Point-of-View
Missionary martyrs did not waste their lives
By ERICH BRIDGES
Baptist Press
Published January 30, 2003
After the Dec. 30 killings of three Southern Baptist medical
workers by a Muslim gunman in Yemen, the tributes and condolences
poured in from around the world.
Hundreds of calls, letters and e-mails came from the friends
of the victims, churches, Christian and Muslim religious leaders-and
regular people-moved by the lives and deaths of physician Martha
Myers, hospital administrator William Koehn and purchasing
manager Kathleen Gariety. A tiny sampling:
- "This was not only a loss to the Baptist community
but also to the Muslim community," said Muhammad
Sahli of the Islamic Center of Virginia, who personally
visited International Mission Board leaders to express
his sympathy. "We were extremely saddened and
angered by what happened in Yemen. ... It is our profound
hope that Almighty God will shower the families with His
mercy and compassion during their bereavement."
- "My husband Bob and I were privileged to be (at the
Jibla hospital) as volunteers in 1988 and 1989,"
reflected Nancy Dillard. "We grew to love Martha in
a very special way. I remember her with some cold
pancakes in her skirt pocket (to eat on the run), because
once Martha started working for the day she never stopped.
I remember her sleeping on the floor on a mat under the
crib of a very sick child. I feel so blessed to have
known her and I know she, Bill and Kathleen are in heaven
with our Lord Jesus Christ."
- "As a former short-term mission volunteer in Kosovo
immediately after the war there, I am renewing my
commitment to return there whenever the Lord allows,"
vowed Michael Elsey. "My prayers are with you, and I
will ask my church to pray for your families, the
families of those ministered to in Yemen-and those who
killed your loved one."
- "As an (emergency medical) worker in the U.S., I see
senseless tragedies and death occur on a daily basis,"
wrote Heather Brewster. "As an MK (missionary kid),
I try to explain to my co-workers what would have called
these people to go a country like Yemen and what
compelled them to serve a people 'not their own,' far
from their own families and the 'safety' of the U.S. This
incident has challenged me personally to make my life not
just one of transporting people to the ER during times of
crisis, but to boldly share with people in their darkest
moments the love of Christ. Your loved ones have not
given their lives in vain."
- "I am writing you as a Yemeni living in Saudi Arabia
to express condolence on the cruel slayings," e-mailed
one heartbroken man. "It hurts a lot when these
martyrs come thousands of miles, leave their homes and
beloved ones to help my poor relatives and get brutally
assassinated. By who? None but one of our people. It
hurts badly. As I write you (my) eyes are uncontrollably
crying . ... May their souls rest in peace and God give
you strength."
But not everyone was sympathetic.
"You Christian missionaries are nuts!" said one
irate message. "You go to Moslem countries and get
kidnapped, shot and killed by people who don't want you (there),
and then cry the blues that you are being persecuted! Get out of
their countries and this won't happen!"
A somewhat calmer correspondent criticized American missionary
presence anywhere abroad. "The question that immediately
comes to mind is 'why'?" he asked. "Not why did the
murderer shoot these people, but why were the missionaries there
in the first place? Are there not enough sick, ailing and unwell
people in the United States who cannot care for themselves or
afford medical treatment? ... There is a critical shortage of
doctors and nurses in this country, yet three medical
professionals' lives have been forfeited for no good reason."
No good reason?
Tell that to the thousands of people whose lives were saved,
whose children were delivered and cared for, whose suffering was
relieved by these three. Tell it to the thousands who crowded
around the gates of the hospital for days after the shootings,
who lined the streets of Jibla and cried for the loss of three
people who loved them.
Why did they go, and ultimately die?
"The answer is love," IMB staff member Mike Edens
said at one of the memorial services for the slain trio. "Love
is the reason they went. Love is the reason their colleagues are
there. Love is the reason Jesus came. And love requires us to go
to those who have never heard, those who live in darkness."
It isn't just the world that sees such love as foolishness.
There's a strong and increasingly vocal faction within our
comfortable American churches that says stay at home, serve our
own and to hell with the rest-literally.
This is an appropriate moment for such Christians to ask
themselves whether they serve the God who revealed Himself in
Scripture and in our Suffering Servant Savior, Jesus Christ.
The day of the killings, someone sent Avery Willis, IMB chief
of overseas operations, a plea to "bring the missionaries
home" once and for all.
"Instead of asking us to bring them home, why not pray
that more will go?" Willis responded. "We will not
bring them home, but we will send thousands more."
Jesus answered the critics of such seeming "waste,"
Willis recalled, when He praised the woman who washed His feet
with her tears and expensive perfume. A waste? Most who were
there thought so, including Judas. But Jesus called it a
beautiful offering, a memorial to Him, a preparation of His holy
body for burial.
"Only with God's perspective can we see what He sees,"
Willis said. "She did what she could," with all her
heart. So did Martha Myers, Bill Koehn and Kathy Gariety.
"That's why it is beautiful in His eyes."
For related coverage, see Missionary Martyrs Archive