Monday, 12 December 2016

Indian expressions of ecumenism Ashrams, Serampore and Missionary societies

Introduction
The word ecumenism doesn’t contend with unity among churches or denominations rather it involves cultural, social, religious and traditional ecumenism. All through the history there are various efforts taken to have ecumenism among these factors and had achieved various results such are Ashramas, serampore and Missionary societies.

1. The Ashram Movement
The historians have been rummaging through the record in search of some Christian institutions of the past which can be presented now as “pioneers of the Ashram Movement”. All Christian historians concur that the need for Christian ashrams was felt when the spread of the gospel became more and more difficult due to the rising tide of resurgent Hinduism. The pride of place in this context goes, to the “ashram” of Robert De Nobili and his successors at Madurai. Then there is a long gap till to the short-lived ashram which Brahmabandhab set up on the Narmada in the closing years of the nineteenth century. From 1921 onwards we are presented with some mission stations which styled themselves as ashrams, or are named so now.

1.1 Emerging Ashramas :-The first cues came from ashrams founded by some leaders of the Indian Renaissance-the Bharat Ashram founded by Keshab Chandra Sen in 1872 at Belgharia near Calcutta, the Ramakrishna ashrams which functioned as bases of the Ramakrishna Mission since 1897, the Shantiniketan Ashram founded by Rabindranath Tagore at Bolepur in 1901, and the Satyagraha Ashram which Mahatma Gandhi started at Sabarmati after his return from South Africa in 1915. The names of Ramana Ashram at Tiruvannamalai and Sri Aurobindo Ashram at Pondicherry are added to the list by some historians. Christian ashramas were inspired by the Brahmanical ashrams and Buddhist and Jain monasteries, of ancient and medieval times.
1.2 Christian Ashramas: - After Brahmabandhab, K.T. Paul, General Secretary of the National Missionary Society (NMS) founded in 1905, was the first to propose formation of Christian ashrams in a meeting of the NMS at New Delhi in 1912. The ashrams were expected “to attract the most spiritual Christian youths” and provide them with “evangelical equipment to meet the best exponents of the non-Christian religions on their own grounds”. But the idea did not take shape till 1921. The NMS was an organization outside the mission proper controlled by foreign missionaries.
The Christian poet from Maharashtra, N.V. Tilak, founded an institution at Satara in 1917 and named it God’s Darbar. He had “a vision of Christ founding Swaraj in man’s heart”. Jesus was hailed as the guru. The inmates of the Darbar were baptised and unbaptised disciples of Tilak. He sometimes preferred to describe his creation as an ashram. “But it is recorded that some missionaries misunderstood and opposed Tilak’s attitude and style.” The “ashram” collapsed and disappeared when Tilak died two years later. Dr. E. Forrester Paton of the Scottish Mission forward the idea of Christian Ashramas and found favor with the mission. He joined the NMS and roped in a native Christian, Dr. S. Jesudasen of the same organization, to start in 1921 the Christakula (Family of Christ) Ashram at Tirupattur in the Madras Presidency.
1.3 Ecumenism and Ashramas: - The Christakula ashrama was patterned on Gandhian lines. The inmates were clad in khâdî, ate vegetarian food and remained celibate. “Because both the founders were medical doctors, the major social service activity of the ashram was medical care. But village evangelism was a high priority with the ashram and education and agriculture development were systematically offered.” The ashram did make some experiments in Tamil-style church architecture and Tamil Christian hymns. But for the rest, it was a normal mission station and so it has remained till today. In later years, it was given “grants by European funding agencies for health, agriculture and tribal development”.
1.4 Christa Seva Sangha: - The Christa Seva Sangha, was also founded by a foreign missionary, J.C. Winslow of the British Society for Propagation of the Gospel. He had consulted Dr. Paton before the Sangha was launched at Miri in Ahmadnagar District of Maharashtra on June 11, 1922, the feast day of St. Barnabas. The inmates became known for wearing khâdî, performing sandhyâs in Marathi and Sanskrit, and singing bhajans to the accompaniment of Indian musical instruments and spent in evangelistic work in the Ahmadnagar villages.
Fr. Winslow visited England in 1926 and as a result in 1927 and 1928 the Sangha was reinforced by four priests and three laymen from England”. With the help of Dame Monica Wills, he was able to purchase a piece of land near Bhamburda station just outside Poona to build an Ashram and permanent headquarters”. In 1931, the Sangha purchased “a large field adjoining the river at Aundh, four miles to the north of Poona, as a site for establishing a village Ashram from which work might be carried on among villages. By 1934, the Sangha had so much money and manpower that it was bifurcated into two. The new establishment at Aundh retained the old name. The set-up at Poona was rechristened as the Christa Prema Seva Sangha and handed over to another British missionary, W.Q. Lash. He became the Bishop of Bombay in 1947. 
In subsequent years, the Christa Prema Seva Sangha became more prominent than its parent body. It built a hostel for college students-Hindu, Muslim and Christian-who could spend their holidays there in inter-religious dialogues. It became affiliated to the Society of St. Francis in England and provided hospitality to all sorts of missionary organizations, national and international, for holding conferences. Poona became the clearing house for the Ashram Movement of the mission. Dr. Philipos Thomas writes, “The Poona Ashram has been revived and it acts as an ecumenical Ashram in which Roman Catholics and Protestants work together Inter-Ashram Conferences are held every year and their reports, messages and prayer circulars are sent to every Ashram. This is one way of strengthening the fellowship between Ashrams.” 
1.5 Jesus as Sannyasin: - A Christian painter at Poona plied his brush and made Jesus a native son of India. Hindus could now see Mary, the mother of Jesus, dressed in sârî and wearing an elaborate Hindu coiffeur, in scenes such as her own childhood, Nativity of Jesus, Mother of India, Our Lady of India, Annunciation, etc. Hindus could now see Jesus in a Hindu setting, blessing the fishes held up in a plate by a Brahmin boy, meeting and talking to a Hindu woman at Samaria, sitting in padmâsana while his feet are anointed by Mary Magdalene dressed as a Hindu damsel, being attended by two Hindu women at Bethany, getting tied to a Hindu-style pillar and scourged by two whip-wielding Hindus, being crucified while two Hindu women stand by the cross with mournful faces, being taken down from the cross by four Hindu women, and so on. The evening at Golgotha became crowded with Hindu men and women. St. Thomas stood attired as a Hindu sannyasin with two similarly dressed Hindu disciples kneeling at his feet. The design for Indian Christian statuary showed Jesus hanging on a cross while a rishi-like figure, riding a Garu Da-like bird, sat on its top and two Hindu women stood on both sides, one praying with folded hands and the other offering incense. Hindus now had no reason to reject Jesus as a Jewish rabbi who lived and died in a distant land; he was very much of a Hindu avatâra. Hindus could only wonder at how a historical person who appeared at a particular place and time could be transplanted elsewhere and in another period with such perfect ease.
1.6 Rishis: - S. Jesudason of the Christukula Ashrma says that “Rishis gave us ashrams and the ashrams gave us rishis in return”.  It is true that they founded and lived in ashrams. But to say that ashrams produced rishis is ridiculous. There is no evidence that Hindus ever accepted a man known as a rishi simply because he lived in an ashram. The rishis known to Hindu religious tradition were first and foremost the living embodiments of a vast spiritual vision evolved and perfected by Sanatana Dharma. The total absence of that vision in Christianity is a guarantee that Christian ashrams will always remain sterile so far as rishis are concerned. The rishis were never so dumb. Hindus have inherited a large literature in which spiritual experience has been described in detail, in prose and poetry, by means of similies and metaphors. Their rishis have continued adding to it till recent times.
1.7 Roman Catholic:- The Roman catholic church did not made attempt to found ashram movement but Fr. Jules Monchanin, the French missionary, gave the project a practical shape in 1950 when he, along with another French missionary, Fr. Henri Le Saux, founded the Saccidananda Ashram at Tannirpalli in the Tiruchirapalli district of Madras Presidency. They had clad themselves in Kavi robes, the traditional sign of the great renunciation in the land of India. Round their necks they wore the Benedictine cross and engraved in its centre the pranava, symbol of God the Ineffable and of the Eternal word springing from His Silence, a solemn affirmation that the Christ revealed in history is the very Brahman itself, the object of all the contemplations of the Rishis. They had taken new names. His own, Parama-Arubi-Anandam, bore witness to his special devotion to the Praclete, the Supreme (Parama), Formless (a-rubi). They called their solitude the Shanti Vanam, the wood of peace. Its formal name was Saccidananda Ashram.” Fr. Henri Le Saux took the name Swami Abhishikteshwarananda, Bliss of the Lord of the Anointed Ones, that is, Jesus Christ. His friends and followers found the full name too difficult to pronounce. So he cut it short to Abhishiktananda more shortened as Abhishikta by his followers. Dr. Taylor writes, the ashram did not really work like an ashram and finally Abhishiktananda wandered off to the Himalayas and became the most exciting Indian spiritual theologian of his generation.
1.8 Shantivanam: - Dom Bede Griffiths came to Shantivanam to make a new foundation. Dom Bede had been in India for many years at the so-called ashram in Kurisumala where he must have observed how to do and how not to do things. Anyway, it seems that Shantivanam is now thriving.
2. Serampore Mission
Christ-centered humanism has the best opening making its impact in this dialogic social existence. This is the cultural mission of Christian ecumenism in contemporary society, and more specially in India. The mission of the Serampore Trio can be seen in the light of contemporary ecumenical concept of mission. The missionary vision and mission strategies of them were significantly ecumenical both in Christian and secular lines even in the nineteenth century itself. In the early years of nineteenth century, the trio had emerged as a dynamic force of Christian mission which spoke of cosmic Christ. William Carey and his team strongly believed that mission was concerned not only to a person but also to his environment. Therefore, we found a wholistic concept of mission in the ministries of Serampore Trio i.e., mission to the total person in the whole society. We can easily identify how the missions of the Serampore Baptists Bengal society reached the nineteenth century in a broader and secular ecumenical sensibility. Secular ecumenical missions are understood here as the Christian missions ventured in the total context of people's culture and community.

2.1 Historical Context of the Serampore Trio:
Though the first Christian activity in Bengal began from 1576 by the Jesuits, the total life of Bengalees was not influenced by it. But the mission of Serampore trio had a tremendous impetus on the life of the Bengal society from 1800. William Carey started his ministry in Bengal in 1793 and he had been joined by John Marshman, a school teacher and WilliamWard, a printer. This partnership was generally called - Serampore Trio who worked unitedly for many years for the upliftment of Bengal society in educational, social and religious environments.
Politically, the Danes settled at Serampore from 1755. Col. Ole Bie was the, Chief Administrator of Serapore' town from 1776-1805. In 1777, the Danish settlements of India came into the direct administration of the crown of Denmark, Col. Bie became the crown regime. From the beginning, the mutual trust and right relation had never achieved totally between English and Danes till the Serampore town fell into the hands of British in 1845.
Socially, the life of the Bengal society was divided on the basis of castes and their traditional occupations. Intercaste marriages or dining were strictly forbidden. Practice of polygamy was a common factor among Kulins. Religio-Culturally, the Hindu beliefs and traditions were part of community life. Durga Puja was the national festival of Bengal and each village had its own deity. Many social evils continued in the society on the basis of religion and culture. The Hindu and Muslim relation was cordial and harmonious.

2.2 Ecumenical Missions of the Serampore Trio: 
The missionaries had encountered the society, religion and various situations to bring out their Christian missions with a new vision and spirit. The ecumenical missions of the Trio are examined in educational, social and religious fields.

2.2.1. Educational Missions:- All missionaries in India used Education as a key instrument in their missionary work to propagate the gospel. Perhaps; the chief aim of the Serampore Trio might be the same in the beginning of their missions. But later, the concept of education in the minds of Trio became completely different as per the demands of the then Bengal social religious and cultural situation. The reality' of the society was largely studied by them. So a global thought of education emerged in their minds to liberate the local society. Innovative schemes of education were initiated and implemented sincerely though they had to struggle in their lives due to various reasons factors. Contextually, it was the intention of the East India Company to encourage Bengali, Marathi and other regional languages at Fort William College to benefit themselves in commercial enterprises with natives. Whereas the Baptist missionaries, launched the educational institutions for the sake of the whole society. Here the society or the peoples must be looked upon as ‘Oikoumene’, of the whole inhabited world. No denomination, race, class, sex, caste or any other criterion of difference was evolved in the ecumenical ministries of the Baptists.
Carey's effort in establishing Agri-Horticultural Society in 1825 reflects his vision of cosmos, which is again becoming concerned with the whole of the earth. He was a unique missionary of global mission. Over all, the trio recognized and respected each other's thoughts and deeds. It is a model ecumenical trio!
Vernacular schools, female schools, Marshman’ Educational Plan, William Carey's Professor at Fort William College and his interaction with other faiths there and the association of Serampore trio with so many educational programmes in Bengal speak for the ecumenical consciousness of the three Baptist missionaries.The linguistic works of the Trio were so remarkable. The grammars, dictionaries, translations, journalism, publications and various literary contributions thus enlightened the whole Bengal.  The modern mission thought of Carey and his men was totally framed on the basis of cultural mission. Unless the culture, the people and the whole society was transformed into a new mind, the whole process of modern mission would be in vain. So the educational missionary efforts of trio made a tremendous impact on the life of the Bengali society in the nineteenth century.

2.2.2. Social Missions:- Carey was a social thinker and social ecumenist. He had undertaken an extensive study of Bengali society and found the social evils prevailed were against the welfare and progress of the society. When the sick and dying people were brought by their relatives to the Ghats of the holy rivers to die, the missionaries helped them with medicines. They not only supplied medicines but also published in their periodicals from time to time to let the readers know how to make use of the medicines available. The trio thought non-Christians would make use of the services of Indian Christian doctors. Therefore, it was vindicated that the services of the Baptists influenced William Bentinck, British Governor-General, to launch a medical college at Calcutta in 1835. The primary aim of the college was to give medical knowledge to the natives.
Another social evil was infanticide i.e. throwing the child into the river as an offering. This was strongly criticized by Carey when he heard the report of William Ward on it and he submitted a report to the government saying: Memorial on murders committed under the pretence of religion in the hope that they would all be decided criminal acts.
Furthermore, the Serampore Trio fought severely against ‘Sati’ which was an inhuman act in the name of Hindu religion. With the help of his Pundit Vidyalankar, Carey found no emphasis in the shastras about Sati. So the missionaries published articles on Sati for public awareness, and through their letters they appealed their philanthropic European friends to put pressure on British government. Raja Ram Mohan Roy, an eminent Indian leader also joined the movement and voiced against the evil practice of Sati. After long protest by the Serampore Trio and their supporters, the government abolished Sati in 1829. The significant features this social mission of the trio was giving a new meaning and praxis for modern Christian missions.

2.2.3. Religious Missions:- A greater amount of commitment and unity among the Serampore missionaries made possible their efforts of evangelism in and out of Bengal a success. The socio-economic and socio-religious situation of India during the end of eighteen Century gives the impression that the country was in dismal condition. Historically, it has been accepted that Raja Ram Mohan Roy had transformed this century through his dynamic social, intellectual and religious acts. But a careful study of this period reveals that even before him the Serampore Trio started their crusade against illiteracy, ignorance and superstition. Trio established printing presses, started writing and printing in Indian languages, opened schools and launched movements against the prevailing social evils; But they differed from other ‘evangelicals’ in their approach towards Indian religion and culture. Though they appreciated Indian culture, they criticized the evils of Hindu society and religion.
William Ward wrote a four volume book on Hindus entitled “An Account of the’ writings, Religion and Manners of the Hindus, including translations from their Principal Works” (1811) in which Hindus, their religion, festivals and their gods were degraded. Situationally, Serampore Trio shifted to exclusivist attitude towards Hinduism. They recognized the fact of interdependency of religion and society among Bengal Hindus. Caste is Hinduism and Hinduism is caste and they tried for casteless society by encouraging inter-caste marriages among the converts and arranged united communion services. At Serampore College, Pundits refused to teach the Hindu sacred scriptures to the Sudras. But the Baptists forced them to teach the sacred laws to Sudras. Furthermore, they considered the ‘Brahminical thread’ as a token of social distinction and so the Brahmins were baptized with their sacred threads. It is noteworthy here that Carey and his associates learned Indian languages and published Ramayana and other Indian ancient works in view of finding facts and social awakening among Hindus. When Serampore trio were using their journals ‘Samachar Darpan’ and ‘Friend of India’, to bring out their comments on Hindu society and religion; Ram Mohan also published (1821) a bi-lingual magazine in Bengali and English entitled ‘The, Brahminical Magazine’ to defend Hinduism. Roy played a significant role in the process of interaction between Serampore trio and the Hindus through his free thinking and valuable writings. He decided to draw the attention of his fellow Hindus to the teachings of Jesus and in 1820; he published the ‘Precepts of Jesus’. Overall, the trio had done their ultimate efforts on the translation of the Holy Bible into numerous Indian languages which was the matchless and permanent gift to the Indian Christians.
The three type missions of Trio in the Bengal society during nineteenth century reflects their wider perspective of missions. Their secular ecumenical missionary approach had created a marvellous influence on the life of Bengal Hindus. The society, religion and culture were examined and encountered by their educational, social and religious missions. The outcome of these missions was an emergence of a new ecumenical awakening in the Bengal society i.e., Renaissance which produced a lot of openness and secular ecumenism.

3. Missionary societies
History  shows  that  the  contemporary  Ecumenical  Movement  has  its  roots  in  the         Protestant  missionmovement  of  the  19th   century  and  its  inspiration  in  the  desire  of          Evangelical Protestants  to achieve a  “unity in fellowship” amongst themselves for greater        success in the mission field. Willem Saayman, a  Protestant scholar of missiology, begins  his    study  on  mission  and  unity  with  the following  words:  “Theecumenical  movement  does  not derive  simply  from  a  passion  for  unity;  it     sprang from  a  passion  for    unity  that  is  completely  fused  in  mission.”  The union of mission and   ecumenism, however, was not          something arrived at quickly or painlessly for the Protestant world. It  grew slowly in the  soil ofglobal confessional alliances and comity agreements among the Protestants   in the  second halfof the 19th  century,  and continued in the international student movements and  missionaryconferences,  becoming  a  new paradigm  of  ecclesiastical  unity for  the John Mott, the spokesman for global missions among the  Protestants,  dared  to  speak  of  “the  evangelization  of  the  world  in  this  generation.”  On the otherhand,  Mott  pointed  to  the  growth  of  the  missionary  societies.  At  the  beginning  of  the  nineteenth  century  there  were  six  Protestant  missionary  organizations.  By  the  end  of  the  century  there  were  537.

3.1 Global vision 
This  global  vision  of  mission  was,  in  two  important  ways,  to  set  the  stage  for  the  “ecumenical  century”  to  follow.  Firstly,  it  took  Protestantism  out  of  its  isolation  in  the  West and brought it face to face both with cultures, peoples and faiths around the world  and with its own divisions reflected in the denominational chaos which was transplanted  to the mission field. In this respect, it is quite telling that the most outspoken proponents  of ecumenism after the turn of the century were the leaders of the newlyplanted missions  of China and India.  Secondly,  the  missionary  movement  often  went  hand  in  hand  with  colonial  and  economic expansion. In this way, the worldwide spread of Protestantism is seen to be an  important factor in the first stages of the process of globalization,which has been built  upon the common language and culture of the Protestant West.    Thus,  the  Protestant  missionary  enterprise  served  as  the  spring  board  of  the  ecumenical  movement  and  prepared  the  ground  for  the  arrival  of  the  “ecumenical  century” and the move from a missionary to an “ecumenical ecclesiology.” 

3.2 Evangelical alliance  
London,  in  1846,  was  the  setting  for  the  coming  into  being  of  a  “new  thing”  in  Church  history  -  a  definite  organization  for  the  expression  of  unity  amongst  Christian  individuals  belonging  to  different  Churches,  namely,  the  Evangelical  Alliance.  Eight  hundred  Evangelical  leade rs  belonging  to  no  less  than  fiftytwo  Protestant denominations were in attendance. Hailed “as if it were the millennium,” it is claimed that here the reality of Christian unity had at last found corporate expression. The Evangelical Alliance was an organization which aimed at making the Invisible Church visible, that the world may know. In  large  part  through  the  Alliance  Evangelicals had learnt to feel themselves one in Christ, across national and ecclesiastical  boundaries, had banded themselves together in voluntary societies, and had come to look  upon cooperation with each other in the service of their Lord as a normal and joyful part  of the Christian life. United in the evangelical experience through the missionary societies, in spite of or in  indifference  to  dogmatic  differences,  the  unity  of  the  evangelicals  can  rightly  said  to  be  one of the first expressions of the contemporary ecumenical spirit.
The passion for evangelism gave rise to the passion for unity, expressed both on the  practical  level,  toward  greater  missionary  success,  and  on  the  theoretical  level,  in  the  evangelical conception of the church as being invisible and of unity as being a matter of  the  heart;  spiritual  not  organic.  The  spread  and  acceptance  of  this  conception  of  the  church  throughout  and  eventually  beyond  evangelical  circles  was  made  possible  by  the  missionary society - an organization at once nonecclesial and superecclesial.  
 Protestant  historian  Ruth  Rouse  has  this  to  say  about  the  evangelical  missionary  societies:  
“They were not ecumenical in objective but they were ecumenical in result.  .  .  they  created  a  consciousness  of  unity,  a  "sense  of  togetherness"  amongst  Christians  of  different  Churches.  Though rarely formulated, the fundamental conception of Christian unity which lay beneath their common striving was that all true Christians share the life in Christ, that they are one by virtue of that sharing, and that this oneness is the essential Christian unity.”
The Evangelicals, whose principle task was to preach the Gospel to the heathen, the greatest evil of the time was denominational bigotry. Hence, when in 1795 the London Missionary Society was  founded,  which  was  started  as  a  union  effort  of Congregationalists,  Presbyterians,  Methodists, and Anglicans, it was hailed as “the funeral of bigotry.” Out  of  the  common  evangelical  experience,  then,  an  “evangelical  ecclesiology”  had  appeared founded upon the watchword: “if theologies can divide, experience can unite.”  


Conclusion
When we speak of ecumenism it does not include only the church unity but ecumenism goes beyond church unity and these are some of the examples in the history of ecumenical movement. It is better to follow such type of ecumenical model which our missionaries adopted based on the cultural, social and religious values to do ministry in a pluralistic country like India. 
Bibliography
Firth, C.B. An introduction to Indian Church History. Madras: Christian literature service,1961.
JeyaKumar, Arthur. History of Christianity in India. New Delhi: ISPCK, 2002.
Jaya Kumar A. History of Christianity in India Major Themes. New Delhi: ISPCK,  
Snaitang O.L. A history of ecumenical movement. Bangalore: SATHRI, National   printing            press, 2004.
Webliography
http://www.biblicalstudies.org.uk/pdf/ijt/35-1_029.pdf
http://www.biblicalstudies.org.uk/pdf/ijt/42-2_171.pdf
http://voiceofdharma.com/books/ca/ch05.htm
https://www.google.co.in/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=18&cad=rja&ved=0CFgQFjAHOAo&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.martynmission.cam.ac.uk%2F
www.edinburgh2010.org/.../UBS%20Pierard%20-%20The%20
www.edinburgh2010.org/.../files/.../Edinburgh%202010%20Enose.doc

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