The Anglican Church in Burma: From Colonial Past to Global Future
Sometimes presumed to be a mere relic of British colonialism, the Anglican Church in Burma (Myanmar) has its own complex identity, intricately interwoven with beliefs and traditions that predate the arrival of Christianity. In this essential volume, Edward Jarvis succinctly reconstructs this history and demonstrates how Burma’s unique voice adds vital context to the study of Anglicanism’s predicament and the future of worldwide Christianity.

Over the past two hundred years, the Anglican Church in Burma has seen empires rise and fall. Anglican Christians survived the brutal Japanese occupation, experienced rampant poverty and environmental disaster, and began a tortuous and frustrating quest for peace and freedom under a lawless dictatorship. Using a range of sources, including archival documents and the firsthand accounts of Anglicans from a variety of backgrounds, Jarvis tells the story of the church’s life beyond empire, exploring how Christians of non-Western heritage remade the church after a significant part of its liturgical documents and literature was destroyed in World War Two and how, more recently, the church has gained attention for its alignment with influential conservative and orthodox movements within Anglicanism.

Comprehensive and concise, this fascinating history will appeal to scholars and students of religious studies, World Christianity, church history, and the history of missions and theology as well as to clergy, seminarians, and those interested in the current crises and future direction of Anglicanism.

1138879056
The Anglican Church in Burma: From Colonial Past to Global Future
Sometimes presumed to be a mere relic of British colonialism, the Anglican Church in Burma (Myanmar) has its own complex identity, intricately interwoven with beliefs and traditions that predate the arrival of Christianity. In this essential volume, Edward Jarvis succinctly reconstructs this history and demonstrates how Burma’s unique voice adds vital context to the study of Anglicanism’s predicament and the future of worldwide Christianity.

Over the past two hundred years, the Anglican Church in Burma has seen empires rise and fall. Anglican Christians survived the brutal Japanese occupation, experienced rampant poverty and environmental disaster, and began a tortuous and frustrating quest for peace and freedom under a lawless dictatorship. Using a range of sources, including archival documents and the firsthand accounts of Anglicans from a variety of backgrounds, Jarvis tells the story of the church’s life beyond empire, exploring how Christians of non-Western heritage remade the church after a significant part of its liturgical documents and literature was destroyed in World War Two and how, more recently, the church has gained attention for its alignment with influential conservative and orthodox movements within Anglicanism.

Comprehensive and concise, this fascinating history will appeal to scholars and students of religious studies, World Christianity, church history, and the history of missions and theology as well as to clergy, seminarians, and those interested in the current crises and future direction of Anglicanism.

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The Anglican Church in Burma: From Colonial Past to Global Future

The Anglican Church in Burma: From Colonial Past to Global Future

by Edward Jarvis
The Anglican Church in Burma: From Colonial Past to Global Future

The Anglican Church in Burma: From Colonial Past to Global Future

by Edward Jarvis

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Overview

Sometimes presumed to be a mere relic of British colonialism, the Anglican Church in Burma (Myanmar) has its own complex identity, intricately interwoven with beliefs and traditions that predate the arrival of Christianity. In this essential volume, Edward Jarvis succinctly reconstructs this history and demonstrates how Burma’s unique voice adds vital context to the study of Anglicanism’s predicament and the future of worldwide Christianity.

Over the past two hundred years, the Anglican Church in Burma has seen empires rise and fall. Anglican Christians survived the brutal Japanese occupation, experienced rampant poverty and environmental disaster, and began a tortuous and frustrating quest for peace and freedom under a lawless dictatorship. Using a range of sources, including archival documents and the firsthand accounts of Anglicans from a variety of backgrounds, Jarvis tells the story of the church’s life beyond empire, exploring how Christians of non-Western heritage remade the church after a significant part of its liturgical documents and literature was destroyed in World War Two and how, more recently, the church has gained attention for its alignment with influential conservative and orthodox movements within Anglicanism.

Comprehensive and concise, this fascinating history will appeal to scholars and students of religious studies, World Christianity, church history, and the history of missions and theology as well as to clergy, seminarians, and those interested in the current crises and future direction of Anglicanism.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780271091570
Publisher: Penn State University Press
Publication date: 10/08/2024
Series: World Christianity , #4
Pages: 226
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.63(d)

About the Author

Edward Jarvis is Fellow of the Royal Asiatic Society and the Royal Anthropological Institute. He is the author of Sede Vacante: The Life and Legacy of Archbishop Thục and Carlos Duarte Costa: Testament of a Socialist Bishop.

Table of Contents

Foreword by Archbishop Stephen Than Myint Oo

Acknowledgements

List of Abbreviations

Introduction

Chapter 1. “The Only Natural Soil Available”: Burma and the Arrival of Christianity

Chapter 2. “A Devout Individual Churchman Here and There”: The Church in Colonial Burma

Chapter 3. “Fellow-Subjects of Our Gracious Empress”: Peoples and Missions of the Colonial Church

Chapter 4. “Where There Ain’t No Ten Commandments”: The Church in the Early Twentieth Century

Chapter 5. “Patient in Tribulation but Resolute in Faith”: The Church and the Second World War

Chapter 6. “This Last Step in the Historic Task”: Independence and the Challenges of Postcolonial Burma

Chapter 7. “A Land and People of Promise”: Intercultural Theology in a Southeast Asian Context

Chapter 8. “Carrying the Cross”: Perspectives on the Church in Burma Today

Afterword

Appendix 1: Chronology of the Anglican Church in Burma

Appendix 2: List of Bishops Having Leadership of the Church in Burma

Appendix 3: List of Ethnic Groups and Subgroups in Burma

Notes

Bibliography

Index

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