Samuel Ajai Crowther

40
MISSIONARY TO YORUBALAND Samuel Ajayi Crowther (1807 1891) By Dr. Peter Hammond

description

Samuel Ajai Crowther

Transcript of Samuel Ajai Crowther

Page 1: Samuel Ajai Crowther

MISSIONARY TO

YORUBALAND

Samuel Ajayi

Crowther(1807 – 1891)By Dr. Peter Hammond

Page 2: Samuel Ajai Crowther
Page 3: Samuel Ajai Crowther

MISSIONARY TO

YORUBALAND

Samuel Ajayi

Crowther(1807 – 1891)By Dr. Peter Hammond

Page 4: Samuel Ajai Crowther

SETTING THE CAPTIVES FREE

One of the many fruits of William Wilberforce’s life-long

crusade against the slave trade, was that Samuel Ajayi

Crowther, who was born , in Yorubaland, in 1807, the

year Great Britian abolished the slave trade, became the

first African bishop of the Church of England.

Page 5: Samuel Ajai Crowther

Enslaved

Samuel Crowther

was born in

Yorubaland

At age 13, He

was captured by

African slavers

Page 6: Samuel Ajai Crowther

and sold to a Portuguese trader for transport across the Atlantic.

Page 7: Samuel Ajai Crowther

Freed

Samuel was rescued by a British naval squadron in 1822

and put ashore at Freetown.

Page 8: Samuel Ajai Crowther

From 1809 the British government mobilisedits navy to search suspected slave ships, even foreign vessels, on the high seas.

Page 9: Samuel Ajai Crowther

For a century, the Royal Navy was dedicated to setting the captives free, going far beyond

clearing the oceans of slave ships,

Page 10: Samuel Ajai Crowther

to boldly sailing up unchartered rivers and creeks,

Page 11: Samuel Ajai Crowther

to storm slave stockades,

Page 12: Samuel Ajai Crowther

freeing captives at every turn.

Page 13: Samuel Ajai Crowther

Great Britain dedicated it’s resources to fighting and opposing the slave trade.

Page 14: Samuel Ajai Crowther

The British spent millions of pounds in suppressing the slave trade, and sacrificed much blood in fighting

to set the captives free.

Page 15: Samuel Ajai Crowther

The West-African country of Sierra Leone had been established by British

Evangelicals to serve as a haven for freed slaves.

Page 16: Samuel Ajai Crowther

Britain invested vast amounts of money into developing Sierra Leone as a free and independent

state, where liberated slaves could settle.

Page 17: Samuel Ajai Crowther

Converted

In Sierra Leone, Crowther was converted

to Christ. He received an education both

in Sierra Leone and in England.

Page 18: Samuel Ajai Crowther

“About the third year

of my liberation from

the slavery of man, I

was convinced of

another worse state of

slavery, that of sin and

satan. I was admitted

into the visible Church

of Christ here on earth

as a soldier to fight

manfully under His

banner against

spiritual enemies.”

Page 19: Samuel Ajai Crowther

Called

In 1843, he was ordained as a Church of England minister

for service with the Church Missionary Society (CMS).

Page 20: Samuel Ajai Crowther

Impact

Crowther was one of the leaders of a

successful missionary venture that

took him, and several other former

slaves back to their native Yorubaland,

where a vigorous Christianity soon

developed.

Page 21: Samuel Ajai Crowther

One of the first

converts Samuel

baptised was his own

mother – who took the

Christian name –

Hannah.

His language Yoruba

became the first

African Language to

be used for Church of

England liturgy in

worship.

Page 22: Samuel Ajai Crowther

Yoruba Christian worship was distinctly Protestant and Evangelical

in the Church of England style. Crowther led converts in burying

or destroying their traditional charms, fetishes and idols.

Page 23: Samuel Ajai Crowther

In 1864, Crowther was ordained as the first

African bishop of the Church of England

in an overflowing Canterbury Cathedral

Page 24: Samuel Ajai Crowther

and directed to undertake a mission along the Niger River.

This was to follow up on the Niger expedition of 1841, which was led by

William Wilberforce’s successor, Foxwell Buxton.

Crusade Against Slavery

Page 25: Samuel Ajai Crowther

T. Foxwell Buxton was an Evangelical leader in Parliament

and an anti-slavery crusader.

Page 26: Samuel Ajai Crowther

His expedition up the Niger River Valley of West Africa was to overcome the

ravages of the slave industry still entrenched there. Of the 145 Europeans on

that expedition, 130 were struck down with Malaria, and 40 died.

Page 27: Samuel Ajai Crowther

Yet, the expedition succeeded in establishing a Missionary Centre at Fourah Bay

for training liberated slaves to evangelise West Africa. It was built on the very

place where a slave market had once stood..

Transformation

Page 28: Samuel Ajai Crowther

The rafters of its roof were made almost entirely from the masts

of old slave ships.

Page 29: Samuel Ajai Crowther

Samuel Crowther was one of the first four

students to graduated from Fourah Bay College,

sub Saharan Africa’s first university.

Page 30: Samuel Ajai Crowther

Samuel laboured diligently to bring the

Gospel to the diverse tribes along the Niger

River, producing Biblical tracts and

Scripture texts dealing with witchcraft

and charms.

Winning Muslims to Christ

Page 31: Samuel Ajai Crowther

He also dealt with the common ground

between the Qur’an and the

Scriptures, and produced Gospel

presentations for Muslims founded

entirely on Biblical quotations.

Page 32: Samuel Ajai Crowther

Teaching God’s Book

Crowther wrote in 1854 of his contact with King Ogara of Panda: “I asked if he would like his people to be taught God’s Book, and how to worship God

as we do in the white man’s country…

Page 33: Samuel Ajai Crowther

…for it was these two things together which made England great, and that they would

bring peace and prosperity to any

country who received and embraced them …he replied …that he

was very desirous that war should cease, that his people might trade

and be taught God’s Book; he wished us many blessings…”

Page 34: Samuel Ajai Crowther

He was effective in opposing slavery, witchcraft

and Islam and, and won many converts among

the Nupe and the Hausa.

Page 35: Samuel Ajai Crowther

Bishop Crowther worked

effectively at indigenising an

Evangelical Anglicanism,

which was truly African.

Today there are over 14

million Anglicans in Nigeria.

Enduring Fruit

Page 36: Samuel Ajai Crowther
Page 37: Samuel Ajai Crowther
Page 38: Samuel Ajai Crowther

REFORMATION SOCIETYPO Box 74

Newlands, 7725

Cape Town

South Africa

E-mail:

[email protected]

Web: www.ReformationSA.org

Page 39: Samuel Ajai Crowther
Page 40: Samuel Ajai Crowther