Brief Biography of Sadhu Sundar Singh, the apostle with bleeding feet
Against Christian
faith
Sundar Singh was born in 1889 into an important landowning
Sikh family in Patiala state, North India. Sikhs, rejecting Hindu polytheism and Muslim intolerance in the sixteenth century,
had become a vigorous nation with a religion of their own. Sundar Singh's mother took him week by week to sit at the feet
of a Sadhu, an ascetic holy man, who lived in the jungle some miles away, but she also sent him to a Christian mission school
where he could learn English.
Her death when he was fourteen plunged him into violence and
despair. He turned on the missionaries, persecuted their Christian converts, and ridiculed their faith. In final defiance
of their religion, he bought a Bible and burned it page by page in his home compound while his friends watched. The same night
he went to his room determined to commit suicide on a railway line.
Having studied line by line all the religions he knew, having
heard from the lips of many religious teachers all they had to tell, and in spite of all still experiencing a deeper and more
unsatisfied longing for the shanty he believed possible, Sundar was led by God to see that in none of these things could he
find what he sought. In the silent sanctuary of his own heart came the thought
at last, that perhaps in the despised book he had so furiously destroyed there might be some help, and so he yet again took
the Testament in hand. Torn with anguish and driven to despair, he read there,
Come unto me and I will give you rest. The words arrested
him, and as he continued to read the story of the Cross, the wonder grew.
Vision of Christ
The leaven of the gospel had entered his heart and as he read
God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth on Him
should not perish but have everlasting life, a whisper of comfort came to his heart. Still the burden of languish prevented him from finding rest. At
last, he felt he must put an end to the struggle. So one night he made a firm
resolve that he would obtain peace before dawn either in this world or the next. He
knew that at five oclock each morning, the Ludhiana Express passed at the bottom of the garden of his father and to end his
misery seemed no sin to the boy.
In Hindu fashion, he bathed and with the Testament in hand,
he retired to his room to spend the time in reading, meditation and prayer. Just before dawn, Sundar became conscious of a
bright cloud filling the room, and in the cloud, he saw the radiant figure and face of Christ.
As he looked upon the vision it seemed to him that Christ spoke saying, Why do you oppose me? I am your Savior. I died on the Cross
for you. His determined enmity was broken down forever as he looked upon
that Face so filled with Divine love and pity.
However, before dawn, he wakened his father to announce that
he had seen Jesus Christ in a vision and heard His voice. Henceforth he would follow Christ forever, he declared. Still no
more than fifteen, he was utterly committed to Christ and in the twenty-five years left to him would witness heroically for
his Lord. The discipleship of the teenager was immediately tested as his father pleaded and demanded that he give up this
absurd "conversion." When he refused, Sher Singh gave a farewell feast for his son, then denounced him and expelled him from
the family. Several hours later, Sundar realized that his food had been poisoned, and only the help of a nearby Christian
community saved his life.
Called to serve
On his sixteenth birthday, he was publicly baptized as a Christian
in the parish church in Simla, a town high in the Himalayan foothills. For some time previously, he had been staying at the
Christian Leprosy Home at Sabathu, not far from Simla, serving the leprosy patients there. It was to remain one of his most
beloved bases and he returned there after his baptism. Then, in October 1906, he set out from it in quite a new way. He walked
onto the road, a tall, good-looking, vigorous teenager, wearing a yellow robe and turban. Everyone stared at him as he passed.
The yellow robe was the "uniform" of a Hindu Sadhu, traditionally an ascetic devoted to the gods, who either begged his way
along the roads or sat, silent, remote, and often filthy, meditating in the jungle or some lonely place. The young Sundar
Singh had also chosen the Sadhu's way, but he would be a Sadhu with a difference.
"I am not worthy to follow in the steps
of my Lord," he said, "but, like Him, I want no home, no possessions. Like Him I will belong to
the road, sharing the suffering of my people, eating with those who will give me shelter, and telling all men of the love
of God."
Persecuted for his
faith
He at once put his vocation to the test by going back to his
home village, Rampur, where he was shown an unexpectedly warm welcome. This was poor preparation for the months that were
to follow. Scarcely tough enough to meet physical hardship, the sixteen-year-old Sadhu went northward through the Punjab,
over the Bannihal Pass into Kashmir, and then back through fanatically Muslim Afghanistan and into the brigand-infested North-West
Frontier and Baluchistan. His thin, yellow robe gave him little protection against the snows, and his feet became torn from
the rough tracks. Not many months had passed before the little Christian communities of the north were referring to him as
"the apostle with the bleeding feet." This initiation showed him what he might expect in the future. He was stoned, arrested,
visited by a shepherd who talked with strange intimacy about Jesus and then was gone, and left to sleep in a wayside hut with
an unexpected cobra for company. Meetings with the mystical and the sharply material, persecution and welcome, would all characterize
his experience in years ahead. From the villages in the Simla hills, the long line of the snow-clad Himalayas and the rosy
peak of Nanga Parbat, rose in the distance. Beyond them lay Tibet, a closed Buddhist land that missionaries had long failed
to penetrate with the gospel. Ever since his baptism, Tibet had beckoned Sundar, and in 1908, at the age of nineteen, he crossed
its frontiers for the first time. Any stranger entering into this closed fanatical territory, dominated by Buddhism and devil-worship,
risked both terror as well as death. Singh took the risk with his eyes, and his heart, wide open. The state of the people
appalled him. Their airless homes, like themselves, were filthy. He himself was stoned as he bathed in some cold water because
they believed that "holy men never washed." Food was mostly unobtainable and he existed on hard, parched barley. Everywhere
there was hostility. And this was only "lower Tibet" just across the border. Sundar went back to Sabathu determined to return
the next year.
Visit to Tibet
On his first journey in 1908,
when he was scarcely nineteen years of age, he started alone and was unacquainted with the language spoken in Tibet. He took the help of two Moravian missionaries staying in Tibet. In Tibet, he soon found the people of Tibet resented his teaching, land wherever he went; he was met with
bitter opposition and hatred, especially from the Lamas. Notwithstanding this,
he reached the important town of Tashigang in safety and was astonished and pleased to receive kindly treatment at the hands
of the head Lama of the place. This man was a person of importance and under
him served some hundreds of inferior Lamas.
The Lama not only received the
Sadhu with kindness but also provided him with food and shelter, and as the weather was bitterly cold, this hospitality was
most acceptable. Moreover, the Lama called a gathering of the persons under his
control to hear the Sadhus message, and so he preached the gospel with great thankfulness of heart.
Journeying on from this place,
he was fortunate enough to arrive at a town under the rule of another Lama who was a friend of the Lama of Tashigang, and
here again he was accorded a welcome and a good hearing. From this place he visited
several other towns and villages, but in these he met with even greater opposition than in his earlier work. He was constantly threatened and warned to get out of the country lest some evil should befall him. However, he was not to be thus terrorized, and he continued his work amidst many difficulties.
At a town called Rasar he was
arrested and arraigned before the head Lama on the charge of entering the country and preaching the gospel of Christ. He was found guilty, and amidst a crowd of evil-disposed persons, he was led away
to the place of execution. The two favorite forms of capital punishment are being
sewn up in a wet yak skin and pout out in the sun until death ends the torment, or being cast into the depth of a dry well,
the top being firmly fastened over the head of the culprit. The latter was chosen
for the Sadhu.
Arrived at the place he was stripped
of his clothes, and cast into the dark depths of this ghastly charmel-house with such violence that his right arm was injured. Many others had gone down this same well before him never to return, and he alighted
on a mass of human bones land rotting flesh. Any death seemed preferable to this. Wherever he laid his hands, they met putrid flesh, while the odor almost poisoned
him. In the words of his Savior, he cried, Why hast Thou
forsaken me?
Day passed into night, making
no change in the darkness of this awful place and bringing no relief by sleep. Without
food or even water, the hours grew into days, and Sundar felt he could not last much longer.
On the third night, just when he had been crying to God in prayer, he heard a grating sound overhead. Someone was opening the locked lid of his dismal prison. He
heard the key turn and the rattle of the iron covering as sit was drawn away. Then
a voice reached him from the top of the well, telling him to take hold of the rope that was being let down for his rescue. As the rope reached him he grasped it with all his remaining strength, and was strongly
but gently pulled up from the evil place into the fresh air above.
When he arrived at the top of
the well, the lid was drawn over again and locked. When he looked round, his deliverer was nowhere to be seen, but the pain
in his arm was gone, and the clean air filled him with new life. All that the
Sadhu felt able to do was to praise God for His wonderful deliverance, and when morning came, he struggled back to the town,
where he rested in the Serai (which means a resting place) until he was able to start preaching again. Back in the city at his old work again was cause for a great commotion.
The news was quickly taken to the Lama.
The Sadhu was again arrested and
brought to the judgment seat, and being questioned as to what happened he told the story of his marvelous escape. The Lama was greatly angered, declaring that someone must have secured the key and gone to hiss rescue,
but when search was made for the key and it was found on his own girdle, he was speechless with amazement and fear. He then ordered Sundar to leave the city and get away as far as possible, lest his powerful God should
bring some untold disaster upon himself and his people.
Perseverance in service
He had a great desire to visit Palestine and re-live some of
the happenings in Jesus' life. In 1908, he went to Bombay, hoping to board a convenient ship. However, to his intense disappointment,
the government refused him a permit, and he had to return to the north. It was on this trip that he suddenly recognized a
basic dilemma of the Christian mission to India. A Brahmin had collapsed in the hot, crowded carriage and, at the next station,
the Anglo-Indian stationmaster came rushing with a cup of water from the refreshment room. The Brahmin -- a high-caste Hindu
-- thrust it away in horror. He needed water, but he could only accept it in his own drinking vessel. When that was brought
he drank, and revived. In the same way, Sundar Singh realized, India would not widely accept the gospel of Jesus offered in
Western guise. That, he recognized, was why many listeners responded to him in his Indian Sadhu's robe.
There was still sharper disillusionment to come. In 1909, he
was persuaded to begin training for the Christian ministry at the Anglican college in Lahore. From the beginning, he found
himself being tormented by fellow students for being "different" and no doubt too self-assured. This phase ended when their
ringleader heard Singh quietly praying for him, with love in his tones and words. However, other tensions remained. Much in
the college course seemed irrelevant to the gospel as India needed to hear it, and then, as the course drew to an end, the
principal stated that he must now discard his Sadhu's robe and wear "respectable"
European clerical dress; use formal Anglican worship; sing English hymns; and never preach outside his parish without special
permission. Never again visit Tibet, he asked? That would be, to him, an unthinkable rejection of God's call. With deep sadness
he left the college, still dressed in his yellow robe, and in 1912 began his annual trek into Tibet as the winter snows began
to melt on the Himalayan tracks and passes.
Kailash Maharishi
A North Indian newspaper had published the following:
Our world less, selfless and godly brother Sundar Singh has
discovered the Christian hermit, the Maharishi at Kailash, who has for years been on the snowy Himalayas praying and interceding
for the worldYou have revealed to the world the secret of one of the members of our mission the Maharishi at Kailash.
On the summit of one of the mountains of the Kailash Range
was a deserted Buddhist temple, and then rarely visited by man. A few miles from
this temple dwelt the great saint known as the Majority of Kailash, in a cave some 13,000 feet above the sea level. All this region is the Olympus of India, the seat of Hindu holy myths, and it is associated in Hindu sacred
books with the names of great and devout souls of all times. In one cave, the
Sadhu found the skeleton of some nameless holy man who had died while meditating there.
In the summer of 1912, he traveled through these regions alone
and on foot, often refreshed by the beautiful scene trough, which he passed, but more often fatigued to the last degree in
his difficult and fruitless search for the holy men he hoped to meet there. He
would never forget the day when, struck with snow-blindness and almost wearied to death, he staggered drearily on over snowy
and stony crags, not knowing whither, he went. Suddenly he lost his balance and
fell. Recovering from the fall, he awoke to one of the greatest experiences of
his life, for he opened his eyes to find himself lying outside a huge cave, in the shelter of which sat the Maharishi of Kailash
in deep meditation.
The sight that met his eyes was so appalling that Sundar closed
them and almost fainted. Little by little, he ventured to inspect the object
before him, and then discovered that he was looking at a living human being, but so old and clothed with long hair as to appear
at first glance like an animal. Sundar realized that thus, unexpectedly he had
succeeded in his search after a holy man, and as soon as he could command his voice, he spoke to the aged saint. Recalled from his meditation, the saint opened his eyes and, casting a piercing glance upon the Sadhu,
amazed him by saying, Let us kneel and pray. Then followed a most earnest Christian
prayer ending in the name of Jesus. This over, the Maharishi unrolled a ponderous
copy of the Gospels in Greek and read some verses from the fifth chapter of Matthew.
Sunder heard from his own lips the account of his wonderful
life. He claimed to be of very great age.
The roll from which he had read, he explained, had come down to him from Francis Xavier, and the Sadhu noticed that
it was all written in Greek uncials, and may therefore prove to be of value to scholars should it come into their possession. The saint said he was born in Alexandria of a Mohammedan family, and was brought up
to be a zealous follower of the Prophet. At the age of thirty, he renounced the
world and entered a monastery in order to give himself up entirely to religion. However,
the more he read the Quran and prayed, the unhappier he became. During these
days of spiritual distress, he heard of a Christian saint who had gone over from India to preach in Alexandria, and from him
he heard words of life that filled his hopeless soul with joy. He now left the
monastery to accompany his teacher in his missionary journeys. After some time
spent thus, permission was given him to go on his own account to preach the gospel wherever God sent him. The saint then started out on an evangelistic campaign that lasted a very long time.
The Sadhu had long conversations with him about holy things,
and heard many strange things from his lips. His astonishing visions as related
to the Sadhu would, if written down, read like another Book of Revelation, so strange and incomprehensible are they, and the
Sadhu himself warns readers and hearers of these visions that common interpretations can never disclose the meaning, since
the Saint had to clothe his ideals in language that cannot be taken literally. The
Sadhu had visited the Maharishi three times.
Sadhu in the Christian
world
Whether he won many continuing disciples of Christ on these
hazardous Tibetan treks is not yet known. For the Tibetan it was Buddhism or nothing. To acknowledge Jesus Christ was to ask
for death. But the Sadhu's own courageous preaching cannot have been without effect.
As Sundar Singh moved through his twenties his ministry widened
greatly, and long before he was thirty years old his name and picture were familiar all over the Christian world. He described
in terms of a vision a struggle with Satan to retain his humility but he was, in fact, always human, approachable and humble,
with a sense of fun and a love of nature. This, with his "illustrations" from ordinary life, gave his addresses great impact.
Many people said: "He not only looks like Jesus, he talks like Jesus must have talked." Yet, all
his talks and his personal speech sprang out of profound early morning meditation, especially on the Gospels. In 1918, he
made a long tour of South India and Ceylon, and the following year he was invited to Burma, Malaya, China, and Japan. Some
of the stories from these tours were as strange as any of his Tibetan adventures. He had power over wild things, like the
leopard, which crept up to him while he stood praying and crouched as he fondled its head. He had power over evil, typified
by the sorcerer who tried to hypnotize him in a railway-carriage and blamed the Bible in the Sadhu's pocket for his failure.
He had power over disease and illness, though he never allowed his healing gifts to be publicized.
For a long time Sundar Singh had wanted to visit Britain, and
the opportunity came when his old father, Sher Singh, came to tell him that he too had become a Christian and wished to give
him the money for his fare to Britain. He visited the West twice, traveling to Britain, the United States, and Australia in
1920 and to Europe again in 1922. He was welcomed by Christians of many traditions, and his words searched the hearts of people
who now faced the aftermath of World War I and who seemed to evidence a shallow attitude to life. Sundar was appalled by the
materialism, emptiness, and irreligion he found everywhere, contrasting it with the awareness of God in Asia, no matter how
limited that might be. Once back in India he continued his ministry, though it was clear that he was getting more physically
frail.
Sadhu and the Indian
churches
His gifts, his personal attractiveness, the relevance of Christ
as he presented Him to his Indian people could have given Sundar Singh a unique position of leadership in the Indian church.
However, to the end of his life he remained a man who sought nothing for him, but only the opportunity to offer Christ to
everyone. He was not a member of any denomination, and did not try to begin one of his own, though he shared fellowship with
Christians of all kinds. He lived (to use a later phrase) to introduce his own people to "the Christ of the Indian road."
In 1923, Sundar Singh made the last of his regular summer visits
to Tibet and came back exhausted. His preaching days were obviously over and, in the next years, in his own home or those
of his friends in the Simla hills he gave himself to meditation, fellowship, and writing some of the things he had lived to
preach.
In 1929, against the advice of all his friends, Sundar determined
to make one last journey to Tibet. In April, he reached Kalka, a small town below Simla, a prematurely aged figure in his
yellow robe among pilgrims and holy men who were beginning their own trek to one of the holy places of Hinduism, some miles
away. Where he went after that is unknown. Whether he fell from a precipitous path, died of exhaustion, or reached the mountains,
will remain a mystery. Sundar Singh had been seen for the last time. But more than his memory remains, and he had continued
to be one of the most treasured and formative figures in the development and story of Christ's church in India.
Sadhu and India
Sadhu Sundar Singh disappeared in the foothills of the Himalayas
in 1929. As a Christian witness, he had been rejected as well as welcomed, persecuted, and even left for dead. By many missionaries
and even Indian Christian leaders he had been regarded as a highly eccentric convert, totally out of step with contemporary
Christianity as he wandered the roads in his yellow robe and turban. Yet, even though he never heard the later vogue-word
"indigenisation," he had done more than any man in the first half of the twentieth century to establish that "Jesus
belongs to India." He made it clear that Christianity is not an imported, alien, foreign religion but is indigenous
to Indian needs, aspirations, and faith. He remains one of the permanently significant figures of Indian Christianity.
THE LIFE OF Sundar Singh
1889 - Born at Rampur, Punjab
1903 - Conversion
1904
- Cast out from home
1905 - Baptized in Simla; begins life as a Sadhu
1907 - Works in leprosy hospital at Sabathu
1908
- First visit to Tibet
1909 - Enters divinity college, Lahore, to train for the ministry
1911 - Hands back his preacher's
license; returns to the Sadhu's life
1912 - Tours through north India and the Buddhist states of the Himalayas
1918
to 1922 - Travels worldwide
1923 - Turned back from Tibet
1925 to 1927 - Quietly spends time writing
1927 - Sets
out for Tibet but returns due to illness
1929 - Attempts to reach Tibet and disappears