In Loving Memory Of…
It happened twenty-five years ago.
One summer afternoon a postman delivered a letter. It was from a nursing school
in the United Kingdom. You have been accepted in their school and that you must
obtain the necessary travelling documents before the September term. You were
happy then to hear of the delightful news and were anxiously getting ready to
go. However, father had a different plan for you. He wanted you to go to Taiwan to study
theology with the hope that you would be able to teach the children when you
return. There was hardly any children’s classes then. The Theological College
in Taiwan had just started a three-year theological course for the first time.
You offered yourself to the Lord submissively as advised by father.
After three years you had
successfully completed the course. On your return, you did not know what to do
because you did not expect some church leaders against full-time preachers as
hirelings. Therefore, in the beginning most of your work was confined to a few
churches in the Northern Region. You also refused to accept the allowances
given by the church except reimbursements for transport expenses. You were not
discouraged despite the odds against you. On the contrary, you ungrudgingly
helped the church, taught the children and visited members and delivered
sermons. We thank God for giving you the perseverance during those difficult
times. We also praise the Lord for helping you go through the period of trial
until the early seventies when more preachers came forth to serve the Lord. It
was not until then that your services were appreciated and you were ordained a
preacher.
A few years later, with the
blessings of the churches in Malaysia
and Singapore
you were sent to serve the Indonesian churches for one year. There, perhaps
because you could not adapt to a new environment (for the inhabitants in the PontianIslands were still depending on rain
water for consumption). You contracted a strange disease. As a result you
returned home and were admitted to the PenangMissionHospital for treatment.
After an operation you were much distressed. We were a bit worried about your
illness. But the doctor who treated you assured us that it was quite natural
for you to be upset. Later, you came to understand that it was the gracious
Lord who had granted you a complete rest and you kept thanking God for it.
In 1974, mother was called to rest
with the Lord. You were very sorrowful. You felt guilty because you had no
chance to talk to her before she passed away. But who can blame you for it? You
were always on the move, travelling from one church to another. But father
comforted you and said mum had departed in peace. Because in the morning she
was still doing free-hand exercises with our relative from Thailand before
she collapsed and went into a coma. And she passed away on the same evening.
She did not suffer any pain at all. Then you accepted it as the will of the
Lord.
Whenever you were home for a brief
period you would always play the role of Martha and every member at home, young
or old, was your honoured guest. You would serve each and everyone with
delight. The allowances you received were small but you would cut down on your
food and clothing expenses in order to save some money to help the needy. I am
deeply impressed. Indeed, you believed that, “it is more blessed to give than
to receive”.
I also remember you telling me of
the days you spent in the seminary. One day a deacon brought you all visiting.
You passed by a convent and saw many nuns there. This deacon said to you,
“These nuns offered their whole lives to God without getting married. Their
devotion is worthwhile of our emulation.” You said that you had understood him.
He meant to say that if you could be like the nuns it would he well for you.
Was this the reason you chose to remain single to serve the Lord?
Eight years ago the churches in Malaysia and Singapore
sent you to the seminary college in Taiwan again to take up a one-year
course in religious education. While you were there, you wrote to me three
times encouraging me to dedicate myself to God. I must confess that your three
letters had moved me to serve the Lord. For this I give thanks to God for your
encouragement and prayers. When I think of your prayers I could not help but
give thanks to God again. When our younger sisters fell sick you would pray for
them in tears with fasting. Because of your long prayers your two knees had
callouses. Some biblical commentaries say that the callouses
on James’ knees were as thick as the camel skin due to long prayers. I would
say that yours were no thinner than the cow skin.
Job said, “Man that is born of a
woman is of few days, and full of trouble. He comes forth like a flower, and
withers; he flies like a shadow, and continues not.”
Though I understand that even the
best concert must have a finale, and the life of man is like a sojourner, I
really do not expect you, my dear sister, to depart so soon. You have ended
your 22 years of service to the Lord, in fact 25 years (three years in the
seminary), just like that. The value of a man’s life is not measured by the
length of his stay in this world. Some have come into vanity and have gone into
darkness. Others have stayed a long time in this world and yet they have passed
their days meaninglessly. It is a waste. As for you, though you had only lived
50 years, you lived a meaningful life. You knew the eternal God to whom you
also had offered yourself. Preacher F. M. Che wrote
your epitaph thus:
“The beauty of a grain is not its
golden husk but its sacrifice and its new life.”
Oh, my dear sister, we were
companions in our heavenly pilgrimage. You were also a good helper in my
ministry. Now that you have left me, I feel that I have lost a source of
strength - the strength that can find no substitute! Oh, Nyuk Lin, my precious sister,
I cannot help but hold you always in my bosom.