Carey understood the value in/of education, medicine, and other works. He continually encouraged missionaries to travel to the hinterland "and build an indigenous Christianity with vernacular Bibles and other writings and native-led churches."
For his mission to succeed, hile it simultaneously retained its core, Carey purported, it had to not only fill the eternal needs of people missionaries shared the gospel with, but also their day-to-day needs.
During his day-to-day life, Carey was also a husband and father. The following relates details regarding his three marriages.
Dorothy Plackett Carey (1755?-1807): Married William Carey in 1781. She was 25 and he was 19. Their marriage was a contrast in ability and interests. She was reluctant to leave England and go to India. Only after much perusasion and on the condition that her sister, Kitty, would accompany them to help care for their small children, did she agree to go. After the death of their 5 yr. old son, Peter, Dorothy became mentally unstable and remained so until her death, December 8, 1807. They were married for 26 years and had seven children: Ann, Felix, William Jr., Peter, Lucy, Jabez, and Jonathan.
Charlotte Emilia Rumohr Carey (1761-1821): Second wife of William Carey. She was the invalid daughter of the wealthy Chevalier de Rumohr and his wife, the Countess of Alfeldt. Her disability was the result of a fire at the family home, at which time she lost her speech and later the use of her legs. She first met Carey in Serampore, India, where she had gone to be in a warmer climate for health reasons. They were married in May, 1808. Her intellectual and spiritual life was an encouragement and help to Carey in the work of the ministry. They were happily married for 13 years until she died in May, 1821, at age 60.
Grace Hughes Carey (1778-1835?): Third wife of William Carey, she was a forty-five-year-old widow when they were married in 1823. She cared for Carey as a devoted companion during the last eleven years of his life. Grace had a daughter by her first marriage. She died July 27, 1855, at age 58.
At More than One Time in Life
At more than one time during his life, between 1793 and the close of the century, Carey's pilgrimage proved to be arduous.
In his journal writing, Carey relates his "new, challenging, and sometimes intimidating venture into a land whose customs, beliefs, mores, and values often affronted, sometimes appalled" him. None of the challenges, however, deterred, Carey, a man noted as "this man with a mission."
The following table notes Carey's life, compared to work by several other noted Christians.
Table 1: Timeline noting Carey's Birth and Death
Timeline
John & Charles Wesley's evangelical conversions
First production of Handel's Messiah
1759 Voltaire's Candide
William Carey born
William Carey dies
David Livingstone sails for Africa
Carey's Theological Perception
He [Carey] divided the world's population into Christians sub-categorized by Catholics, Protestants, and Greeks),
Jews, 'Mahometans', and Pagans'."
William Carey
Carey's Calling
Although Carey felt a personal "calling" to work among the "heathen," his perception of the heathens, however, did not include Muslims. According to Carey, the world's population consisted of "Christians (sub-categorized by Catholics, Protestants, and Greeks), Jews, 'Mahometans', and 'Pagans'."
Carey, as a number of other Christians during this time, did not consider Muslims as pagans as the Muslims claimed to serve the one true God, just as Christians and Jews claimed. Based on an average number of people per square mile in his targeted area of northern India, Carey calculated the number to be 420 million people, or approximately 57.7% of the world's inhabitants to be pagans. From impressions he gained from travel books, Carey estimated that more than half "... The sons of Adam... are in general poor, barbarous, naked pagans as destitute of civilization, as they are of true religion."(citations omitted) From his calculations, Carey perceived the need for missionary work was greater for the 57.7% pagans of the world, than the 17.9% potential Muslims. The more Carey read and studied, the more he reportedly became convinced that people in the world need Christ. "He read, he made notes, he made a great leather globe of the world and, one day, in the quietness of his cobbler's shop - not in some enthusiastic missionary conference - Carey heard the call: 'If it be the duty of all men to believe the Gospel... then it be the duty of those who are entrusted with the Gospel to endeavor to make it known among all nations'." Gospel Challenges the gospel's would be better spread to the heathen, Carey...
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