GOING out to serve as a missionary in a foreign land is not
an easy thing. It means leaving behind friends, relatives and
familiar surroundings. It requires adjusting to new
circumstances and possibly facing unfamiliar problems. But
there are abundant blessings that await those willing and able
to make sacrifices in helping honest-hearted people to
become devoted servants of Jehovah God.
The fifty young men and women who graduated from the
Watchtower Bible School of Gilead on March 4, 1974, have
reason to look forward to these blessings. This is because
most of them received assignments to serve as missionaries
in foreign fields.
The discourses given during the graduation exercises on
Monday afternoon encouraged them to stick to their
assignments so that they would not lose out on the joys of
missionary service. One speaker admonished the graduates
to keep as their goal the advancement of true worship, not
allowing themselves to be sidetracked. Another stressed the
importance of their having courage, imitating men like Joshua
of old. Still another called attention to the need for using
wisdom in pursuing each step they would be taking and not
permitting their mental eyes to look behind them.
F. W. Franz, basing his remarks on 1 Chronicles chapter 5,
pointed to the ancient Gileadites as an example worthy of
imitation.
In the days of King Saul the Israelites inhabiting the land of
Gilead east of the Jordan were enjoying great prosperity.
Their livestock had become very numerous. So they
courageously pressed forward in expanding their territory
beyond the land of Gilead, toward the river Euphrates. This
they did in harmony with God’s promise made to their
forefather Abraham.—Gen. 15:18; 1 Chron. 5:10.
Hence, they came into conflict with the Hagrites (possibly
descendants of Hagar and thus descendants of her son
Ishmael, hence Ismaelites). The Gileadites faced tremendous
odds. They numbered 44,760. But in the ensuing conflict they
took 100,000 living captives. This was by no means the
complete Hagrite force, for the Bible reports that ‘many had
fallen slain.’ Manifestly the Gileadites could not have gained
the victory in their own strength, and they did not do so. They
looked to Jehovah God to help them. “It was to God that they
called for aid in the war,” says the Bible account, “and he let
himself be entreated in their favor because they trusted in
him.”—1 Chron. 5:18-22.
Making application to the Gilead graduates, F. W. Franz
urged them likewise to trust in Jehovah as they, equipped with
the shield of faith and the sword of the spirit, God’s Word,
would engage, not in physical warfare, but in spiritual warfare
against great odds.
Following up F. W. Franz’ remarks, N. H. Knorr, president
of the Watchtower Bible School of Gilead, presented stirring
admonition to keep on preaching in imitation of Jesus Christ,
his apostles and other disciples. In the concluding portion of
his talk, he related modern examples of the fine work done by
missionaries and others in preaching the “good news.”
Thereafter the graduates received an envelope containing
their diploma, and the president of the School announced their
assignments of service in seventeen different lands.
In the evening the graduates of Gilead’s fifty-sixth class put
on a most enjoyable program, featuring music from Europe,
the Middle East and North America as well as two thoughtprovoking
Bible dramas. The first of these dramas aided the
audience to benefit from what happened to a prophet whose
activities are related at 1 Kings 13:1-32; the other drama
portrayed outstanding experiences of the Israelites during
their forty years in the wilderness. Both were excellently done!
There can be little question that the graduates and others
who shared in the joy of the occasion were impressed with the
need to keep on preaching, imitating the courage and
devotion of God’s servants of ancient times.
w74 5/1 p. 286 Gilead Graduates Urged to Imitate
Ancient Gileadites
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