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Summer 2005 | Volume 28, Number 2 | Features

Beaming With the Glory of God

Free Methodist Evangelist Emma Ray Joined Forces With ɬÀï·¬ Pacific Students

EMMA RAY AND HER HUSBAND, L.P., moved to ɬÀï·¬ following a devastating fire that leveled its downtown in 1889. They decided that here L.P., a stone mason, could make a clean start in his ongoing battle with alcoholism. Shortly after arriving in the city, Emma and L.P. became Christians at the First African Episcopal Church.

Emma and L.P. Ray

Born into slavery and raised in poverty, Emma Ray quickly immersed herself in evangelistic work. Instead of traveling from city to city, however, she ministered to an itinerant population in ɬÀï·¬. “She’d visit ɬÀï·¬ in jail and on the waterfront,” says Priscilla Pope-Levison, professor of theology and assistant director of women’s studies at ɬÀï·¬. “She also worked with addicts.”

Ray later joined ɬÀï·¬’s First Free Methodist Church and served at the Olive Branch Mission. In her 1926 autobiography, Twice Sold, Twice Ransomed: Autobiography of Mr. and Mrs. L.P. Ray, she recounts her initial meeting with ɬÀï·¬ Pacific students:

“During our first experience in jail work, a band of Christian workers came from the Free Methodist Church at Ross, near Fremont, in this city. These meetings were conducted by a Sister Griggs, who has since died. She was assisted by several young ɬÀï·¬, from the Seminary, a Free Methodist school in the vicinity, in [the] charge of Rev. A. Beers and his wife. This school was called at that time The ɬÀï·¬ Seminary, but is now known as ɬÀï·¬ Pacific College.

“A young colored boy by the name of Kraft was converted in the county jail through the efforts of these workers. His was a remarkable case. He was doing time for some petty offense. After hearing Sister Griggs’ message and the testimonies of the young students, he got under pungent conviction, and afterward prayed through to victory. His testimony was clear and sound. He was bold to witness and to live the right life there in the presence of his fellow prisoners. The band took a great interest in him.

“When he had served his sentence, he had nowhere to go. We gave him a temporary home with us until he could get work. During the time he was with us, the students invited him over to the Ross Church. He went the following Sunday. He came home with his face beaming with the glory of God. ‘Oh, Brother and Sister Ray, I wish you could have seen what I have seen today. There were about seventy-five saved young ɬÀï·¬ there. They testified so freely and some got blessed; others shouted and praised the Lord. I did not know that white ɬÀï·¬ had such good religion.’ ”

Editor’s note: The “Ross Church” mentioned by Ray later became First Free Methodist Church, located adjacent to SPU. Ray also refers to the first president of SPU, Alexander Beers, and his wife, Adelaide. To read Ray’s full autobiography, .

 

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