Norris Groves
The
Father of Faith Missions
1795-1853
Norris Groves (1795-1853), "the father of faith missions," deeply influenced
the founders of the China Inland Mission, the North Africa Mission, and
particularly his own brother-in-law, George Muller.
Anthony was the only son in a family of six. His mother was gentle and talented.
His father was an aggressive businessman, who lost much of his wealth in
ill-advised ventures. The Groves were staunch Anglicans, attending the gloomy
old grime-stained Anglican Church at Fulham in London. Coupled with the stern
disciplines of a religious upbringing, the traits of the parents surfaced in
Anthony. Like his father, he was both generous and adventurous, with a quiet
determination which would not shake loose from a goal. He also displayed the
serenity of his mother. Henry Craik was a tutor to Anthony's children before
they left for Baghdad. Young Craik was a bit awed by Groves' example of
"generosity, heavenly-mindedness, great talent, persuasive eloquence,
gentleness, humility, and learning."
Groves was awakened in soul at age 13 or 14, and vowed to overcome his
shortcomings and ease his conscience by doing protestant penance as a missionary
in India. Thereafter, whenever spiritual disquiet recurred, he renewed his vow
to be a missionary. At the age of 19, to atone for his sins, he offered himself
to the Church Missionary Society. Then he met the Paget sisters, and through the
witness of Miss Bessie Paget (who would later work closely with R. C. Chapman)
Anthony came to Christ. His conversion--while it cleared the fog about sin and
salvation--did not weaken but instead gave reason to his resolve.
Following training in chemistry, surgery and dentistry, young Groves had begun a
career as a dentist in Plymouth on his nineteenth birthday. Two years later, he
married Mary Bethia Thompson. As they prospered, as a matter of principle, the
young couple purposed to give a tenth of their income to the Lord for the needy.
The proportion then increased to a fourth of their income, but the more they
gave, the more they prospered. Ultimately they carved their standard of living
to bare essentials and gave away the balance. As a dentist, he was earning 1,500
pounds a year (a considerable fortune).
At first, Mary was as opposed to Anthony's missionary ambition as he was for it.
Whenever he raised the topic she wept. He waited ten years before Mary was not
only agreeable but enthusiastic about them going, at which time they offered
themselves to the Missionary Society. They were accepted--but it was for Baghdad
instead of India. He turned his dental practice over to a young relative--to
whom he later gave it--and began studies for a theological degree at Dublin, as
a prerequisite to ordination in the Anglican Church. At this time, he began
questioning the need for a university degree for a prospective missionary. Then,
in the summer of 1827, by a strange coincidence, his house was broken into and
money set aside for schooling was stolen (although other money was left
untouched). The Groves took this as a token of the Lord's guidance and dropped
the course.
Next came doubts about ordination to preach. When he informed the mission that
he was prepared to go to the field as a layman instead of as an ordained
minister, they said he would not be able to celebrate the Lord's Supper! That
was enough to sever their commitment to the C.M.S. They prepared to go at their
own expense.
At this time Anthony gathered with believers in Dublin and broke bread after the
New Testament pattern. Groves was a precursor to multitudes who set sail without
the aid of ecclesiastical machinery. At the same time he shed the control of
missionary organizations (which meant no salaries or pledges of any financial
support from men). In a small sailing yacht, on June 12, 1829, Anthony, Mary,
sons Henry (age 10) and Frank, (age 9), and seven co-laborers set sail for St.
Petersburg, Russia.
The stormy voyage would be prophetic of the rest of the journey. In Russia they
traveled through rugged landscape in springless carriages crammed with bodies
and baggage. Attacks by mosquitoes, drenched in torrents, endangered by gangs,
strange food, bad food, no food and failed horses combined to discourage.
But Anthony was resilient. At their destination, he gave thanks for every
survivor of that journey of four months and 1,400 miles. Their account reads
like a paraphrase of 2 Corinthians 11.
In the first year in Baghdad, Anthony wrote, "I never had a very strong
expectation that what we were to do was manifestly very great, but that we shall
answer a purpose in God's plan I have no doubt."
He started to study Arabic, opened a boys' school and, to establish contacts,
gave free dental and optical treatment (including cataract operations).
Baghdad's suffocating heat was dreadful The citizens appeared to be warlike,
thieving, and bigoted.
Then came the plague in April of 1830, which, during its peak, carried off a
thousand victims a day. "Fifty unburied corpses might be seen during a walk of
500 yards, and the wails of naked and starving children who roamed the streets
were heartbreaking." At the height of the plague the river flooded, collapsing
about 5,000 houses and crushing some of the inhabitants.
Most horrific was the death of Groves' devoted wife, Mary. Entire families had
perished in the districts around the missionaries' home. Still the plague had
not invaded their home. But as the clouds seemed to be receding, Anthony made
this entry in his diary: "The Lord has this day manifested that the disease of
my dear wife is the plague, and of a very dangerous type, so that our hearts are
prostrate in the Lord's presence . . . It is indeed an awful moment, yet my dear
wife's faith triumphs. The difference between a child of God and a worldling is
not in death, but in the hope the one has in Jesus, while the other is without
hope and without God in the world."
After the plague, a Turkish army besieged the city. In later years, Anthony's
son Henry "pathetically recalled the fact that after leaving England he could
not remember ever having been a boy." For Anthony, a hidden resource
strengthened him to write, "When I consider how God, in His infinite and
unsearchable Providence, has seen fit to bring to naught all our plans . . . I
cannot but feel it is a strong call to form very few plans for the future and
just to work by the day."
Among other trials, the long delay or loss of letters meant protracted isolation
and privation. Financial support was uncertain. He once claimed that they went
without financial support from anyone in England for over a year, but that the
Lord did not allow him to go into debt. His diary contains repeated praise to
the Lord for material provision. For example, "My soul is led to abhor more and
more that love of independence which still clings to it, when I see how it would
shut me out from these manifestations of my Father's loving care."
About this time, a revised charter granted to the East India Company opened the
way for unrestricted missionary work in India. On invitation from Colonel (later
General Sir) Arthur Cotton, in 1833, Groves visited widely among missionaries in
India. He was in his element. Soon he brought his sons and others from Baghdad,
and in the next two decades found open doors for the gospel of Christ, mainly in
the Godavari Delta.
He was not a church-builder like his friends J. G. Bellet, R. C. Chapman, J. N.
Darby, and George Muller, but rather a single-minded evangelist and teacher. In
logic, he was consistent (even if his applications were not always workable). He
could be staunch, yet courteous to any who disagreed. And disagree they did.
His aggressive exhortations to missionaries to live simply and to trust God to
supply their needs was not always welcome. But one young convert, John
Aroolappen, acted on Groves' principles and as a full-time worker lived "by
faith." Through Aroolappen's ministry, a revival broke out in Tinnevelly in
South India and many congregations were formed. Groves visited this area, and
his teaching so upset the Anglicans that they accused him of being the greatest
enemy the Church of England had in India.
After a year's furlough in England, he returned to India with a small party of
missionaries and a generous stock of sheep, cattle, chickens, and geese (The
sailors complained about being on Noah's ark) in 1836.
Groves continued preaching and teaching in India until illhealth forced him back
to England in 1852. His condition deteriorated until he quietly passed into the
presence of his Master in May 1853 in the home of George Muller.
Anthony Norris Groves' contribution to the missionary enterprise springs less
from measurable results than it does from his utter devotion to Christ and
complete dependence upon Him for his needs. He left a pattern to emulate.