John's brother
Edmund went as a student missionary to Montana, where he contracted a fever and
died. John wondered if he should take Edmund's place. During his senior year at
McCormick Theological Seminary, he came to the room of his friend Mr. Konkle
near midnight, saying he wanted all Konkle's arguments in favor of going to the
foreign mission field. "I told him that he knew as much about the foreign
field as I did; that I didn't believe it was argument that he needed, and that
I thought the way for him to settle it was to lay it before our Father and stay
until He decided for him: We sat in silence a while longer, and, saying he
believed I was right, he rose and bade me good night."
The next
morning Konkle felt a hand on his arm. Looking around, he saw John's face
radiant with a new vision. "It's settled, Konkle," said he.
John left
for India. Aboard ship, he opened a letter from a friend who wrote that he
would pray until John was filled with the Holy Spirit. Angrily John crumpled
the letter and hurled it aside. He had yielded his heart to the Lord, gotten
his degree, studied Indian languages and was obediently on his way to a life
work. How dare his friend suggest he lacked the Spirit? But when he cooled
down, he realized that his friend was right. He pleaded for the power of the
Holy Spirit.
The result
was that John became a notable intercessor, one who pleads for the souls and
needs of others. He was nicknamed "Praying Hyde." He often paid for
his concern with sleepless nights.
Revival
began when he came late to a meeting one evening. "I have been having a
great controversy with God. I feel that he has wanted me to come here and
testify to you concerning some things that he has done for me, and I have been
arguing with him that I should not do this. Only this evening...have I got
peace concerning the matter and have I agreed to obey him, and now I have come
to tell you just some things that he has done for me." John told them how
God had freed him from certain sins. Soon his listeners were weeping and confessing
their own.
In 1908,
anguished by the sight of sin and souls doomed to hell, he asked the Lord to
bring a soul a day into the kingdom of God. Soon he upped that to two souls,
and then four. God answered his prayers.
But in
March of 1911, Hyde had to say good-bye to India. His heart had shifted in his
chest and required medical attention. In the United States it was found he had
a malignant brain tumor. Surgery was necessary. On February 17, 1912 he died.
His last words were "Shout the victory of Jesus Christ!"
Bibliography:
Gordon,
Ernest. A Book of Protestant Saints. Chicago: Moody Press, 1946.Miller, Basil. Praying Hyde. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan, 1953.
Various internet articles.
Last updated April, 2007. Taken From Christiaity.com
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