Missionary Visitor, The (1912) . An Indian Home. August1912 The Missionary Visitor 255 INDIAS PRESENT NEEDS Cora R. Price. HEN Dr. Judson hadbeen in Burma afew years and had noconverts, some onewrote to him, What are the pros-pects in Burma?He replied, Theprospects are asbright as the prom-ises of God. Hisfaith has been justified. One hundredyears have passed and the peopleamong whom he worked, the Karens,have been converted by the hundredsand thousands. They were a peoplelow down in the social scale. Todayhundreds are teaching and preachingJesus Christ. Nothing could haveuplifted these people
Missionary Visitor, The (1912) . An Indian Home. August1912 The Missionary Visitor 255 INDIAS PRESENT NEEDS Cora R. Price. HEN Dr. Judson hadbeen in Burma afew years and had noconverts, some onewrote to him, What are the pros-pects in Burma?He replied, Theprospects are asbright as the prom-ises of God. Hisfaith has been justified. One hundredyears have passed and the peopleamong whom he worked, the Karens,have been converted by the hundredsand thousands. They were a peoplelow down in the social scale. Todayhundreds are teaching and preachingJesus Christ. Nothing could haveuplifted these people but the Gospelof Jesus Christ. Miss Yaba, who has been studyingin this country, is an illustration ofwhat Christianity has done for theKarens, for her grandfather was oneof Judsons converts. Her father hasbeen a teacher in his country afterpreparing himself in this country, andhaving been educated in the missionschools in India, she came here tolearn more, that she might follow inher fathers footsteps. A young wom-an who spent a summer with her toldthe writer that Miss Yaba was thebrightest girl she ever met. Beauti
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