, his voice had always returned. But towards the end of 1879 and well into 1880 he lost his voice completely. The ailment at the time was described as a “dropped throat.” The only solution, according to his South African doctor, was to spend extended periods in silence.


A modern-day “Desert Father” in the Karoo

As Andrew Murray knew that he wouldn’t be able to refrain from speaking while remaining at home, he retreated into the semi-desert of the Cape Karoo. Over a period of two years, he virtually became a “Desert Father.” When his imposed silence did not work, his doctor advised him to seek treatment in London. But what to do aboard ship, especially as his voice problem would prohibit him from being sociable with fellow passengers?


Translating Abide in Christ aboard ship

To understand his decision, we need to return to his time in the Karoo.


Besides prayer and communing with God, he’d been writing a new work titled: Gelijk Jezus (Like Jesus), which was later published as Like Christ in 1884. (I’ll be discussing this work in our next series.)


Andrew had now a decision to make: Should he complete Gelijk Jezus, or should he translate into English Blijf in Jezus (Abide in Christ), which had been published in 1864? He chose to do the latter.


Seeking healing

By the time he arrived in England in mid-1882, the translation was complete. It appears that he posted it to the publishers straight away because it was ready for publication a few months later.


In the meantime, he put aside visiting a medical specialist in favor of spending time at the Bethsham Home of Faith Healing, where his throat was miraculously healed after a few weeks.


Marketing the English version

What is particularly interesting about the original publication of the English version of Abide in Christ was the modern way it was launched and marketed. The chapter "Day by Day" was published as a teaser in the periodical Life of Faith volume 4, 1882.


Before that date, Andrew Murray was an unknown pastor to the English-speaking Protestant world. After that date, he would become a household name amongst evangelical Christians. This would set him on a path to publishing his yet-to-be-written voluminous output in both Dutch and English.


References

Douglas, W.M. Andrew Murray and his Message. Fort Washington: Christian Literature Crusade, 1957.


Du Plessis, J. The Life of Andrew Murray of South Africa. London: Marshall Brothers, 1919.


 


© Olea Nel.
First published in www.onAndrewMurray.com


Tags: Andrew Murray Desert Father, Andrew Murray and Faith Healing, Andrew Murray Bethsham Home of Faith Healing; Like Christ by Andrew Murray

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on February 03, 2014 21:12
No comments have been added yet.