Article contents
The Idea of a ‘Missionary Bishop’ in the Spread of the Anglican Communion in the Nineteenth Century
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 January 2009
Abstract
In the 1830s, among those associated with the Tractarian revival in England and also among certain figures in the (then) Protestant Episcopal Church of the United States (PECUSA), the idea of the ‘missionary bishop’ was propagated, which presented the bishop as a pioneer evangelist as the apostles were understood to be in New Testament times and saw the planting of the Church as necessarily including a bishop from the beginning for the ‘full integrity’ of the Church to be present. This view of the bishop as the ‘foundation stone’ was not held by the Evangelicals of the Church Missionary Society (CMS), who saw the bishop by contrast as the ‘crown’ or coping stone of the young churches. Two main protagonists were the High Churchman, Samuel Wilberforce, Bishop of Oxford, and the honorary secretary and missionary strategist, Henry Venn. The party, led by C.F. Mackenzie as Bishop and mounted by the Universities’ Mission to Central Africa (UMCA) in 1861 to the tribes near Lake Nyassa, was the outworking of this Tractarian ideal.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © SAGE Publications (Los Angeles, London, New Delhi and Singapore) and The Journal of Anglican Studies Trust 2004
References
1. Brilioth, Y., The Anglican Revival: Studies in the Oxford Movement (London: Longmans, Green, 1933), p. 192.Google Scholar
2. Ashwell, A.R. and Wilberforce, R.G., Life of the Right Reverend Samuel Wilberforce, DD, Lord Bishop of Oxford and Afterwards of Winchester, with Selections from his Diaries and Correspondence (3 vols.; London: Kegan Paul & Co., revised from the original work, with additions, 1888), I, pp. 109–10.Google Scholar
3. Doane, G.W., The Office of a Bishop (Philadelphia: Protestant Episcopal Press, 1834), pp. 15–16, 23.Google Scholar
4. Doane, G.W., The Missionary Bishop (Burlington, NJ: Missionary Press, 1835).Google Scholar
5. Chadwick, O.W., MacKenzie's Grave (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1959).Google Scholar
6. Proceedings of the CMS (London: CMS, 1842), XVI, p. 7.Google Scholar
7. Alexander, C. Warren Max and Venn, H., To Apply the Gospel: Selections from the Writings of Henry Venn, Edited (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1971), p. 20.Google Scholar
8. Randall, T. Davidson and Benham, W., Life of Archibald Campbell Tait, Archbishop of Canterbury (2 vols.; London: Macmillan, 1891), I, p. 329.Google Scholar
9. Walter, F. France, The Oversea Episcopate: Centenary History of the Colonial Bishoprics (London: Colonial Bishoprics Fund, 1941), pp. 15–16.Google Scholar
10. Both these quotations are taken from Ashwell, and Wilberforce, , Life of Samuel Wilberforce, II, pp. 201–203, cf. pp. 193–97.Google Scholar
11. Ajayi, J.F., Christian Missions in Nigeria, 1841–1891: The Making of a New Elite (London: Longmans, 1965), p. 185.Google Scholar
12. Chadwick, , Mackenzie's Grave, p. 77.Google Scholar
13. Knight, W., Memoir of H. Venn: The Missionary Secretariat of H. Venn (London: Guildford [printed], 1882Google Scholar: Seeley, , Jackson, and Halliday, , new edn, with portrait and appendix. Memoir of H. Venn, etc., 1881), p. 443.Google Scholar
14. Yates, T.E., Venn and Victorian Bishops Abroad: The Missionary Policies of Henry Venn (Uppsala: Swedish Institute of Missionary Research; London: SPCK, 1978), p. 178Google Scholar. See also Williams, C.P., The Ideal of the Self-Governing Church: A Study in Victorian Missionary Strategy (Leiden: E.J. Brill, 1990), pp. 41–51.Google Scholar
15. Venn, to Savage, R.C., 13 10 1862: CMS G/AC 1/15, pp. 365–66.Google Scholar
16. Sundkler, B. and Steed, C., A History of the Church in Africa (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998), p. 244.Google Scholar
17. White, G.D., ‘The Idea of the Missionary Bishop in Nineteenth Century Anglicanism’, MST dissertation, General Theological Seminary, New York, 1968, p. 56, cf. p. 45Google Scholar. See also ‘Newman's Missionary Dream’, Modern Churchman 14.4 (1971), pp. 267–72.Google Scholar
18. White, , ‘The Idea of the Missionary Bishop’, p. 56Google Scholar, see also Cnattingius, H., Bishops and Societies: A Study of Anglican Colonial and Missionary Expansion 1689–1850 (London: SPCK, 1952).Google Scholar
19. Anglican Cycle of Prayer (2002), pp. 219–20.Google Scholar
20. Johnstone, P.J. and Mandryk, J., Operation World (Carlisle: Paternoster Lifestyle, 2001), pp. 488–89.Google Scholar
- 1
- Cited by