Saint Thomas Anglicans

Saint Thomas Anglicans
Total population
200,000[1][2]
Regions with significant populations
Kerala, India; with immigrant congregations in Europe, North America and Australia
Languages
Malayalam, English
Religion
Anglicanism (1836–1947)
United Protestant within the Anglican Communion (1947 onwards)
Related ethnic groups
Malayalis, Cochin Jews[3]

Saint Thomas Anglicans (often called Anglican Syrian Christians or CSI Syrian Christians) are the Saint Thomas Christian members of the Church of South India (CSI); the self-governing South Indian province of the Anglican Communion. They are among the several different ecclesiastical communities that splintered out of the once undivided Saint Thomas Christians; an ancient Christian community whose origins goes back to the first century missionary activities of Saint Thomas the Apostle, in the present-day South Indian state of Kerala. The Apostle, as legend has it, arrived in Malankara (derived from Maliankara near Muziris) in AD 52.[4][5][6]

The community began as a faction of Malankara Syrian Christians, who opted to join the Anglican Church, mostly between 1836 and 1840.[7] This happened due to the influence of the Church Mission Society missionaries, who laboured amongst the Oriental Orthodox Christians of Travancore.[8][9] In 1879, these St. Thomas Anglican congregations were organized as the Diocese of Travancore and Cochin of the Church of England.[10][11][12] Other Saint Thomas Christians influenced by Anglican practice and belief would go on to found the Malankara Mar Thoma Syrian Church, a church in full communion with the Anglican Communion.

In 1930, a separate Anglican ecclesiastical province was founded from the Church of England dioceses in the British Indian Empire, establishing the Church of India, Burma and Ceylon.[13] In 1947, soon after Indian independence, the Anglican dioceses of South India, merged with other Protestant Churches in the region, on the basis of the Lambeth Quadrilateral, forming the Church of South India. Anglican Syrian Christians have been members of the CSI, ever since.[14][15][16]

  1. ^ Gregorios 1982, p. 2.
  2. ^ Thomas 1993, p. 83.
  3. ^ Ross 1979, pp. 88–89.
  4. ^ Gregorios & Roberson 2008, p. 285.
  5. ^ Neill 2002, pp. 247–251.
  6. ^ "Anglican Communion: Member Churches".
  7. ^ Neill 2002, pp. 247, 250–251.
  8. ^ Bayly (2004), p. 300.
  9. ^ Frykenberg 2008, pp. 246–249.
  10. ^ MacKenzie 1901, p. 39.
  11. ^ Fortescue 1913, p. 375.
  12. ^ Chatterton 1924.
  13. ^ Buchanan 2009, pp. 234, 420–424.
  14. ^ Fahlbusch 1999, pp. 686–688.
  15. ^ Melton & Baumann 2010, p. 707.
  16. ^ Livingstone 2006.

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