Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-dsjbd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-03T20:24:03.736Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Exporting Godliness: The Church, Education and ‘Higher Civilization’ in the British Empire from the late Nineteenth Century

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 June 2019

Mark Chapman*
Affiliation:
Ripon College, Cuddesdon
*
*Ripon College, Cuddesdon, Oxford, OX44 9EX. E-mail: [email protected].

Abstract

This article discusses the impact of the educational method pioneered in the English public schools on the development of education in Anglican schools in the British empire, with a particular focus on the Indian subcontinent from the turn of the twentieth century until the outbreak of the First World War. It discusses how the focus of missionary activity changed from a desire for overt evangelism into a sense of the transmission of moral and ethical values though a system of education in the Christian virtues. An educational understanding of salvation began to supplant the doctrinal. This is connected with the thinking on ‘higher’ and ‘lower’ civilizations of the period. A central focus is on the preparatory work for, and discussions around, the Pan-Anglican Congress of 1908 and the role played by Bishop H. H. Montgomery.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Ecclesiastical History Society 2019 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Etherington, Norman, ‘Education and Medicine’, in idem, ed., Missions and Empire, Oxford History of the British Empire Companion Series (Oxford, 2005), 261–84Google Scholar, at 261.

2 See Bellenoit, Hayden J. A., Missionary Education and Empire in Late Colonial India, 1860–1920 (Abingdon and New York, 2007)Google Scholar.

3 On this, see, for instance, Etherington, ed., Missions and Empire; Holtrop, Pieter N. and McLeod, Hugh, eds, Missions and Missionaries, SCH Subsidia 13 (Woodbridge, 2000)Google Scholar; Maughan, Steven S., Mighty England do Good: Culture, Faith, and World in Foreign Missions of the Church of England, 1850–1915, SHCM (Grand Rapids, MI, 2014)Google Scholar; Hardwick, Joseph, An Anglican British World: The Church of England and the Expansion of the Settler Empire, c.1790–1860 (Manchester, 2014)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Carey, Hilary, God's Empire: Religion and Colonialism in the British World, c.1801–1908 (Cambridge, 2011)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; eadem, ed., Empires of Religion (New York, 2008); Porter, Andrew, Religion versus Empire? British Protestant Missionaries and Overseas Expansion, 1700–1914 (Manchester, 2004)Google Scholar, especially 282; idem, ed., The Imperial Horizons of British Protestant Missions, 1880–1914, SHCM (Grand Rapids, MI, 2003); Stanley, Brian, The Bible and the Flag; Protestant Missionaries and British Imperialism in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries (Leicester, 1990)Google Scholar. For a ground-breaking account which already pays attention to post-colonial issues, see Warren, Max, The Missionary Movement from Britain in Modern History (London, 1965)Google Scholar.

4 Etherington, ed., Missions and Empire, 4.

5 Porter, Religion versus Empire?, 321.

6 Brian Stanley, ‘Church, State and the Hierarchy of “Civilization”’, in Porter, ed., Imperial Horizons, 58–84, especially 69–73.

7 See, for example, Berkwitz, Stephen C., ‘Hybridity, Parody, and Contempt: Buddhist Responses to Christian Missions in Sri Lanka’, in Sharkey, Heather J., ed., Cultural Conversions: Unexpected Consequences of Christian Missionary Encounters in the Middle East, Africa, and South Asia (Syracuse, NY, 2013), 99120Google Scholar; Harris, Elizabeth, Theravada Buddhism and the British Encounter: Religious, Missionary, and Colonial Experience in Nineteenth-Century Sri Lanka (London, 2006)CrossRefGoogle Scholar. See also Hettiarachchi, Shanthikumar, Faithing the Native Soil: Dilemmas and Aspirations of post-colonial Buddhists and Christians in Sri Lanka (Colombo, 2012)Google Scholar. More generally, see Cracknell, Kenneth, Justice, Courtesy and Love: Missionaries and Theologians Encountering the World Religions, 1846–1914 (London, 1995), 181260Google Scholar; Warren, Missionary Movement, 119–38.

8 Bayly, C.A., The Birth of the Modern World, 1780–1914: Global Connections and Comparisons (Oxford, 2004), 325Google Scholar. See also Thompson, Todd M., ‘Charles Malik and the Origins of a Christian Critique of Orientalism in Lebanon and Britain’, in Methuen, Charlotte, Spicer, Andrew and Wolffe, John, eds, Christianity and Religious Plurality, SCH 51 (Woodbridge, 2015), 350–65Google Scholar.

9 Bayly, Birth of the Modern World, 332. For examples of cultural encounter, see Sen, Amiya P., ed., Social and Religious Reform: The Hindus of British India (Oxford, 2003)Google Scholar; Veer, Peter van der, Imperial Encounters: Religion and Modernity in India and Britain (Princeton, NJ, 2001)Google Scholar; Jones, Justin, ‘Islam at Home: Religion, Piety and Private Space in Muslim India and Victorian Britain, c.1850–1905’, in Doran, John, Methuen, Charlotte and Walsham, Alexandra, eds, Religion and the Household, SCH 50 (Woodbridge, 2014), 378404Google Scholar.

10 See Chadwick, Owen, The Victorian Church, 1: 1829–1859 (London, 1987), 544Google Scholar. There does not appear to be any record of the sermon itself.

11 Reprinted and edited by as, Arthur BurnsChurch Parties’, in Taylor, Stephen, ed., An Anglican Miscellany, CERS 7 (Woodbridge, 1999), 213385Google Scholar.

12 For a synopsis of broad church thinking, see Chapman, Mark, ‘Liberal Anglicanism in the Nineteenth Century’, in Strong, Rowan, ed., OHA, 3: Partisan Anglicanism and its Global Expansion, 1829–c.1914 (Oxford, 2017), 212–31CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

13 See Williamson, Eugene L. Jr, The Liberalism of Thomas Arnold: A Study of his Religious and Political Writings (University, AL, 1964)Google Scholar.

14 See Newsome, David, Godliness and Good Learning (London, 1961)Google Scholar.

15 Girls’ schools were to develop much later; as late as 1864 there were only twelve public secondary schools for girls in England.

16 Thring, Edward, Education and School (London, 1867), 269–70Google Scholar; see also Rawnsley, H. D., Edward Thring: Teacher and Poet (London, 1889), 12Google Scholar.

17 Westcott, Arthur, Life and Letters of Brooke Foss Westcott, 2 vols (London, 1903), 145Google Scholar.

18 Etherington, ‘Education and Medicine’, 265. On missionary education in India, see Frykenberg, Robert Eric, Christianity in India: From Beginnings to the Present (Oxford, 2008), 301–43CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

19 Etherington, ‘Education and Medicine’, 273.

20 On Montgomery, see Maughan, Steven, ‘An Archbishop for Greater Britain: Bishop Montgomery, missionary imperialism and the SPG, 1897–1915’, in O'Connor, Daniel, ed., Three Centuries of Mission: The United Society for the Propagation of the Gospel 1701–2000 (London, 2000), 358–70Google Scholar; idem, ‘Imperial Christianity? Bishop Montgomery and the Foreign Missions of the Church of England, 1895–1915’ in Porter, ed., Imperial Horizons, 32–57; idem, ‘Montgomery, Henry Hutchinson (1847–1932)’, ODNB; M. M., Bishop Montgomery, with a Preface by the Archbishop of Canterbury (London, 1933). For an insightful account of Montgomery's background, see Withycombe, Robert S. M., Montgomery of Tasmania: Henry and Maud Montgomery in Australasia (Brunswick East, Victoria, 2009)Google Scholar.

21 Montgomery, Henry H., Foreign Missions, 4th edn (London, 1909; first publ. 1904)Google Scholar.

22 For overviews, see Chapman, Mark D., Anglicanism: A Very Short Introduction (Oxford, 2006)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Jacob, W. M., The Making of the Anglican Church Worldwide (London, 1997)Google Scholar; Ward, Kevin, A History of Global Anglicanism (Cambridge, 2006)CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Most comprehensive is now Maughan, Mighty England.

23 M. M., Bishop Montgomery, 8–9.

24 Ibid. 49.

25 See Wynne, G. Robert, The Church in Greater Britain: The Donnellan Lectures delivered before the University of Dublin 1900–1901 (London, 1901)Google Scholar; see also Carey, God's Empire.

26 Hardwick, Anglican British World.

27 See Carey, Hilary, ‘Gladstone, the Colonial Church, and Imperial State’, in eadem and Gascoigne, John, eds, Church and State in Old and New Worlds (Leiden, 2011), 155–82Google Scholar, especially 161–6.

28 Tucker, H. W., The English Church in other Lands, or, the Spiritual Expansion of England (London, 1886)Google Scholar.

29 Montgomery, Foreign Missions, 2.

30 Ibid. 10.

31 Ibid. xvi.

32 Ibid. 20.

33 Ibid. xvii.

34 Ibid. xvi–xvii.

35 Montgomery, H. H. and Stock, Eugene, Christian Missions in the Far East: Addresses on the Subject (London, 1905), 6Google Scholar.

36 Montgomery, H. H., ed., Mankind and the Church, being an Attempt to estimate the Contribution of Great Races to the Fulness of the Church of God, 2nd impression (London, 1909; first publ. 1907)Google Scholar.

37 Ibid. xli–xlii.

38 Ibid. xli–xlii.

39 See Stephenson, Alan M. G., Anglicanism and the Lambeth Conferences (London, 1978), 111–18Google Scholar.

40 See Stanley, Brian, The World Missionary Conference, Edinburgh 1910, SHCM (Grand Rapids, MI, 2009)Google Scholar. On education, see Jensz, Felicity, ‘The 1910 Edinburgh World Missionary Conference and Comparative Colonial Education’, HE 47 (2018), 399414Google Scholar. Commission III of the conference was dedicated to ‘Education in Relation to the Christianization of National Life’.

41 Bell, George, Randall Davidson: Archbishop of Canterbury (London, 1952), 568Google Scholar.

42 Maughan, ‘Imperial Christianity?’, 40.

43 Pan-Anglican Congress, 7 vols (London, 1908).

44 Stuart A. Donaldson, ‘The Rationale of Foreign Missions’, ibid. 5: 5–8, at 6.

45 Ibid. 6–7.

46 See Gerald Studdert-Kennedy, ‘Westcott, George Herbert (1862–1928)’, ODNB.

47 See idem, ‘Westcott, Foss (1863–1949)’, ODNB.

48 Westcott, ed., Life of Westcott, 1: 190.

49 Ibid. 235.

50 G. H. Westcott, ‘General Statement, Missionary Methods (2) Educational 1’, Pan-Anglican Congress, 5: 29–31, at 29.

51 Ibid.

52 Ibid. 30.

53 Pan-Anglican Congress 5: 161.

54 Jeffrey Cox, ‘Whitehead, Henry (1853–1947)’, ODNB.

55 Henry Whitehead, ‘Village Populations V. Educated Classes’, in Pan-Anglican Congress, 5: 150–3, at 151.

56 Ibid. 153.

57 Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, Aids to Reflection in the Formation of a Manly Character on the several Grounds of Prudence, Morality and Religion, illustrated by select Passages from our elder Divines, especially from Archbishop Leighton (London, 1825)Google Scholar, 195 (‘Aphorisms on Spiritual Religion’).

58 Bishop of Chota Nagpur [Henry Whitehead], Pan-Anglican Congress, 5: 153–7, at 153.

59 Ibid. 154.

60 Ibid. 156.

61 Ibid. 157.

62 Pan-Anglican Congress 5: 158.

63 On Andrews, see Lockley, Philip, ‘Social Anglicanism and Empire: C. F. Andrews's Christian Socialism’, in Brown, Stewart J., Methuen, Charlotte and Spicer, Andrew, eds, The Church and Empire, SCH 54 (Cambridge, 2018), 407–21Google Scholar.

64 Rudra, S. K., Missionary Education in India, Pan-Anglican Papers, Pamphlet S. D. 2(1) (London, 1908), 2Google Scholar.

65 On Brahmo Samaj, see Jones, Kenneth W., The New Cambridge History of India, 3/1: Socio-Religious Reform Movements in British India (Cambridge, 1990), 30–9Google Scholar.

66 Rudra, Missionary Education, 3.

67 Ibid. 3.

68 Ibid. 6–7.

69 Ibid. 7.

70 On Wigram, see Mehta, Ved, Mahatma Gandhi and his Apostles (New Haven, CT, 1976), 240Google Scholar. Returning to England, Wigram went on to become CMS secretary for India (1915–29) and CMS secretary (1929–32).

71 Wigram, E. F. E., Equipment of Native Workers: India, Pan-Anglican Papers, Pamphlet S.D. S (k) (London, 1908), 45Google Scholar.

72 Ibid. 1.

73 Ibid. 3.

74 On Copleston, see Michael Laird, ‘Copleston, Reginald Stephen (1845–1925)’, ODNB. Copleston was married to Edith Chenevix Trench, whose father, Richard Trench (1807–86), archbishop of Dublin from 1864, had set up the first higher educational establishment for women in Ireland in 1866. From his Cambridge days, Richard Trench had been, and remained, a close friend of F. D. Maurice, another educational pioneer who displayed an interest in other world religions.

75 See his Boyle Lectures, The Religions of the World and their Relations to Christianity (London, 1847).

76 R. S. Copleston, ‘Presentation of the Christian Faith to the Buddhist’, Pan-Anglican Congress, 5: 177–81, at 178.

77 Ibid.

78 R. S. Copleston, The Missionary's Equipment: India, Pan-Anglican Papers, Pamphlet S. D. 5(a) (London, 1908), 1.

79 Ibid. 3.

80 Ibid.

81 Copleston, ‘Presentation’, 181.

82 Ibid. 274.

83 A. G. Fraser, ‘The Problem before Educational Missions in Ceylon’, Pan-Anglican Papers, no. S. D. 2 (c). These are bound into volume 5. Fraser later chaired a commission on village education in India for the Conference of Missionary Societies in Great Britain and Ireland: see Fraser, A. G., Village Education in India: The Report of a Commission of Inquiry (London, 1920)Google Scholar.

84 Fraser, ‘Problem’, 1–2.

85 Ibid. 3.

86 Ibid.

87 Ibid. 4.

88 Ibid. 5.

89 Ibid. 7.

90 Ibid. 8.

91 A description of the chapel can be found in ‘Trinity College Chapel’, online at: <https://www.trinitycollege.lk/chapel/>, and there are photographs in ‘Building the Trinity College Chapel’, at: <https://www.trinitycollege.lk/chapel/building-of-the-chapel/> both last accessed 20 November 2018.

92 This understanding was even adopted in Article 22 of the League of Nations Covenant: Africa was now proclaimed to be a responsibility undertaken in the name of higher civilization, with ‘the tutelage of such peoples … entrusted to advanced nations’: Betts, R. F. (rev. M. Asiwaju): ‘Methods and Institutions of European Domination’, in Boahen, A. Adu, ed., UNESCO General History of Africa, 7: Africa under Colonial Domination 1880–1935 (Berkeley, CA, 1985), 314Google Scholar.

93 See also D. Chanaiwa, ‘African Initiatives and Resistance in Southern Africa’, ibid. 194–220, at 198; Wole Soyinka , ‘The Arts in Africa during the Period of Colonial Rule’, ibid. 539–64, at 563; R. D. Ralston, ‘Africa and the New World’, ibid. 746–81, at 780–1.

94 See Esme Cleall's work on medical missions in India and the pathologizing of heathenism: Missionary Discourses of Difference: Negotiating Otherness in the British Empire, 1840–1900 (Basingstoke, 2012).

95 Etherington, ‘Education and Medicine’, 261.

96 Frykenberg, Christianity in India, 339.

97 Temple, Frederick, ‘The Education of the World’, in Essays and Reviews, 10th edn (London, 1862; first publ. 1860), 158Google Scholar, at 52.