Thursday, May 12, 2016

ROOTS: The Unofficial Beginning of The International Mission Movement of American Baptists ...

When discussing the genesis of the cross-cultural missionary movement of Baptists one might overlook the life and work of George Lisle. However, after much research, it is the humble conviction of this author that it would be a great mistake to do such a thing. George Lisle is, perhaps, as research would conclude, the first American Baptist to take the gospel to another culture beyond the borders of the United States of America. Even before William Carey, the great European missionary, Adoniram Judson, Luther Rice, and the likes. Lisle, “without the benefit of a formal theological education and having to overcome the injustice of slavery, blazed a path that would shape American foreign and cross-cultural missions, church planting, and the contextualizing of the gospel for decades to come.”1  
                  George Lisle was born into slavery in Virginia around 1750 to a slave couple, Liele and Nancy. George only knew second hand stories about his father. Many of these stories were filled with testimonies that George’s father was deeply committed in his faith. George once said that it was believed both among the blacks and the whites of his time that his father was “the only black person who knew the Lord in a spiritual way in that country.”2  
Like most children born into slavery, George was separated from his parents at an early age. He grew up under the influence of his master Henry Sharpe who was an ordained Baptist Deacon. Henry was known to be a God-fearing man and had a reputation of being kind to all even his slaves. Sharpe would often take George to church with him and it was through the ministry of this church that George would see his need for Christ. George once said, after hearing a sermon on heaven and hell that, I saw my condemnation in my own heart, and I found no way wherein I could escape the damnation of hell, only through the merits of my dying Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ; which caused me to make intercession with Christ, for the salvation of my poor immortal soul; and I full well recollect, I requested of my Lord and Master to give me a work, I did not care how mean it was, only to try and see how good I would do it.”3
George immediately started preaching to his fellow slaves with the blessing of his master, Mr. Sharpe. Sharpe’s pastor also noticed the anointing of God on George’s life and urged the church to officially license George to preach. “Some historians believe George Liele was the first ordained African-American Baptist pastor in America.”4 “His preaching was received by black and white alike...George Liele was a gifted evangelistic preacher who knew how to present the gospel in the language of his people.”5 Sharpe granted George his freedom so he could answer God’s obvious call on his life to preach and preaching he did all over South Carolina and Georgia for the next four years until his master Henry Sharpe died in the Revolutionary War. Although the research is a little cloudy about the exact dates of the starting of the first black Baptist Church, it appears that all historians agree George Lisle was one of the founders along with a white supporter and two men who came to Christ and grew up under George’s ministry. The following excerpt appears to be in harmony with much of the research discovered in this project.

Originally named First Colored Baptist Church and located in Savannah,
Georgia, First African Baptist Church traces its roots to December 1777
and is officially designated the oldest African American church in the
United States. The roots of the black Baptist tradition can be traced to three
men: George Leile, David George, and Andrew Bryan. It is believed that
the first black Baptist congregation was formed in 1773 in Silver Bluff,
South Carolina on the Galphin Plantation, 14 miles northwest of Savannah, Georgia, through the efforts of Rev. Wait Palmer (white founder of the First Baptist Church of Stonington, Connecticut) and George Leile. Galphin
allowed his enslaved population to worship under the leadership of his slave, David George, in an empty barn on the plantation. David George was baptized and trained under the tutelage of Leile, who was evangelizing up and down
the Savannah River between present-day Augusta and Savannah, Georgia. 
Under George's leadership, the congregation’s number gradually increased to more than 30.6

            Similarly to the early disciples in the book of Acts, as the gospel was moving forward powerfully through George’s ministry, persecution would strike his family. After his master’s death nearing the end of the Revolutionary War, Sharpe’s children made an effort to take George and his family back as slaves. Fortunately, George was able to provided papers proving his official emancipation from slavery by his master Henry Sharpe that took place sometime before Sharpe was killed in the war. This persecution very well could have been divinely used to inaugurate foreign missions for the American Baptists as God soon made provision for George and his family to move to “Jamaica as the indentured servant of Col. Kirkland, an English officer.”7
            Once in Jamaica, George would continue to face persecution. He paid off his debt to Colonel Kirkland, purchased land, a home, and built a church building. Then the persecution grew more intense as a law was passed that made the preaching of the gospel forbidden to slaves. Christians in Jamaica were being beaten, sexually abused, and some were even being put to death. George, himself, had been placed in prison. In spite of these attempts by the Enemy to stifle the work of God, the Church in Jamaica continued to grow.  Still, by 1814 it was reported that there were 8,000 Baptists in Jamaica including mostly black slaves and some whites.”8 The work of George Lisle in America and in Jamaica even under such great opposition was reminiscent of the work of the apostle Paul, Silas, and their companions as recorded in the Acts of the Apostles, “These men who have caused trouble all over the world have now come here, and Jason has welcomed them into his house. They are all defying Caesar’s decrees, saying that there is another king, one called Jesus.” (17:6-7) George Lisle truly rocked his world with the gospel of the Lord Jesus!
            Before this research project, George Lisle was not a mystery nor was he a man forgotten. Rather, he was a man who lived in historical obscurity. This author confesses, that he has never seen the name in print nor has he heard the name of George Lisle. However, after reading and researching, George Lisle’s legacy now speaks loudly and clearly. Missionaries would do well to learn from his character, conviction, perseverance, his commitment to family, and his undeniable love for the Lord Jesus.
            George Lisle was a pioneer. He paved the way for African Americans in a day filled with an unparalleled hatred that many in my generation truly do not understand. He won the respect, friendship, and support of the “white man” in America, England, Jamaica, and around the world of his day. He demonstrated a level of perseverance in the midst of persecution that mirrors that of authentic biblical testimony. He, like the Apostle Paul, knew how it felt to live in chains for the sake of the gospel. His staunch belief in God and deep conviction of his personal responsibility to partner with the Holy Spirit to advance the mission of God, rooted in the core of the gospel, speaks volumes to the apathetic Church of the 21st century. His ability to impart ecclesiastical leadership to men who spiritually grew up under his tutelage and his ability to help them develop a strategy to grow and plant new churches without any former theological training or the help of things like the internet or the latest church planting manual is both mind boggling and inspiring. Another noble character trait of George Lisle is that he did all that He believed God ordained for him to do in this life as a minister of the gospel without remuneration for his family from any of the churches he planted, pastored, or preached in while traveling in the ministry of evangelism. Again, like the Apostle Paul, he was a “tentmaker.” Technically, he was a farmer; but analogously he was a “tentmaker.”
            George started sharing the gospel immediately after his conversion. As a slave, he shared with both blacks and whites the story of how Jesus had changed his life. The conviction of God’s saving grace was so strong it not only changed him spiritually, it charged him to share as often as possible with as many as would listen. He wanted greatly for others to know the God that freed him from the slavery of his sin. Missionaries and all who claim to know Christ should imitate this evangelistic fervor.
George obviously understood the leadership proverb written by many in this day, “It you are failing to plan you are planning to fail.” He had a plan and it worked. “The growth in these churches also indicates a direct response to black ministers’ hub-and- spoke evangelism, which collected converts from peripheral plantations and provided slaves physical establishments for worship.”9 George worked a simple plan that, with God’s help, enabled the gospel to spread rapidly and stick. His strategic efforts to make Christ known show that he possessed wisdom beyond his years and are worthy of being studied and repeated in some form today.
            The modern missionary should note George’s reputation for amicability with the white prominent plantation owners, white clergy, and among the slaves. The gospel flows best through the webs of relationships. This certainly indicates that the missionary must be able to relate to people, all different types of people. George Lisle did this as good as anyone, maybe ever better than most considering he was a slave during the height of slavery in the United States.
Paul’s admonition to leaders in 2 Timothy 2 was obviously something George understood. He entrusted the gospel ministry to young men in South Carolina before leaving for Jamaica who were “reliable” men and they were able to teach others. The ministry under his protégés in South Carolina blossomed even after he departed. This is the true mark of a great leader. The modern missionary will do well to build people that will be able to work alongside him and continue the work long after he is gone.
            George Lisle’s life is somewhat obscure compared to the historical testimony of many other missionaries. No wonder it is written about him that his body, “… rests in an unmarked grave somewhere in Kingston, Jamaica.”10 The modern missionary will do well to aspire to greatness in the work for the Kingdom of God while simultaneously not looking for the praise of man. George Lisle lived for an audience of one. The modern missionary should do the same. Great will be his reward!

Bibliography
1George Lisle: First Baptist Missionary from America,
http://www.faith2share.net/Mission/Missionaries/GeorgeLisle/tabid/284/language/en-US/Default.aspx
2Rippon, John, Letter from George Liele to Dr John Rippon, The Angus Library: Regents
Park College, Oxford, The Baptist Register, 1791.
3Holmes, Edward Jr., George Liele: Negro Slavery’s Prophet of Deliverance, The Baptist
History and Heritage, August 1965, P. 28.
4J.A.D, Missionary Bios: George Liele, May, 2001 http://www.gramissions.org/missionary-biographies/liele-george.html.
5The Cross and Faithful Ministry as Seen in the Pastoral and Missionary Ministry of George Liele – Galatians 6:11-18, August 24, 2010, Manuscript http://www.danielakin.com/the-cross-and-faithful-ministry-as-seen-in-the-pastoral-and-missionary-ministry-of-george-leile/
7Early, Joseph, Jr. Readings in Baptist History, B&H Publishing, Nashville, 2008, p. 55.
8George Liele: America’s First Missionary,
9In a letter to Rippon, Jonathan Clarke said that a planter Edward Davis allowed Bryan to build a church on his land, which Clarke described as “a rough building...a Yamacraw,” a suburb of Savannah. Jonathan Clarke to John C. Rippon, 19 July 1790, BAR, 1:340.

10 National Libraries of Jamaica, Biographies of Jamaican Personalities, George Lisle.

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