6
May 1955 A.D. “Old
School” Presbyterian Missionary , Rev. M.A. Pearson, Passes
May 6, 2014: M. A.
Pearson
As Francis Schaeffer said, in the Kingdom of God, there
are no little people. Rev. and Mrs. M.A. Pearson were two selfless servants in
God’s vineyard, unknown to most, who labored in near poverty in order to bring
the good news of Jesus Christ to the Cherokee nation.
Missionary to Cherokees Called Home to Be With Lord
The Rev. M. A. Pearson, minister in the Bible
Presbyterian Church and missionary for many years to the Cherokee Indians in
Oklahoma, went to be with the Lord on Friday, May 6, 1955.
Mr. Pearson worked among the Cherokee Indians as a
missionary from 1911 until his retirement in 1953.
Manford Alphaeus Pearson was born in Waverly, Kansas,
June 26, 1876, graduated from Coe College, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, in 1903, and
from Princeton Theological Seminary in 1906. From his graduation from Princeton
until he entered the mission field, he was a local pastor, having been ordained
by the Presbytery of Neosho (PCUSA), on September 19, 1906, whereupon he served
as Stated Supply from 1906-1907 for PCUSA churches in Altamont and Mound
Valley, Kansas. From 1907 to 1910, he served other PCUSA churches throughout
Kansas, in Chetopa, Toronto, Liberal, Seiling and Helena. Finally, in 1911, he
began his life’s work with the Cherokee Indians, working initially under the
auspices of the PCUSA’s Board of Home Missions. laboring with the Cherokee
Indian Mission in Oklahoma.
Rev. Pearson withdrew from the Presbyterian Church in the
U.S.A. in 1922 due to the prevailing modernism of the denomination. From
1922-1939, he continued his work with the Cherokee by associating with the
Gospel Missionary Union out of Kansas City, Missouri. He was later received by
the Presbytery of Philadelphia, of the Presbyterian Church of America (later
the OPC), on November 2, 1936, and subsequently was among those who in 1938
left to form the Bible Presbyterian Synod.
Mr. Pearson, during the last few years of his ministry
with the Cherokees, translated parts of the Old Testament, then the Gospel of
John, and later the New Testament into their language. The Cherokees had the
Bible, but their copies were wearing out and the Bible Society did not plan to print
more. Moreover, there were some 400 errors in the translation. For these
reasons, Mr. Pearson made the new translation in Cherokee.
Upon his retirement, he moved to the East and was a
resident in “Evening Rest,” the Bible Presbyterian Home for the Aged in
Delanco, New Jersey. While there he made a number of recordings for use in the
Cherokee Churches he had established where as yet there was no missionary or
minister to take his place. On May
6, 1955, Rev. Pearson died suddenly of a heart attack while a
guest at the Bible Presbyterian Home in Delanco, N.J.
Pictured above right, Rev. M.A. Pearson and his second
wife, Ella (Cooper) Pearson. Rev. Pearson’s first wife, Martha (Smith) Pearson,
had died in 1933.
Upon Rev. Pearson’s death, an obituary was printed on the
pages of The Christian
Beacon, which included the following memorial from the BPC Minutes of synod:
“His funeral was held in the tablernacle of the Bible
Presbyterian Church of Collingswood, N.J. Dr. McIntire stated that he had known
Mr. Pearson all the years of Synod. Mr. Pearson often stated that he had
belonged to Synod before the formation of our Synod. He was a real scholar. He
had done a great work of translation in the Cherokee Old and New Testament.
From 1911 on he had worked among the Cherokee Indians. He was stalwart for the
faith. Mrs. Pearson showed Dr. McIntire Mr. Pearson’s prayer list which he kept
in an old shoe box. It contained a detailed card filing system of B.P.
Ministers, Independent Board missionaries, regional officers of the I.C.C.C.
and many others connected with the whole sphere of our work with notes and
clippings concerning each. He had a great burden of prayer for our
movement. Synod then stood for a season of prayer led by the Rev. Charles
E. Richter.”
[excerpted from The
Christian Beacon, May 12, 1955]
I can only wish that someone had thought to preserve that
old shoe box full of prayer lists and cards. What a testimony it would bear.
Words to Live By:
A poem greatly loved and much quoted by Mr. Pearson is Annie Johnson Flint’s
“He Giveth More Grace.”
He giveth more grace when the burden becomes greater.
He sendeth more strength when
labors increase.
To added affliction he addeth
His mercies,
To multiplied trials—His
multiplied grace.
When we have exhausted our store of endurance,
When strength seems to fail
ere the day is half done;
When we reach the end of our
hoarded resources
Our Father’s full giving is
only begun.
His love has no limit, His grace has no measure,
His power no boundary known
unto man;
For out of His infinite riches
in Jesus
He giveth and giveth and
giveth again.
Works published by Rev. M.A. Pearson:
The Gospel of John the Apostle. [Westville, Okla.], 1948. Cherokee; 83 p.; 19 cm.
Note: Cherokee version by M.A. Pearson together with the King James Version in
English. Includes English note on pronunciation. In the syllabic script
elaborated by S.A. Worcester.
[Genesis]. New York : American Bible Society, 1953.
Cherokee; 400 p. 13 cm. Note: Title on title page in Cherokee. English
title from p. [3]. “Cherokee O.T. parts”–Title page verso. Includes: Genesis,
Exodus, selections from Psalms, Proverbs, and Isaiah, and Jonah. Translated by
M.A. Pearson. Text in syllabic script elaborated by S.A. Worcester.
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