Muthyala Theophilus
The Professor M. Theophilus CBCNC | |
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Born |
Muthyala Theophilus May 7, 1895[1] Gunnanapudy,[1] Krishna district, Andhra Pradesh |
Died |
December 10, 1946 51)[1] Kakinada,[1] East Godavari district, Andhra Pradesh | (aged
Cause of death | Tuberculosis |
Nationality | Indian |
Other names | Theophilus Ayyagaru |
Citizenship | India |
Education | B.D.,[1] |
Alma mater | CBM-McLaurin High School and Pitapuram Rajah College, both in Kakinada, Andhra Pradesh and Serampore College, Serampore, West Bengal |
Occupation | Spiritual Formator |
Years active | 1924-1946 (22 years) |
Religion | Christianity |
Parent(s) | Smt. Mary and Sri Benjamin[1] |
Church | Convention of Baptist Churches of Northern Circars |
Congregations served | President, Andhra Baptist Church, Kakinada (1931-1934) |
Offices held |
Teacher, CBM-McLaurin High School, Kakinada (1917), Professor, Ramayapatnam Baptist Theological Seminary, Ramayapatnam (1924-1926), Professor, Baptist Theological Seminary, Kakinada (1926-1946) |
Title | Professor |
M. Theophilus (May 7, 1895 - December 10, 1946) was a Baptist Patriarch and Spiritual Formator of the Protestant Convention of Baptist Churches of Northern Circars, a major congregation along the Bay of Bengal in Andhra Pradesh, India that extends from Srikakulam District in the northern tip through Guntur District in the middle. Theophilus taught at the Baptist Theological Seminary, Kakinada during the period 1926-1946 and was also Senator[2] of India's first[3] University, the Senate of Serampore College (University) during 1942-1946 taking forward not only the theological concerns of the University but also the concerns of Serampore College, which as a dual University affiliated entity, had the arts, science and commerce faculties affiliated to the University of Calcutta.[2] In matters of Church union, Theophilus actively cooperated[4] with the National Council of Churches in India that not only incorporated the Protestant and the Orthodox Churches but also reached out to the Catholics.
The timeline of Theophilus (1895-1946), though short lived, can almost be put in the same line of Juhanon Mar Thoma (1893-1976), the Mar Thoma Patriarch who happened to study at the seminary in Bangalore around the period[5] when Theophilus was undergoing spiritual studies at Serampore between 1919-1924.
Theophilus was an ecumenist who envisioned a Church that surpassed doctrinal barriers.[6] Both Theophilus and his companion Gordon P. Barss took the lead[6] to take up conversations between the Baptists and a few other Protestant congregations comprising the Anglicans, Congregationalists, Methodists, and Presbyterians for forming a Union. The untimely death of Theophilus in 1946 toned down the strength of the dialogue and the Baptists could not join the Church of South India that was inaugurated in 1947 at St. George's Cathedral, Madras. While this was so, the Baptists of North India joined the Church of North India in 1970. The Church Historian, D. J. Jeremiah, a member[7] of the Church History Association of India writes that,[6]
Theophilus was one of the chief architects of the Convention of Baptist Churches of Northern Circars. His leadership was well recognised both at the state and national level. His interest in other Churches and his contacts with other denominational leaders enriched and moulded his thinking and though he was an ardent Baptist, he fought for a Church Union. He could not bear nor did he believe in denominational differences. He strongly recommended for Church Union and published his articles in Ravi.[8] But his death in 1946 put an end to the move towards union on the part of the CBCNC.[6]
In 1948, G. R. Lorne of Kakinada wrote a well-researched biography replete with footnotes on M. Theophilus. In one of the chapters, Lorne highlights the personal prayer and devotional life of Theophilus who seemed to take much interest in reading titles on St. Francis of Assissi, St. Francis de Sales, Sadhu Sundar Singh and other devotional reading material.[1] Lorne wrote that Theophilus had much concern for the clergy seeing them as servants of Christ.[1]
Writings
In 1993, the Board of Theological Education of the Senate of Serampore College during the incumbency of H. S. Wilson commissioned vernacular bibliography lists to be prepared for which the Church Historian, Ravela Joseph with the assistance of Suneel Bhanu took the onus to prepare a comprehensive list of original Christian writings in Telugu language in which one[9] of the writings of M. Theophilus was also listed.
- 1935 (with L. E. Wilton), ''The Light of the Harmony of the Gospels,[9]
- 1935, Life history of William Carey,[10]
- 1941, Pioneers of the Canadian Baptist Mission[11]
Studies
Scholastic and Collegiate
Theophilus hailed from Krishna District and schooled at Gunnanapudy, a mission station of the Canadian Baptist Ministries and during the course of his scholastic studies, he was transferred from one place to the other, first to Akiveedu in 1907, Samalkot in 1908 and finally to Kakinada in 1912 to the CBM-McLaurin High School.[1] For collegiate studies, Theophilus enrolled at the local Pitapuram Rajah College in Kakinada in 1915 and also taught as a Teacher in 1917 at his alma mater, the CBM-McLaurin High School.[1]
Theologiate
In 1919, the Canadian Baptist Ministries sent Theophilus to the Serampore College, Serampore to pursue spiritual studies leading to Bachelor of Divinity.[1] Theophilus lived in the old Danish town studying at the theological faculty at Serampore College which also had students studying for arts, science and commerce under George Howells, then Principal of the historical College. After nearly three years of spiritual formation studies, Theophilus took ill and was sent to the Tuberculosis Sanatorium, Madanapalle where he spent nearly a year between 1922-1923 recuperating from his illness. In October 1923, Theophilus returned to Serampore to complete his graduate studies.[1] A year later, the University awarded the degree of B.D. to Theophilus in the ensuing convocation during the Registrarship of The Rev. John Drake.
Academic career
Ramayapatnam
In July 1924, moved to Ramayapatnam, a mission station of the American Baptists. Incidentally, the Canadian Baptists initiated their mission together with the American Baptists during the last century. Though the Canadian Baptists moved to Kakinada and started a stand-alone mission in 1874 on the invitation of Thomas Gabriel, and also started a seminary in 1882, it was shut down in 1920 and the existing students and faculty were transferred to Ramayapatnam. Theophilus, who joined the faculty of the Ramayapatnam Baptist Theological Seminary in 1924, stayed on in Ramayapatnam teaching seminarians until 1926.[1]
Kakinada
In 1926,[12] the seminary in Kakinada was revived[12] leading to the recall of the Canadian Baptist faculty from Ramayapatnam. Theophilus moved from Ramayapatnam to Kakinada where he taught at the Baptist Theological Seminary from 1926 onwards along with C. Bhanumurthy. Theophilus joined the seminary in 1926 and served under three Principals, namely, J. B. McLaurin, Gordon P. Barss, and Archibald Gordon. It was during this period that a young aspirante, A. B. Masilamani[13] joined the seminary and would later on became a major contributor to the Church. Theophilus and his companions, Chetti Bhanumurthy, Gordon P. Barss, and Archibald Gordon worked towards University affiliation that required a rigorous academic regimen which was already in place at the seminary. In 1946,[14] the University granted affiliation[12] to the Baptist Theological Seminary which then began offering courses leading to Licentiate in Theology[1] which also saw an increased uptake with a record number of 46[4] admissions that year.
Theophilus taught at the seminary for nearly twenty years until he died suddenly in 1946 while being on duty within the portals of the seminary[1] leading to untold grief and sadness that engulfed the seminary and the CBCNC which the Indian Church History Review puts it as,[4]
A great blow and great sadness came to the Seminary in 1946 in the death of Theophilus.[4]
Contribution
All India Sunday School Association
Theophilus was an examiner to the All India Sunday School Association (formerly Union) of the National Council of Churches in India.[1]
Christian Endeavour
In 1939, Theophilus was elected President[4] of the Christian Endeavour Societies' Union of India, Burma and Ceylon and had been instrumental in organizing Christian Endeavour meetings in East Godavari district since 1932.[1]
Convention
Theophilus was involved[6] in efforts to form the Convention of Baptist Churches of Northern Circars to work together with the Canadian Baptist Ministries. Theophilus believed in the Indian ethos and conceived[15] a team comprising the Canadians and the Indians working towards the Christian mission of the Church with the clergy in the lead.
In 1947, when the Convention of Baptist Churches of Northern Circars was formed, the Clergy led[16] the Society in line with the wishes of Theophilus. At one point of time, A. B. Masilamani who happened to be a student of Theophilus also became President of the CBCNC in 1959.[16] After nearly 25 years of the formation of the CBCNC, successive leaderships disregarded the clergy with the Laity in the lead, leading to obvious conflict of interest on the part of the Laity who showed scant regard to the Christian mission leading to a plethora of lawsuits[17] and legal recourse[17] leading to chaotic disruptions in the Convention of Baptist Churches of Northern Circars resulting in an irrevocable crisis that brewed in 1972 that caught the attention of Research Scholars, especially M. B. Diwakar who undertook a study titled, An Investigation into the historical antecedents of the crisis in the CBCNC during 1972 to 1974.[18]
Senate of Serampore College (University)
In 1942,[2] Theophilus became a Senator of the Senate of Serampore College (University) representing the Baptists of India in the Senate.[1]This was the period when The Rev. John Drake was Registrar of the University.
Student Christian Movement
Theophilus was a member of the Student Christian Movement and became President of the Andhra Pradesh Unit of the SCMI in 1939 and led many college students to active membership.[1]
Andhra Baptist Church, Kakinada
In 1931,[19] Theophilus became Honorary President[19] of the Andhra Baptist Church in the neighbourhood of the Seminary in Kakinada and held the position for four years until 1934 coinciding with the Pastorships of The Rev. C. Prakasam and Pastor P. Premanandam.[19]
Theophilus - the Professor who endured illness
In 1923, when Tuberculosis first struck Theophilus in Serampore while he was studying, he was able to recuperate at the Church of South India-Sanatorium in Madanapalle. However, Tuberculosis once again struck Theophilus in 1936 when he was teaching at the seminary in Kakinada from where he moved to Gopalpur-on-Sea to a mission station of the Canadian Baptist Ministries for rest and again to Rajahmundry, the same year, where he was admitted to the Andhra Evangelical Lutheran Church-Sanatorium and then moved to Vengurla in 1937 to the Church of North India Sanatorium.[1] For nearly twenty years', Theophilus endured Tuberculosis until his death on December 10, 1946 at the ground floor of the administrative building of the Baptist Theological Seminary in Kakinada where he lay motionless in his chair until a student who came out from the classroom that morning to enquire about his Professor who was unduly delayed, but to his shock, discovered his Professor lying in a chair, calm and motionless,[1] an incident which remained etched in the history of the Baptist Theological Seminary, Kakinada.
Theologians down the line have also had upsets either in their seminary days or during their latter part of their career. S. J. Samartha who became Principal of Serampore College, Serampore endured typhoid during his seminary days in Bangalore which put him out of the seminary for nearly a year and was cared for by his parents. Similarly, G. D. Melanchton of the United Theological College, Bangalore was stricken with paralysis during the latter part of his teaching career but the Council of the United Theological College, Bangalore through the efforts of E. C. John then Principal, D. S. Satyaranjan then Registrar of the University and G. Babu Rao a former student of E. C. John, ensured that Melanchton remained in the College Faculty Quarters in spite of [is illness. As for Theophilus, given the condition that he was in, the Canadian Baptist Ministries took Theophilus under its care right from the time of his education in the mission schools, the sudden death of his parents one after the other within a span of ten days,[1] and the time when he was stricken with tuberculosis.[1]
In December 2014,[20] nearly seventy years after the death of Theophilus at the portals of the Baptist Theological Seminary in Kakinada, the seminary witnessed another upset when a Baptist patriarch who was preaching at the seminary Christmas collapsed onto the pulpit while delivering a sermon evidently at the same spot where Theophilus collapsed and died.[21] Seminarians recall these two events, though decades apart, of the successive Baptist Patriarchs who met untimely deaths at the seminary portals and incidentally, both of them had much concern for the clergy and the seminary.[21]
Reminiscence
The Rev. T. Gnananandam writing in the Silver Jubilee Souvenir of the CBCNC in 1972[22] brings to light the fact that Theophilus was involved with the administration of not only the CBCNC which worked with the Telugu people but also with the other[22] three vernacular associations in Odisha,
- The Kui language people - Kui Baptist Association,[23]
- The Odiya language people - Utkal Baptist Mandali Sammiloni,[24]
- The Soura language people - Soura Baptist Association,[25]
T. Gnananandam wrote,
Theophilus was considered a very important member of the Telugu-Odiya Council. He was responsible for drafting the whole constitution of the same body. He also did a good job on the constitution of the present convention.
Academic offices | ||
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Preceded by |
Professor, Baptist Theological Seminary, Kakinada, Andhra Pradesh 1926-1946 |
Succeeded by |
Honorary titles | ||
Preceded by |
Senator, Senate of Serampore College (University), Serampore, West Bengal 1942-1946 |
Succeeded by |
Preceded by D. M. David, Esquire |
President, Christian Endeavour Union of India 1939 |
Succeeded by |
Other offices | ||
Preceded by The Rev. R. C. Becson[19] 1922-1930 |
President,[19] Andhra Baptist Church, Kakinada, Andhra Pradesh 1931-1934 |
Succeeded by Pastor P. Premanandam[19] 1935-1948 |
References
- Notes
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 G. R. Lorne, He Walked with God: A Life-story of M. Theophilus of the Canadian Baptist Mission, India, Baptist Book Room, Kakinada, 1948.
- 1 2 3 University of Calcutta Calendar 1942, University of Calcutta, 1942, p.711.
- ↑ Sankar Ray, The Hindu (Business Line), 11 April 2008 Almost a century later, the charter was endorsed officially under the Bengal Govt Act IV of 1918.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Indian Church History Review, Volume 13, 1979, pp.75-78
- ↑ K. M. Hiwale (Compiled), Directory of the United Theological College 1910-1997, Bangalore, 1997. p.14.
- 1 2 3 4 5 D. J. Jeremiah, The Relationship of the Baptist Churches in Andhra Pradesh to the Church Union Movement in South India since 1919 in Reflections on Theology Today: Papers Presented by the ACTC Faculty during the Academic Year 1988–89 on Theology and the Mission and Ministry of the Church, Andhra Christian Theological College, Hyderabad, 1990, pp.54-73.
- ↑ Church History Association of India, Council and Officers.
- ↑ Ravi was a magazine published in Telugu language. Cited in Press in India, published by the Registrar of Newspapers, New Delhi, 1961, p.19.
- 1 2 M. Theophilus, L. E. Wilton, The Light of the Harmony of the Gospels, The Baptist Book Room, Kakinada, 1935. Featured in Ravela Joseph, Suneel Bhanu (Compiled), Bibliography of Original Christian Writings in India in Telugu, Board of Theological Education of the Senate of Serampore College, Bangalore, 1993, p.6.
- ↑ M. Theophilus, Life history of William Carey, Baptist Book Room, Kakinada, 1935.
- ↑ M. Theophilus, Pioneers of the Canadian Baptist Mission, George Press, Kakinada, 1941. Cited by James Elisha Taneti in History of the Telugu Christians: A Bibliography, Scarecrow, Lanham, 2011, p.90.
- 1 2 3 D. J. Jeremiah, Christian Ministerial Training in the Convention of Baptist Churches of Northern Circars from 1882 to 1971. A B. D. thesis submitted to the Senate of Serampore College (University) through the Andhra Christian Theological College, Rajahmundry, 1971.
- ↑ M. Rajiv Theophilus, Professor Mutyala Theophilus, B.D., in United Evangelical Christian Fellowship Souvenir, New Jersey, 2012, pp.154-155.
- ↑ Orville E. Daniel, Rising Tides in India, Canadian Baptist Foreign Mission Board, Toronto, 1963, p.91.
- ↑ James Elisha Taneti, History of the Telugu Christians: A Bibliography, Scarecrow, Lanham, 2011, p.7.
- 1 2 W. G. Carder, Hand to the Indian Plow: Volume One, Carder, Hyderabad, 1976.
- 1 2 2001 (2) ALD 215, 2001 (2) ALT 190. . 2003 (5) ALD 218 . 1992 (2) ALT 715 . 2007 (1) ALD 385 . 2002 (6) ALD 503
- ↑ M. B. Diwakar, An Investigation into the historical antecedents of the crisis in the CBCNC during 1972 to 1974 in Thesis Titles, Board of Theological Education of the Senate of Serampore College, Bangalore, 1991.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 A. Daniel, K. Venkata Ratnam (Edited), Andhra Baptist Church, Kakinada (1906-2006) - 100 Years Souvenir, Kakinada, 2006. From section on Office bearers of the Church (1906-2006).
- ↑ Canadian Baptist Ministries, Remembering G. Babu Rao.
- 1 2 C. L. Johnson in Memorial Mass for the Baptist Patriarch in Kakinada in 2015.
- 1 2 T. Gnananandam, Our Beginnings in G. R. Devasahayam (Edited), CBCNC Silver Jubilee 1947-1972 Souvenir, Kakinada, 1972, pp.18-22.
- ↑ Kui Baptist Association
- ↑ Utkal Baptist Mandali Sammiloni
- ↑ Soura Baptist Association
- Further reading
- G. R. Lorne (1948). "He Walked with God - A life story of M. Theophilus of the Canadian Baptist Mission, India". The Baptist Book Room, Kakinada.
- Church History Association of India (1979). "Indian Church History Review" 13.
- N. Surya Rao (1984). "The History of the Theological Training Institute at Kakinada, Andhra Pradesh 1882–1964. Unpublished M.Th. thesis, United Theological College, Bangalore".
- D. J. Jeremiah (1990). "The Relationship of the Baptist Churches in Andhra Pradesh to the Church Union Movement in South India since 1919. Reflections on Theology Today: Papers Presented by the ACTC Faculty during the Academic Year 1988–89 on Theology and the Mission and Ministry of the Church, Andhra Christian Theological College, Hyderabad".
- G. Beaulah Pearl Sunanda (1990). "An Insight into the History of the Canadian Baptist Mission in Andhra Pradesh (1874–1924), Madras Christian College, Madras".
- A. Daniel, K. Venkata Ratnam (Edited) (2006). "Andhra Baptist Church, Kakinada (1906-2006) - 100 Years Souvenir".