5 Women Who Were Trailblazers in Missions

TEAM – The Evangelical Alliance Mission • Mar 13, 2017

When you think of women in missions, names like Elisabeth Elliot, Lottie Moon and Amy Carmichael might come to mind. Their well-documented lives continue to inspire both men and women to live lives fully yielded to the Gospel.

But the legacy of women on the mission field doesn’t end with them. For hundreds of years, women have been the lifeblood of missions, crossing enemy lines, healing the sick and even risking their lives to spread the Gospel.

Today, we want to share just a few of the amazing stories you haven’t heard yet.

Stella Cox

Stella Cox has served in Japan for sixty-five years.

In 1950, young Stella Sluder told God she would go to Japan.

Upon graduating from Bob Jones University, she did just that. Stella sailed for western Japan on October 14, 1952, one year ahead of her fiancé, Ralph Cox.

Stella and Ralph were considered pioneers in the first wave of missionaries dispatched across former enemy lines after World War II . When Ralph joined her on the field, they began a church planting ministry, evangelizing and equipping Japanese believers.

Spurred on by Ralph’s vision to plant 100 churches across Japan, they founded the Takamatsu Christian Center and welcomed thousands of short-term volunteer evangelists, many of whom would return to Japan long-term.

women in missions

Stella holding a portrait of her and Ralph.

Stella, renowned for her cooking and hospitality, founded the Ladies Luncheon (now 50 years strong), taught cooking classes for 40 years and hosted 15 yearly hospitality seminars.

When Ralph passed away from cancer in 2008, Stella carried on their work in the country they called home. She even used the traditional Japanese condolence gifts from Ralph’s funerals (he had three) to pay off the building for one of their church plants, Seto Uchi Chapel.

“God called me to Japan first, before I ever met Ralph,” Stella said. “I know where I belong.”

Ninety churches, 70 national believers in full-time ministry and 65 years later, you’ll still find Stella in Takamatsu, handing out literature, serving university students in an English café or ministering in six area church plants. She’s written a book, too — One Man’s Vision for Japan — about her partner in life and ministry, Ralph.

To this day, Stella lives by words she wrote in her first prayer letter: “… as I have seen the hungry hearts of these people my heart has overflowed with thankfulness, even to tears, because Jesus has brought me to this land.”

Malla Moe

malla moe women in missions

Malla Moe’s love for Christ and adventurous spirit led her to become a pioneer missionary in Southern Africa.

Born Petra Malena “Malla” Moe in Norway in 1863, Malla was part of one of the first missionary teams to enter South Africa and work among the Zulu tribe.

She wrote in a letter dated Jan. 1, 1894: “If God can just get [their] people’s hearts to believe that there is a God in Heaven who loves them, I believe they would soon turn to him, as nothing is as powerful as love.”

At the age of 65, Malla decided she needed to reach the more remote people groups in the area, so she built a “Gospel wagon,” a small house on wheels where she would live and work .

malla moe women in missions

Malla Moe’s Gospel wagon allowed her to remote areas and preach the Gospel.

Over the next 15 years, Malla traveled to some of the least-reached parts of Tongaland, Swaziland and Zululand. She endured malaria outbreaks, droughts and food shortages.

People flocked to Malla and her wagon when it rolled into a village. She handed out small gifts, served tea and talked about Jesus.

Finally, at the age of 80, Malla settled down at the Bethel mission station and became the unofficial hostess, welcoming new missionaries to the field with a proper African meal.

Ten years later, Malla died while surrounded by African believers. Her lifetime of service brought many to Lord, and she helped establish a thriving TEAM ministry in Africa that exists to this day.

Alberta Skinner

Alberta Skinner continued to proclaim Christ even when persecuted by an oppressive government.

In the 1930s, Alberta Skinner was serving in the far eastern part of Czechoslovakia with Bible Christian Union (BCU), a missions organization that later merged with TEAM , when Russian communists moved in and annexed that section of the country, eventually making it part of the Soviet Union.

The communists seized the Moody Bible Institute graduate and told her, “You can leave and never come back, or you can stay and never leave.”

She stayed.

For many years, BCU didn’t hear a word from her. All financial support and contact with her family and friends was cut off. BCU officials feared that communists had killed her.

One day, 25 years later, the phone rang in BCU’s international headquarters in Pennsylvania. Alberta was on the line. She said she had been allowed to remain behind the Iron Curtain where — though ridiculed and persecuted — she continued to faithfully serve the Lord.

God had led her to a godly Russian pastor. They were married and had six sons. Due to their outspoken faith in Christ, they were forced to live in a small wooden structure with a dirt floor.

Despite their austere surroundings, they joyfully served the Lord and raised their family. Souls were saved and churches were started and strengthened.

Finally, in 1969, Alberta was allowed to return alone to North America to receive some badly needed dental work. The communists told her that if she tried to remain in North America, she would risk harm to her husband and boys.

When she called the mission that day, she uttered not a word of complaint or self-pity. Instead, she praised the Lord for His faithfulness and wanted BCU officials to know she was fine. She then returned to her family and ministry behind the Iron Curtain. She died several years later.

Gertrude Dyck

The daughter of Mennonite parents on the Saskatchewan prairie, Gertrude Dyck didn’t grow up as an adventurer, but her appreciation for simple living and wide-open spaces made her a surprising fit for life in the Arabian Desert.

Dyck applied to TEAM in 1960, during her last year of nursing school. A short time later, she heard about a doctor couple starting a hospital in Al Ain, United Arab Emirates, where the infant and maternal mortality rates had reached 50 and 35 percent, respectively.

The 28-year-old arrived two years later, wearing her Canadian winter coat and not knowing a word of Arabic. However, she soon adopted the local dress and learned to speak the people’s language fluently.

Dyck worked tirelessly in the obstetrics ward and in clinics for women and children . In 25 years of nursing, she served as midwife for many of the 90,000 babies born at the hospital.

Her full embrace of the culture allowed her to earn deep trust as she shared her faith in common and royal homes.

When she retired from nursing, Dyck began working as a cultural consultant, teaching Arabic and sharing insights with new hospital staff. Canada recognized her service with two of its highest honors in 2002, and the United Arab Emirates would posthumously award her the Medal of Independence of the Third Order in 2010.

In 2005, Dyck returned to Canada, where she continued to support missionary endeavors until her death four years later. By then, Al Ain’s infant mortality rate was below 1 percent, and maternal mortality was almost unheard of.

Barbara Chapman

Barbara Chapman, pictured with her coworkers in 1988, pressed on in ministry even while battling a chronic illness.

Barbara Chapman was a 39-year-old chemistry teacher when God led her to South Korea with TEAM in 1977.

Learning Korean was a struggle, but Chapman made it through language school and quickly jumped back into educating others. She wrote a Scripture-based textbook to teach English and began leading Bible studies for Korean women.

In 1981, Chapman was asked to direct the Korea Christian Conference Grounds, and a year later, TEAM named her as field leader for Korea. With a growing ministry-wide focus on church planting, Chapman equipped missionaries to minister in urban areas, and she worked to tie the conference grounds’ camps, retreats and classes to the local church.

In the midst of her work, Chapman was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis, yet she remained determined.

As the South Korean church grew, TEAM leaders sensed it was time to close the field. Chapman moved to China in 1995 to help with a new ministry. She helped organize the office, establish policies and cast vision for the missionaries. She had a heart for encouraging missionaries and Chinese Christians alike to be more involved in outreach.

In 1998, Chapman helped establish a school for the missionaries’ children. The advance of her MS made life difficult, but she pressed on as a principal and teacher, serving as a powerful example of sacrifice to her students. When the disease forced Chapman back to the U.S. in 2002, she continued in administrative work until her retirement.

Chapman died on December 24, 2011, at the age of 73, but her legacy in Asia is still felt today.

By Megan Lunsford 23 Apr, 2024
When seeking to serve cross-culturally with an authentic love for others, there’s no better example for us than Jesus. If we sat around a table and threw out the question, “How do we love like Jesus?” I think we would have several commonalities as we respond. For example, Jesus loved all people right where they were. He loved those who were deemed the least, those hardest to love, or those who were His enemies. These are all beautiful realities of the heart of Jesus. When we step into relationships, it can be easier to take on the warmer, more gracious gestures of Jesus’ love, especially in cross-cultural relationships. Think about it––when doing life with those who look and act differently than us, we are already out of our comfort zones and would rather keep things as simple and familiar as possible. But there are other facets of Jesus’ heart we often overlook that can transform us and others even more into His likeness. Jesus is love because God is love. Everything Jesus did was out of love; it’s the mere definition of who He is. As followers of Jesus, He calls us to the same: “Beloved, let us love one another, for love is from God, and whoever loves has been born of God and knows God. Anyone who does not love does not know God, because God is love. In this the love of God was made manifest among us, that God sent his only Son into the world, so that we might live through him. In this is love, not that we have loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins. Beloved, if God so loved us, we also ought to love one another. No one has ever seen God; if we love one another, God abides in us and his love is perfected in us.” (1 John:7-12) Every display of love we offer to others is an opportunity for them to encounter the ultimate love of the Father. That’s a pretty big deal! In this article, we’ll look at three expressions of Jesus’ love that we tend to overlook when engaging others cross-culturally. (Next month, we’ll look at three more.) 1. Jesus loved sacrificially. Everywhere Jesus went, crowds followed Him. We even see times in Scripture where Jesus had plans to step away for time alone but those who were hurting found Him and He had compassion on them and stayed with them. Can you imagine rarely having any time to yourself but, instead, constantly being surrounded by crowds of people wanting help from you? Jesus loved sacrificially. He welcomed all who came to Him with love and compassion, never turning anyone away. “When He saw the crowds, He was moved with compassion for them, because they were harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd.” (Matthew 9:36) In the same way, we can make room in our lives for Jesus to bring sacrificial interruptions which, in His eyes, are orchestrated encounters to transfer His love to others. It can be tempting to be so “on mission” that we are full steam ahead and find ourselves frustrated when the Holy Spirit sends an interruption into our path that we feel we don’t have time for. Or, perhaps, we have scheduled a meet-up but it’s the norm in another culture to be 30 minutes or an hour late. We anxiously think through how it will affect whatever we have planned next. While it’s normal to feel a little stressed, what if the very "interruption” standing in front of you was really a divine appointment sent by God? Or what if that person running late experiences how peaceful and gracious you are in adapting to their culture and therefore, they can encounter a beautiful display of Jesus’ love? To truly represent Christ, we should remain ready and willing for each assignment the Lord sends into our path, no matter the cost or how much we will have to re-route our day. He is always a hundred steps ahead and will work all things for His glory and our good. 2. Jesus loved by discerning each situation well. Think about how many situations Jesus had to respond to on a daily basis. We read in Scripture that there were lines of people waiting to be healed by Him, talk to Him, hear His teachings, or simply touch the hem of His robe. Jesus was fully dependent on His Father to discern each situation before addressing it. “Most assuredly, I say to you, the Son can do nothing of Himself, but what He sees the Father do; for whatever He does, the Son also does in like manner.” (John 5:19) Another temptation we can have when in a relationship with those God has sent us to is to think we already know the solution or what God wants to do before we’ve even asked Him. We believe we are full of knowledge, so we just pull from the bank we have stored within and go with it. However, when we access what is familiar to us as our default, we risk missing out on a God-given solution that might truly be the key to unlocking whatever challenge is in front of us. What does this look like when interacting with others? We can simply ask, “God, what is on Your heart for the person standing in front of me?” Then we listen and respond as He speaks. When we make it a daily habit to pause and hear God’s heart for each situation before responding, we are guaranteed to be effective in loving those around us. He knows the heart of every person that will cross our paths. Imagine how impactful we can be if we first lean on His wisdom and discernment before moving forward. 3. Jesus loved by speaking truth. Most of us are familiar with the story of Jesus and the Samaritan woman at the well. If we are honest, this conversation makes us a bit nervous as none of us would be comfortable with Jesus calling out intimate details of our lives that we would prefer to hide. But Jesus went further than just airing her dirty laundry. He offered her the hope of the Gospel and a relationship with Him - a divine fulfillment that could never be found in an earthly relationship. Jesus modeled a powerful example of loving others well cross-culturally. He took the low place and spoke truth, truly out of love––speaking to her heart from His. Like Jesus, our goal in sharing the truths about Him and His Word is to bring hope and satisfaction through Him alone. When we speak truth from Scripture, we are calling others higher into all God has for them. The tricky part here is we should avoid speaking truth if it isn’t first fueled by compassion. If it merely comes from a place of judgment, condemnation, or self-righteousness, it will fall flat 100% of the time. But if it truly comes from love, you are likely to not only win a heart back to the Father but, like the story of the Samaritan woman, even an entire village! If you see someone living outside of God’s best for their lives, ask God to show you your heart before engaging theirs. Once your heart is properly postured, you can speak truth out of an overflow of God’s love and trust Him for a transformation in their lives.
By Suzanne Pearson 16 Apr, 2024
TEAM Canada provides warm welcome and trusted friendships for diaspora populations living far from their native countries. As TEAM Canada workers Peter and Ruth (names changed) drive from their home to a nearby community center, they pass numerous apartment buildings and townhouses. Most of the families who live there are immigrants. They’ve left their countries of origin due to political unrest, trauma, and other difficulties. They’ve left family, friends, homes, jobs, and personal wealth behind. They search for peace, justice for the oppressed, and rest from fear and weariness. And as they adjust to a new country and a new language, they are often very isolated from others around them. “The sad reality is most immigrants are never even invited inside a Canadian home,” says Ruth. Peter and Ruth and their team try to change that reality. For the last nine years, the team, which includes workers from partner organizations as well as volunteers, has held English classes at the community center. Three days a week, over 60 students from more than 20 countries come together to learn English as well as to fellowship together and receive practical help in assimilating to a new normal. Meeting Needs and Building Trust That practical help may come in the form of procuring furniture, clothes, or dishes for newcomers, assistance with creating a resume and finding a job, or teaching people how to navigate Canadian laws and the medical system. As these tangible needs are met, relationships are built. “We invite them into our homes for meals and games,” Ruth shares. “We take them on hiking trips, picnics, outings, and out for coffee.” This is particularly important in this type of ministry because most immigrants come to Canada from cultures that value hospitality. Conversely, Canadians do not typically prioritize hospitality and consequently many newcomers feel lonely and isolated. Inviting folks to various gatherings and outings allows the team to spend extended time hearing people’s stories, struggles, hopes, and dreams. When she speaks about building friendships, Ruth’s heart for the people she serves is evident. “Hearing their stories, it’s easy to love them, and many have become close friends,” Ruth says. “We recognize the value of steady one-on-one relationships.”
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