A Baptist Page Mission
Brief
Bill Wallace of China

Bill
Wallace was born in 1908, the son of a physician.
Young Bill however, had little interest in medicine and instead came
to love cars and motorcycles. At the age of seventeen, Wallace's life
was changed forever when God led him to submit his life to missions.
On that day, July 5th of 1925, Bill Wallace accepted the call of God
to become a medical missionary wherever His Master saw fit to lead him.
Ten
years later after finishing medical school and turning down a lucrative
offer of a medical practice in the States, Wallace headed off to Wuchow,
China to become a medical missionary for the Foreign Mission Board of
the Southern Baptist Convention. In 1935 Bill Wallace left his beloved
Knoxville, TN and found his way to the Stout Memorial Hospital in Wuchow.
The
years that followed were hardly easy in China. Wallace continued to
minister through the Boxer Rebellion, the Japanese invasion during World
War II, and the Communist takeover that followed the war. Everyone who
encountered Wallace found him to be a tireless laborer in the Master's
fields. He had an intense love for the Lord and those the Lord loved.
In
spite of all that Wallace had done to help the Chinese, the new communist
regime came to see him, as well as all foreigners, as a threat to their
iron grip on the people of China. While many missionaries heeded the
advice of their mission boards to leave China, Bill Wallace could not
bring himself to leave the people he had come to love. After being accused
of espionage and forced to sign a phony confession, Wallace eventually
was beaten to death in a dark prison cell.
After
Wallace's death, the Communist sought to bury his body in an unmarked
grave to cover up their evil deed. Faithful Christian Chinese, not fooled
by the ruse, found Wallace's body and laid him to rest in a proper service.
They placed a marker there in Wouchow that simply read, "For Me
to Live Is Christ."
Around
the world there are many memorials to Bill Wallace of China. Jesse C.
Fletcher wrote Bill Wallace of China in 1963, exposing
a new generation to this example of selfless missions. A motion picture
based on the book was later released. In Puchan, Korea there is the
Wallace Memorial Hospital. The Baptist Student Union at the University
of Tennessee Medical Center is named for Wallace. In Knoxville, TN there
is the Wallace Memorial Baptist Church. Wallace's great memorial is
not buildings however. Hundreds of young men and women have been inspired
by his life to take their medical abilities and use them to the glory
of God. May we all remember Bill Wallace of China and the God he so
faithfully served!
Source:
Bill Wallace of China by Jesse C. Fletcher, Timothy and Denise
George, Editors (Broadman and Holman Publishers, 1996).
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