Archive
Review: The Church in Madras (Rev Frank Penny) 1904-12
‘The Church in Madras’
A 3-volume red hardback set (I.88.1) housed in Gladstone’s Library, Hawarden, Wales.
Written by Rev Frank Penny from 1904. Final volume published in 1912.
Frontispiece: Presented by the Secretary of State for India (1905, Vol 1-2), Presented by the Secretary of State for India in Council (1912, Vol 3).
Vol 1 1640 – 1805 Inc. St Mary’s, Madras, page 81
Vol 2 1805 – 1835 Inc. St Stephen’s, Ooty, page 320
Vol 3 1835 – 1861 Inc. All Saint’s, Coonoor, page 169
It was thrilling to see on page 196, the word ‘should’ written in pencil in the margin by William Gladstone replacing ‘shall’, proving that Gladstone himself read these volumes!
The East India Company (EIC)
The EIC was neutral about Christianity and its work, but their Charter of 1698 (renewed in 1792 by William Wilberforce) required them to employ Chaplains. These, in turn, had to be approved by the Bishop of London and had to be from the Protestant Communion.
However, the EIC officially discouraged and sometimes prevented the work of missionaries and Christian mission. The Royal Danish Mission and the SPCK (mostly Germans) worked in the south of India for the ‘Great principle of the duty of promoting Christian Knowledge’. There was therefore a marked difference between the work of the EIC Chaplains and that of the SPCK missionaries.
Fifteen Churches were built within the bounds of the Madras Presidency by the Company and six or eight more were built privately.
By 1835-61, 41 Churches had been built in India.
See also – Bishop Stephen Neill, ‘The History of Christianity in India’.
Travel: San Thome Basilica, Madras (now Chennai)
Just yards from the beach, south of Chennai, this Church is traditionally built near to or over the site where ‘Doubting’ Thomas, the Apostle to India, was reputedly martyred in AD72, having come to India in AD52.
This large white Roman Catholic Cathedral dates from 1896, and was given the status of Basilica in 1956.
It is one of only three churches worldwide said to contain the tomb of one of the twelve disciples of Jesus.
Marco Polo recorded a chapel on the seashore during his travels in Asia in 1293. The original small church was built by the Portuguese in 1523. The Prelates on this brass plaque in the Basilica date back to 1600.
Recent Comments