|
The
Church Union Movement in South India which eventually
resulted in the birth of the Church of South India on 27th
Sep, 1947 is one of the greatest miracles ever performed by
God in the first half of the present century. The story of
union is a story of a collaborative venture fraught with
innumerable difficulties of one kind or the other. By the
grace of God and by the fortitude of the Union leaders,
those difficulties were frankly faced and finally over come.
It was a venture in which the Divine hand guided the people
involved constantly. It as a stupendous task in which the
leaders of the movement clearly discovered God’s will and in
utter humility tried to fulfill it, if not always. After
twenty-eight years of joint consultation in trying patience
and fervent hope, the negotiating churches eventually
entered into an organic union.
1947!
The year of freedom, the creation of New India. The bitter
struggle for political independence ended. A new chapter was
opened on August 15 when Pandit Nehru, the first Prime
Minister of free India, delivered his memorable speech under
the caption “Tryst with Destiny”. The same year also
witnessed the end of the long process of negotiations for
church union. |
 |
|
The Methodist
J.S.M.Hooper, the pilot of the Union
Movement in South India, preached the
Inauguration sermon, interpreting the
significance of the year: “God has matched
us with His hour; the Church of South India
has an unparalleled opportunity. The
reconciliation between our divergent
elements enables us with fresh conviction
and force to proclaim the Gospel of
reconciliation to all the clashing elements
in this nation’s life. Thus the CSI was
constituted by the union of the Madras,
Madura, Malabar, Jaffna, Kannada, Telugu and
Travancore Church Councils of the South
India United Church; the South India
Province of the Methodist Church, comprising
the Madras, Trichinopoly, Hyderabad and
Mysore Districts; and the Madras, Dornakal,
Tinnevelly, and Travancore and Cochin of the
Church of India, Burma and Ceylon.
|
 |
|
The Church of
South India began with fourteen dioceses and
a membership of 10, 17, 184 of whom 2,
63,680 were communicants. At the time of the
union, the uniting bodies numbered, in round
figures: Methodists 220,000; Presbyterians
and Congregationalists (SIUC) 290,000;
Anglicans (CIBC) 500,00. The North Tamil
Church of the SIUS which in 1946 decided not
to join the CSI joined the united church in
1950. The Bombay Karnataka Council of the
United Basel Mission Church in India joined
the Church of South India in 1958. The
Anglican Church of Nandyal Diocese which
chose to stand outside the union in 1947,
merged with the CSI in 1975. Today the CSI
consists of 21 Dioceses covering entire
South India and also Sri Lanka. |
|
|
|
We welcome your
comments as it would help us to improve the
website. Please send us your
feedback |
|
|
|