When
King S.O. Abimola II bestowed an African chief's title on a 56-year-old woman
from Texas, young people danced in procession to the palace and hundreds
assembled for the ceremony.
The
honoree, Southern Baptist missionary Alma Rohm, donned a traditional hand-woven
Yoruba dress, coral jewelry and a headdress adorned with akoko leaves.
The
king had planned to give her the title "Iya Nisin," often used of
Christian women to mean "mother of those who worship." But one of the
area's Muslim chiefs objected.
"No,
we want her to be 'Iya Nisin Ilu' ['mother in service of the whole
community']," he said.
It
was, in 1982, a fitting tribute to a woman who had poured out 32 years of her
life for Christ among the people of Iwo, Nigeria.
But
Alma Rohm was far from finished with her service in Iwo.
Rohm
was among 37 veteran Southern Baptist missionaries who received the title of
"emeritus missionary" recently in a service at New Bridge Baptist
Church in Richmond, Va. Her 54 years in Nigeria was the longest tenure in a
group with 1,172 years of overseas service among them.
Only
three missionaries have had longer tenures in the International Mission Board's
159-year history: China missionary doctor Rosewell H. Graves, who served 57
years, and Brazil missionary legends William "Buck" and Anne Bagby,
who served 56 years. Only three other missionaries have had tenures longer than
50 years.
WRESTLING
WITH GOD
A
native of Waco, Texas, Rohm was only 12 when she committed her life to
missionary service in Africa. But it wasn't a child's decision lightly made.
"Not
long after I was saved at age 9, the Holy Spirit told me I was to be a single
woman missionary teacher in Africa," Rohm said. "I objected
vehemently. I wanted to get married, have a lovely home and four children.
"When
I could not escape the voice of the Holy Spirit, I finally told God I would be
a missionary if I could go to China or Japan and serve as a doctor or a nurse.
But that was not the task God had for me. When He kept repeating the same call,
I stubbornly told God I would not be a missionary.
"When
I was 12 years old, our church choir sang an Easter cantata on the seven last
words of Christ on the cross," she said. "Between each anthem, the
lights were dimmed except for a lighted cross in the baptistery, and the choir
director read one of the seven last sayings of Jesus on the cross.
"As
I heard those words, my heart was touched, and I said to myself, ‘If Jesus
could die for me, surely I should be able to live for Him.’"
SETTING
SAIL
After
graduation from Baylor University in Waco and Southwestern Baptist Theological
Seminary in Fort Worth, Rohm was among six new missionaries appointed on May 4,
1950. She set sail for Nigeria on July 5.
She
arrived in Lagos in time to attend a celebration of the Nigeria Baptist
Convention's 100th anniversary.
Rohm
was sent to teach briefly in a girls' school in Yaba and then had three months
of language study in Ire while serving as companion to a missionary nurse who
was alone in the town. A year after arriving in Nigeria, she was transferred to
a Baptist teacher-training college in Iwo, a Muslim town in southwestern
Nigeria.
It
was a time, according to Nigerian journalist Seyi Odewale, when most of Nigeria
was "no more than thick jungles, lined by scanty footpaths, and the
hinterland, dotted by hamlets of mud houses."
At
the Baptist college, Rohm taught English literature, education and organ
classes, served as school librarian, played piano for the church, led the
choir, directed Shakespearean plays and organized an annual nationwide Baptist
music workshop.
When
Nigeria gained its independence from Britain in 1960, her choir was called on
to sing the country's new anthem as its flag was raised over the capital for
the first time.
On
Sundays, Rohm went out with students who preached on the town's streets.
"Iwo
was one of the most solidly Muslim towns in Nigeria," Rohm recalled.
"There was one Baptist church in the town and two small churches that had
been started by student preachers, as well as a Baptist church at the college.
"In
those early years, I saw two more Baptist churches established by our street
preachers. One of those churches is now the largest in Iwo."
OPEN
HEARTS
Africans
were responsive to the Good News of God's love and salvation in Jesus Christ.
For
100 years, Nigeria was the only country in Africa where Southern Baptist
missionaries were serving. As Rohm arrived in the country, the very first
Southern Baptist missionaries were just entering Ghana -- then called the Gold
Coast.
"Alma
Rohm can remember when the first missionaries went from Nigeria on survey trips
to evaluate the prospects of sending missionaries to Kenya and Tanzania,"
International Mission Board President Jerry Rankin told the other retirees
Sept. 13. "Those are countries where many of you have served for many
years."
Whereas
Southern Baptists had 131 missionaries in Nigeria in 1950, "now we have
more than a thousand serving all over Africa," Rankin said.
In
Nigeria, Baptist churches now number more than 7,000 and report more than 1
million members, a remarkable contrast to the 340 churches and 25,343 members
counted in 1950, Rankin said.
Countrywide,
Christians account for about 40 percent of Nigeria's 137 million people. In Iwo
itself, some estimate the city of 300,000 is now as much as 60 percent
Christian.
"Prayer
meetings in the churches are crowded," Rohm said, "not only by church
members, but also by prominent Muslims."
'CHIEF
DOCTOR MAMA'
In
a country where tensions between Christians and Muslims at times flare into
violence, Rohm's tireless service and genuinely Christian spirit has earned her
the title "Chief Doctor Mama."
She
is chief by a king's decree. A doctor because the Baptist seminary in Ogbomosho
wanted to honor her music work in churches all over the country.
"Mama" is a title of respect bestowed affectionately on those the
Yoruba love.
The
church at the college named a new primary school in her honor. A few years
later, the congregation changed its name to Alma Rohm Baptist Church. In 1992,
the school erected a statue of the diminutive missionary in front of its
library.
At
the thanksgiving ceremony after receiving the chief's title, Rohm acknowledged
that she had found God faithful in her obedience.
"In
the Bible, Jesus promised that 'everyone who has left houses or brothers or
sisters or father or mother or wife or children or lands, for My name's sake,
shall receive a hundredfold,'" Rohm said.
"I
thought I was leaving all that, but here I am, living in the largest mission
house in Nigeria. More than a thousand people call me 'Mama.' At least 28 I can
name call me 'Grandma.' Ten call me 'Great Grandma.' And now you have given me
the land."
At
the retirement service, her testimony was simple: "How
blessed I have been! How undeserving I am!"
RICHMOND,
Va. (BP)
Mama hurriedly left for the U.S. late 2002 as a result of sickness. But she was later certified fit medically and she returned to Iwo on Monday, 17th February, 2003 with a counsel to spend two and a half months only "to put her things in proper order and say bye to her numerous beneficiaries". She did but later returned to Iwo to fulfill her vow to return to her creator in the town where she had been living since August 1951. She had
been quietly serving the Lord until when she breathed her last today.
Here
goes Mama Alma Rohm, when cometh another?
The Nigerian Baptist Convention, the people of Iwo, the BOWEN Community in particular and the Iwo community will surely miss her. Good Night Mama.
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