Sunday, May 15, 2011


Robert Moffat

A Light to South Africa - The Missionary (Part 2)

Conversion 

In 1817 Robert Moffat wanted to set out for the kraal, or village, of the Namaquas.   However, the political situation in the country was such that he was prevented from moving there and setting up his mission work.  However, a German missionary requested Moffat to come to visit the Namaquas area and visit the chief, Afrikaner, a blood-thirsty butcher who had three years earlier been converted. That conversion has been considered one of the great accounts of the grace of God on the mission fields.

Jager Christian Africaner was an outlaw who became a Christian leader of his people after he was converted.  He was a chief of the Oorlams (Khoi) people.  His father, Klaas, was a cattle farmer and headman of the Oorlams people in the Witzenberg district near Tulbagh.  He was gradually driven from his land by white farmers, his livestock dwindled and, unable to retain his inheritance, in about 1790 Klaas Africaner and his family moved to the farm of a Dutch farmer named Piet Pienaar at Hantam, near Calvinia.  They worked as herdsmen and shepherds, protecting the farmer's livestock from attacks by the San.  Pienaar gave them guns to protect the herds and often accompanied them on the punitive expeditions.  Campbell, the London Missionary Society missionary, wrote in 1815 that the plundering expeditions they carried out for the farmer taught the Africaners how to survive as outlaws.

In 1795 Jager Africaner succeeded his father as chief of clan.  He was in charge of the family when the quarrel with Pienaar came to a head a year later Pienaar was an overbearing man who did not understand or respect the Khoi people.  When he ordered Africaner and his followers to go on an expedition that they knew would end in disaster they refused to obey.  They were summoned before the farmer.  An argument followed, either about the expedition or about wages, and Pienaar knocked Jager to the ground.  Titus Africaner, his brother, could not stand by and watch and he fired a gun at the farmer, killing him.  Campbell's account reports that the farmer's wife and child were also killed. The Africaner clan now became outcasts, on the run as murderers.  They took the cattle and the firearms belonging to the farmer and hurried north to the Orange River.  They eventually crossed the Orange River and settled in Great Namaqualand.

Africaner, now an outlaw, proved a formidable cattle raider among the frontier Boers.  He had as his enemies both the farmers in the Cape Colony and the Namaquas, among whom he was an unwelcome settler.
 He managed to strike terror into them all until at last Governor Dundas at the Cape offered a large reward for his capture.

After a number of years Africaner met the missionary Christian Albrecht.
 By this time Africaner was tired of life as an outlaw and had settled in Africanerskraal in what today is Namibia.  
Africaner lived in peace until 1810 when he attacked the London Missionary Society mission station at Pella and returned to his old way of life raiding and plundering.

Albrecht persuaded Africaner to accept a German missionary, the Rev. Johannes Ebner, for his clan.
In June 1815, Ebner baptized Jager and his family and from then on Jager became known as Christian.

Two years later the Rev. Ebner took Robert Moffat, from the London Missionary Society, to visit Africaner.  A farmer they passed on the way warned them of the desperate character of the man they were going to visit.  He told Moffat that he was taking his life in his hands by going near Africaner.


At first Africaner was cool and reserved towards Moffat.  Ebner quarreled with the chief's brother and left Africaner's clan to work among the Bondelzwarts people, who had invited him to be their missionary.  Moffat was left alone with the clan.  Gradually a strong personal friendship grew between Moffat and Africaner.

Africaner took a keen interest in what the missionary taught, attended the worship services and learned to read the Bible and write.
 His way of life was so changed that in 1819 Moffat persuaded Africaner to accompany him (dressed as a woman to avoid being killed) to Cape Town for a meeting with the governor.  Africaner was wary at first because he knew that there was a price of 1,000 rix dollars for his head.  On the way to Cape Town Moffat spent the night at the home of a farmer named Engelbrecht, who was amazed to see that he was still alive after visiting the outlaw.  As nothing had been heard of the missionary, people feared that the outlaw chief had ordered his death.  
Africaner was introduced to the farmer who raised his eyes heavenwards and said in amazement: "O God, what a miracle of thy power! What cannot thy grace accomplish!'

The governor, Lord Charles Somerset, was so impressed when he met Africaner that he granted him amnesty and gave him a wagon worth 80 pounds.
  Lord Somerset was so impressed as to what the Gospel could do, that he granted Moffat permission to go into the hinterland and begin his mission work! 

The door to the interior was now open to the Gospel’s advance!  

(Part 3 soon to follow)