Missionary shot in Congo to speak at Lisburn church
Maud trained as a nurse in Royal Victoria Hospital in Belfast and then felt the call of God to serve as a missionary in Africa.
She has made media headlines for two reasons this year. She was awarded an OBE in the New Year Honours list for work in Africa but a few days later suffered severe gunshot wounds in an attack by bandits in war torn Congo and was miraculously saved from death or paralysis.
“If it had hit that I would have died on the spot.
“It came out almost on my spinal cord.
“Another fraction of a centimetre and I would have been paralysed.”
During her distinguished missionary career she has witnessed many people coming saving faith in Jesus Christ.
She has used her medical skills to treat hundreds who had no other means of medical treatment in a remote community.
As a missionary she has not only engaged in medical work but in evangelism, Bible teaching, preaching and practical building projects.
It involved her being personally involved in making bricks by hand with local clay. During times of civil conflict and rebel attacks many of the buildings had been ransacked and destroyed.
She has organised the rebuilding of them again. She has been evacuated twice when her life was in danger during ethnic conflicts.
She will be speaking in Lisburn Independent Methodist Church on the Causeway End Road this Sunday (May 31) at 6.30.pm.
This is a great opportunity to meet this remarkable woman and hear her tell of her experiences in Congo and of God’s faithfulness and deliverance.