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  1. Adoniram Judson Bush II (Juddie) passed away peacefully in his home on August 2, 2024. Mr. Bush was born in Norfolk VA on November 6, 1931, son of the late Captain Adoniram Judson Bush...

    • November 6, 1931
    • August 2, 2024
  2. Aug 7, 2024 · Adoniram Judson Bush II (Juddie) passed away peacefully in his home on August 2, 2024. Mr. Bush was born in Norfolk VA on November 6, 1931, son of the late.

    • August 2, 2024
  3. Adoniram Judson Bush, II OBITUARY CORRECTION: The memorial service will be held 11:00a.m. Friday August 23, 2024 at First Presbyterian Church in Norfolk. For full obituary visit...

    • August 2, 2024
  4. May 1, 2000 · His record is on high’. So runs an inscription in the Baptist meeting-house in Malden, Massachusetts. It commemorates the life and work of Adoniram Judson Jr (1788-1850), eldest son of Adoniram Judson (1752-1826), a Congregationalist minister, and his wife Abigail (1759-1842).

    • An Unusual Proposallink
    • A Long and Painful Harvestlink
    • Imprisoned and Alonelink
    • “I Find Him Not”Link
    • A Finished Bible and A New Wifelink
    • Few Die So Hardlink
    • The Fruit of This Dead Seedlink

    Judson entered Andover Seminary in Newton, Massachusetts, in October 1808, and on December 2 made solemn dedication of himself to God. The fire was burning for missions at Andover. On June 28, 1810, Judson and others presented themselves for missionary service in the East. He met Ann Hasseltine that same day and fell in love. After knowing Ann for ...

    In Burma, there began a lifelong battle in 108-degree heat with cholera, malaria, dysentery, and unknown miseries that would take not only Ann but a second wife, seven of his thirteen children, and colleague after colleague in death. Through all the struggles with sickness and interruptions, Judson labored to learn the language, translate the Bible...

    In 1823, Adoniram and Ann moved from Rangoon to Ava, the capital, about three hundred miles inland and further up the Irrawaddy River. It was risky to be that near the despotic emperor. In May of the next year, a British fleet arrived in Rangoon and bombarded the harbor. All Westerners were immediately viewed as spies, and Adoniram was dragged from...

    The psychological effect of these losses was devastating. Self-doubt overtook his mind, and he wondered if he had become a missionary for ambition and fame, not humility and self-denying love. He began to read Catholic mystics like Madame Guyon, Fénelon, and Thomas à Kempis who led him into solitary asceticism and various forms of self-mortificatio...

    Central to Judson’s missionary labors from the beginning, and especially at this juncture in his life, was the translation of the Bible. In these years of spiritual recovery, without a wife and children, he confined himself to a small room built for the purpose of being able to devote almost all his energy to refining the New Testament translation ...

    Judson’s stay in the States did not go according to plan. To everyone’s amazement, he fell in love a third time, this time with Emily Chubbuck, and married her on June 2, 1846. She was 29; he was 57. She was a famous writer and left her fame and writing career to go with Judson to Burma. They arrived in November 1846. And God gave them four of the ...

    Judson’s life was a grain of wheat that fell into the soil of Myanmar and died — again and again (John 12:24). The suffering was immense. And so was the fruit. At the turn from the second to the third millennium, Patrick Johnstone estimated the Myanmar (Burma’s new name) Baptist Convention to be 3,700 congregations with 617,781 members and 1,900,00...

  5. Adoniram Judson (/ ˌ æ d ə ˈ n aɪ r ə m /; August 9, 1788 – April 12, 1850) was an American Congregationalist and later Particular Baptist [1] missionary, who worked in Burma for almost forty years.

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  7. From 1812 to 1850, twenty-four of Judsons relatives or close associates went home to heaven, including several of his children. As a husband, father, missionary, and friend, Judson truly knew what it was to sacrifice and suffer.

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