
The Bible can change not only a life but an entire lifestyle.
Most of us have heard the story of the Mutiny on the
Bounty, but few of us have heard how the Bible played
a very vital part in that historical event. The Bounty
was a British ship which set sail from England in 1787, bound
for the South Seas. The idea was that those on board would
spend some time among the islands, transplanting fruit-bearing
and food-bearing trees, and doing other things to make some
of the islands more habitable. After ten month of voyage,
the Bounty arrived safely at its destination , and
for six months the officers and the crew gave themselves
to the duties placed upon them by their government.

When the special task was completed, however, and the order
came to embark again, the sailors rebelled. They had formed
strong attachments for the native girls, and the climate and
the ease of the South Sea island life was much to their
liking. The result was mutiny on the Bounty, and the
sailors placed Captain Bligh and a few loyal men adrift in
an open boat. Captain Bligh, in an almost miraculous fashion,
survived the ordeal, was rescued, and eventually arrived home
in London to tell his story. An expedition was launched to
punish the mutineers, and in due time fouteen of them were
captured and paid the penalty under British law.

But nine of the men had gone to another distant island. There
they formed a colony. Perhaps there has never been a more
degraded and debauched social life than that of that colony.
They learned to distill whiskey from a native plant, and the
whiskey, as usual, along with other habits, let to their ruin.
Disease and murder took the lives of all the native men and
all but one of the white men named Alexander Smith. He found
himself the only man on an island, surrounded by a crowd of
women and half-breed children. Alexander Smith found a Bible
among the possessions of a dead sailor. The Book was new to
him. He had never read it before. He sat down and read it
through. He believed it and he began to appropriate it. He
wanted others to share in the benefits of this book, so he
taught classes to the women and the children, as he read to
them and taught them the Scriptures.

It was twenty years before a ship ever found that island,
and when it did, a miniature Utopia was discovered. The people
were living in decency, prosperity, harmony, and peace. There
was nothing of crime, disease, immorality, insanity, or
illiteracy. How was it accomplished? By the reading, the
believing, and the appropriating of the truth of God! |
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This story is a brief excerpt from the Edge of
Adventure written by Keith Miller and found
in the Charles Swindoll book The Tale of the
Tardy Oxcart (1998).
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