Title: Lottie Moon
1Lottie Moon
A Kingdom-Focused Life
2Quick Facts about Lottie
- Charlotte Diggs Moon (Lottie)
- was born on Dec. 12, 1840
- in Albemarle County, Virginia
3Quick Facts about Lottie
- Lottie rebelled against Christianity until she
was in college. - In December 1858, she dedicated her life to
Christ and was baptized at First Baptist Church
of Charlottesville, Va.
4Lottie the kolohe
- In 1854, Lottie was sent to a girls school run
by leading Virginia Baptists. Early on April
Fools Day her second year, she climbed the
schools bell tower and muffled the bell with
towels and sheets. Classes started late that day!
5Lottie still kolohe at 71
- As Lottie and new missionary, Jane Lide, walked
one day beside the Tengchow city wall, a mounted
Chinese soldier galloped toward them on the path.
Jane prepared to step aside onto the narrow,
slippery ledge between the path and a partially
filled moat. Lottie stopped her. Dont worry,
Jane, she said. Ill teach him some manners.
Lottie stood fast, tightening her hold on her
umbrella. As man and mount bore down upon the
two, threatening to knock them into the moat,
Lottie suddenly opened her umbrella. The horse
shied, throwing the rider into the moat. The two
women walked on, while the angry but chastened
soldier picked himself up out of the water.
6Did you know
- Lottie Moon was only 4 ft. 3 in. tall.
- She was one of the first women in the South to
receive a masters degree from Albemarle Female
Institute, female counterpart to the University
of Virginia. - She wrote quotations in the margins of her Bible.
A favorite was from Francis de Sales Go on
joyously as much as you can, and if you do not
always go on joyously, at best go on courageously
and confidently.
7Lottie Moon in China
- Appointed in 1873, Lottie served 39 years, mostly
in Chinas Shantung province. - Lottie taught in a girls school, often making
trips into Chinas interior to share the good
news with women and girls.
The first graduates of the Baptist girls school
in Tenchow, China with diplomas in hand.
8Lottie in China
Lottie served in Shantung Province
9Did you know
- While two single women recruits studied Chinese
life with Lottie, they noticed during devotions
that her Scripture reading did not correspond
with their Bibles. One asked what Lottie was
reading from. Oh, the Greek, she replied,
continuing her translation. She translated with
the same facility from Greek to Chinese.
10Lotties Sacrifice
- When she set sail for China, Lottie was 32 years
old. She had turned down a marriage proposal and
left her job, home and family to follow Gods
lead. Her path wasnt typical for an educated
woman from a wealthy Southern family. But Lottie
did not serve a typical God. He had gripped her
with the Chinese peoples need for a Savior.
11Lotties Ultimate Sacrifice
During a time of war and famine, Lottie silently
starved, knowing that her beloved Chinese didnt
have enough food. Her fellow Christians saw the
ultimate sign of love giving her life for
others. On Christmas Eve in 1912, at age 72,
Lottie died on a ship bound for the United States.
- Workmen gather wheat in Pingtu, China, about
1910.
12How Lottie changed China
- She organized many new schools, including the
first school for girls and boys together in 1898 - She led Chinese Christians to combat the practice
of binding girls feet
13How Lottie Changed China
- Her dreamestablish a chain of mission stations
toward the interior of China
Starting in Tenchow
14Her dream begins
- Hwanghsein 20 miles away
- Established a church and Foreign Mission Boards
first hospital on any field - Pingtu 100 miles further
- Established a new church around 1898
15The dream continues
- Sha-ling 10 miles further
- Established the 4th Southern Baptist Church in
North China
Persecution
Persecution broke out in Sha-ling in 1890 and
Lottie calmed the terrified believers. A young
convert, Li Show-ting, was persecuted by his
brothershe later became a great evangelist
baptizing more than 10,000 believers!
16Freedom
- After revolutionary forces won the Sino-Japanese
War in 1912 - Under the lead of Sun Yat-sen and Yuan Shih-kai,
a personal friend of Lottie, a republic was
established with a Christian calendar and a
declaration of religious liberty.
17Her dream fulfilled
- By 1912, there were 273 missionaries supported by
the Foreign Mission Board - As of October 2006, there are 5,193 missionaries
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19Lotties Impact on Missions
- At Lotties suggestion, the Foreign Mission Board
adopted a new policy to provide furloughs to
missionaries after 10 years on the field.
20Lotties Impact on Missions
- Lottie Moon wrote numerous letters home, urging
Southern Baptists to greater missions involvement
and support. One of those letters triggered
Southern Baptists' first Christmas offering for
international missions - enough to send three new
missionaries to China.
One of Lotties many letters
21The Lottie Moon Offering
- In 1918, Womans Missionary Union named the
annual Christmas offering for international
missions after Lottie who had urged them to start
it.
22IMB facts
- 5,193 missionaries supported (as of 10/31/06)
- 1,193 people groups engaged
- There are over 4,000 people groups unengaged
23How Your Gifts are Used
- 100 percent of the offering is used in the
overseas budget to support missionaries and their
ministries. - Costs to support a missionary for a year
40,866.61 for a month 3,405.55 for a week
785.90 for a day 111.96 for an hour
4.66 for a minute .08 - Missionary support includes housing, food,
missionary children's education and more. None is
used for stateside administration.
24Lotties Challenge to Us
- How many there are who imagine that because
Jesus paid it all, they need pay nothing,
forgetting that the prime object of their
salvation was that they should follow in the
footsteps of Jesus Christ in bringing back a lost
world to God. - Lottie Moon
- Tungchow, China
- Sept. 15, 1887