"I Have Decided to Follow Jesus" is a
Christian hymn originated from India.
The lyrics are based on the last words of a man in
Garo, Assam, north-east India.
About 150 years ago, there was a great revival in
Wales, England.
As a result of this, many missionaries came from
England and Germany to North-East India to spread the Gospel.
At the time, north-east India was not divided into
many states as it is today.
The region was known as Assam and comprised
hundreds of tribes.
The tribal communities were quite primitive and
aggressive by nature.
The tribals were also called head-hunters because
of a social custom which required the male members of the
community to collect as many heads as possible.
A man’s strength and ability to protect his wife
was assessed by the number of heads he had collected.
Therefore, a youth of marriageable age would try
and collect as many heads as possible and hang them on the walls
of his house.
The more heads a man had, the more eligible he was
considered.
Into this hostile and aggressive community, came a
group of Welsh missionaries spreading the message of love, peace
and hope of Jesus Christ.
Naturally, they were not welcomed.
One Welsh missionary shared gospel & a man,
his wife, and two children believed in Jesus.
This man’s faith proved contagious and many
villagers began to accept Christ.
Angry, the village chief summoned all the
villagers.
He then called the family who had first converted
to renounce their faith in public or face execution.
Moved by the Holy Spirit, the man instantly
composed a song which became famous down the years.
He said:
"I have decided to follow Jesus. No turning back,
no turning back."
Enraged at the refusal of the man, the chief
ordered his archers to arrow down the two children.
As both boys lay twitching on the floor, the chief
asked, “Will you deny your faith? You have lost both your
children. You will lose your wife too.”
But the man said these words in reply:
"Though no one joins me, still I will follow. No
turning back, no turning back."
The chief was beside himself with fury and ordered
his wife to be arrowed down.
In a moment she joined her two children in death.
Now he asked for the last time, “I will give you
one more opportunity to deny your faith and live.”
In the face of death the man said the final
memorable lines:
"The cross before me, the world behind me. No
turning back, no turning back."
He was shot dead like the rest of his family. But
with their deaths, a miracle took place.
The chief who had ordered the killings was moved by
the faith of the man.
He wondered, “Why should this man, his wife and two
children die for a Man who lived in a far-away land on another
continent some 2,000 years ago?
There must be some remarkable power behind the
family's faith, and I too want to taste that faith.”
In a spontaneous confession of faith, he declared,
“I too belong to Jesus Christ!”
When the crowd heard this from the mouth of their
chief, the whole village accepted Christ as their Lord and
Savior.
The tune for the song was given by Sadhu Sundar
Singh few years later when he stumbled upon some historical
literature and read about this incident during one of his
travels to the North East.
This is one of the most powerful songs composed by
a man who gave his life for Christ, which became the reason for
the salvation of the whole tribe. The tune given by a man who
forsook everything in his life for the sake of Christ.
The combination of both these great lives makes
this song filled with vitality to generate more followers of
Christ even today.
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