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DIED
IN THE SERVICE OF CHRIST
Anthony
Paul Duncan
(06.02.66 14.12.94)
Soldier, game ranger and missionary
In
the early morning mist of 14 December 1994,
Frontline Fellowship field worker, Anthony Duncan,
was killed in a head-on collision.
Anthony
was returning back from a long, difficult and
dangerous mission to five countries. Anthony
had been part of a Frontline Fellowship mission
team that had successfully delivered a ton of
desperately needed medicines and Bibles into
war-torn Angola. Despite an ambush and arrest
at the Namibian border with Angola, which maintained
a shoot-on sight policy to enforce the United
Nations blockade on Unita-controlled Free
Angola, the team had succeeded in delivering
the desperately needed medicines and Bibles
to the suffering Christians in Angola. They
were on the way back from this eventful trip,
which had also included the same vehicle rolling
down an embankment and crushing the canopy on
the way up to Zambia.
Anthony had often faced life-threatening situations
before, when he was in the army and later as
a game ranger, even before becoming a missionary.
He had been knocked down and trampled underfoot
by a rhino, charged by elephants and attacked
by lions. Once, while reversing fast up a road
to escape a charging elephant, he literally
bumped into a herd of elephants! On another
occasion, Anthony warded off an attack by lions
by throwing stones at them! He was armed but,
being a serious animal lover, he couldnt
bring himself to shoot a magnificent lion
even when being threatened by them!
Anthony had survived several other vehicle accidents
including coming off an 1100cc motorbike
at 200 kms/hr. Like a cat, Anthony seemed
to have had nine lives and he lived everyone
of those to the full.
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Anthony
was a remarkably dedicated Christian, whose possessions
could fit into his backpack. Everything in excess
of his bare necessities he gave away. Anthony was
a zealous evangelist, a patient and compassionate
counsellor and a calm and cheerful co-worker in times
of crisis. His testimony of single-minded devotion
to the Lord continues to challenge, convict and compel
others to give our all for Christ.
Anthony
Duncan served in the 7th South African Infantry Battalion
as a tracker from 1985 1987. After his military
service, Anthony worked as a game ranger in Timbivati,
Jabula and Etosha. During this time he distinguished
himself as a tracker on the anti-poaching tracker
team. One of his fellow game rangers, Michael, led
him to the Lord. Once he gave his life to Christ,
Anthony was wholehearted in his single-minded dedication
to follow Christ and to lead others to Him.
This
last mission trip of Anthonys involved him driving
him across the length of South Africa, ministry and
travel throughout Zimbabwe and Zambia, before beginning
the Bible smuggling operation into Angola from Namibia.
November/December
1994 stands out in Frontline Fellowships history
as the marathon obstacle course where we sent four
vehicles into the field and only one came back. The
vehicle I drove up to Zambia needed to be diverted
after our Biblical Worldview Seminar in Lusaka, to
rescue our workers stranded in Caprivi (Namibia).
Their landrover had broken down for the last time
after a successful ministry trip into Angola. One
of our vehicles had been donated to a ministry in
Zambia (Anthony had driven this vehicle up), and now
our other vehicle had been totally destroyed in the
head-on collision.
On
the way back to Cape Town, Anthony stopped in the
game park where he had been converted, climbed up
the mountain where he had first placed his faith in
Jesus Christ as Lord and Saviour, and spent a special
time in prayer there. That was the last sunrise he
would see before entering the presence of our Lord.
When he came down from this mountaintop experience,
Anthony found all his personal belongings stolen from
the vehicle. Anthony and his co-worker drove through
the day and the next night and in the early hours
of the next morning a speeding vehicle, overtaking
a big transport truck, collided head-on with our mission
vehicle. Our pick-up truck burst into flame, but a
fire extinguisher quickly put out the flames. Anthony
had died instantly in the collision.
Anthony
had always travelled light. He never collected a lot
of material possessions. All of his worldly possessions
were stowed neatly in a backpack. He was a generous
person who gave away everything he did not need. We
cannot take our possessions with us when we die. Anthony
is the one person that I know who actually had no
possessions to take with him when he died. He died,
literally, with his boots on, but he didnt leave
an extra pair behind. What Anthony did leave behind
cannot be measured in earthly value.
Those
who knew him were struck by his radiant faith and
his deep love for our Lord Jesus Christ. We will always
remember his friendly smile, his kind words and his
helpful deeds. He died in the service of Christ, after
having faithfully ensured that suffering Christians
had received life-giving medicines and the life-transforming
Word of God - which an international shoot-on-sight
blockade was seeking to deny them. Anthony chose to
obey God rather than man.
Anthony
Paul Duncan can truly say:
I
have fought the good fight, I have finished the race,
I have kept the Faith. 2 Timothy 4:7
Peter Hammond
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