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MORAVIAN MISSIONS FEBRUARY 2005 VOL XXIV – NO. 2 PAGE TWO |
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(Continued from p.1) service, the Moravian Church admits that the body has dwindled, from five per cent of the population to one per cent, it must now search deeply within for the answers. “One thing for sure, we have to refashion the character of our church if we intend to remain a viable option for Christian witness in an increasing religiously plural context”, says Dr. Livingstone Thompson, president of the executive board of the Jamaican province. According to old church records, the Moravian Church was established in Czechoslovakia in 1457. It was the first Christian church to be neither Catholic nor Eastern Orthodox which made it the first Protestant church 60 years before the Lutheran Reformation, which gave official birth to Protestantism. The movement was pioneered by John Hus, who was burnt at the stake in 1415 by Roman Catholic functionaries, after being accused of leading a charge of separation from Roman Catholicism. The first set of Moravian missionaries arrived in Jamaica from England and included an Irishman, landing off the coast of St. Elizabeth. They deliberately shunned the towns, opting to remain mostly in the rural parts to serve the large slave population. Most are to be found today in Westmoreland, St. Elizabeth and Manchester. “The vision of the early missionaries was to the poorer class,” explains Earl Goulbourne, minister in charge of the Bethlehem Moravian Church in St. Elizabeth and the Provincial Leaders Conferences, with special responsibility to youth work. “And for that reason, most of our congregations are established in rural areas.” But there was another compelling reason: the health of the missionaries from Europe who often fell victim to the harsh tropical climate and who thrived better in the cool hilly rural areas. “Many died of yellow fever and malaria and when they went to the higher areas, the climate was more in agreement with them,” Goulbourne tells the Sunday Observer. He refers to documented anecdote in which one Rev. E Reinke, a member of the executive board who sought to establish a movement in Kingston in the 1900s, almost lost his place in the ministry. Though the Moravian Church boasts of its proud record of ministering to the needs of the poor not unlike other churches at the time, it was not until the end of the 19th century that native Jamaicans were accepted into leadership positions. By the middle of the 20th century, full conversion to local leadership commenced. But Thompson acknowledges that the revolution should have begun earlier. “We feel, in a way, that it waited too long, but we can make reference to a number of native Jamaicans who have made significant contributions to the establishment of the Moravian Church”, he asserts. There are names such as Walter Malton O’Meally, the grandfather of the current post master general Blossom O”Meally Nelson, who was the first native president of the Moravian executive board. |
The late S.U. Hastings was the first native bishop of the church and went on to become the first Jamaican to be elected to head the world Moravian church. He died in the 1990’s. Hastings was one of a handful of presidents of the Jamaica Council of Churches that served twice.
He was the president of the Council at
the time that Jamaica was making its transition from colonialism to
independence and also served during what some dubbed “the politically
turbulent 1970s”. “This was part of the same reality of the Caribbean Single Market and Economy, which Caribbean States are now striving towards. Cuthbert played a leading role in that and he symbolises the strength of the Moravian Church as an ecumenical church“, Thompson notes. Vincent Ignatious Peart played a great role in the formation of the Boys’ Brigade, which is an ecumenical boys’ organization stressing discipline and service. Justine Peart, who is now retired, made a significant contribution in the development of camps. According to Dr. Thompson, all the present leaders of the Moravian Church – himself included and the current Bishop Robert Foster – have come through Peart’s hands. The Jamaican Provincial Moravian Church is divided into four districts, with each having a minister who is a superindendent. Each superintendent serves on the seven-member executive board, which is completed by two laypersons and Dr. Thompson, who is president of the board which oversees the affairs of the province. There are 33 active ordained ministers in Jamaica, two in Cuba and one in the Cayman Islands. The headquarters of the Moravian Church in Jamaica is located at 3 Hector Street in Kingston. It was bequeathed to the organization by Mary Morris Knibb, the first elected councilwoman in Jamaica and a Moravian. She was the founder of the Morris Knibb Preparatory School. The Lititz All Age School in St. Elizabeth is the successor to the first primary school that was established in Jamaica. That school had a current population of about 300 students. It is one of a total of 46 schools established by the Moravian Church in Jamaica, on 68 parcels of lands across the country. Bethlehem Moravian College in St. Elizabeth, formerly Bethlehem Teachers’ College, is one of the signature educational institutions established by the Church. The college was first established in New Port, Manchester. Its first home was the female answer to Mico Teachers’ College, which at the time was an all-male teachers’ college. It initially served for the most part as a vocational trade-training center. The college was relocated to its present location in Malvern (cont. on p. 3)
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