The Jamaica Province of the Moravian Church (formally The Moravian Church in Jamaica and the Cayman Islands) is part of the worldwide Moravian Church Unity.
The work of the Moravian Church in Jamaica started with the arrival on 1754 -12-07 [1] of missionaries Zecharias Caries, Thomas Shallcross and Gotlieb Haberecht [1] from England [2] at the invitation of the Foster and Barham families, owners of several plantations in St Elizabeth. [1] They landed on the coast of St. Elizabeth, deliberately shunning the towns and opting to remain mostly in the rural areas to serve the large slave population. Their first base was on the Bogue estate. [1]
During the first couple of years they had success in their work. Then, in 1755 Br Gottlieb Haberecht died and on 1756-12-24 his replacements Christian Rauch and ? Schulz arrived from America where Rauch had spent fifteen years working amongst Native Americans. [1]
The new arrivals disagreed with Caries and Shallcross about the conditions to be met before a slave could be baptised. The disagreement lost them the respect of many and caused confusion amongst those awaiting baptism. As a result, numbers attending services started to fall and did not recover until 1764 when a Br Schlegel arrived. The revival continued until he died in 1770. Thereafter, little progress was made until 1809. [1]
The work now prospered, particularly after the close of Old Carmel estate in 1823, with membership growing dramatically during apprenticeship (which started in 1834) and after emancipation on 1838-08-01. [1]
By the centenary, membership had reached 13,129 including 4,249 communicants while there were 43 schools teaching 1,728 boys and 1,280 girls. [1]
From the end of the 19th century, native Jamaicans began to be accepted into leadership positions in the church [2] and in 1961, S U Hastings was consecrated as the first Jamaican bishop of the Moravian Church. [3]
Following independence in 1962, and the resulting drive for Jamaicanisation throughout Jamaican society, full conversion to local leadership was gradually achieved, with the last British clergy departing in 19??[ citation needed ].
The 250th anniversary was celebrated in 2004. As part of the celebrations the Jamaican Post Office issued a set of three stamps depicting pioneering Jamaican leaders of the church. [3]
The current Bishops are the Rt. Rev Stanley G. Clarke Ep. Fr. and the Rt. Rev Devon O. Anglin Ep. Fr.
The Rev. Barrington E. Daley is the president of the PEC (the administrative body of the Moravian Church in Jamaica).
Rev. Dr. Paul Gardner former president (2005-2017) was elected president of the World-Wide Moravian Church in 2008 and became the second Jamaican to be so elected.
The Provincial Elders Conference include: President- Rev. Phyllis Smith-Seymour
Vice President and SDC Representative- Rev. Dr. Kofi Nkrumah-Young
Secretary and EDC Representative- Rev. Sacha Lambert
Treasurer and Lay Member - Bro. Lowel Morgan
Mission and Evangelism and CDC Representative- Rev. Kevin Marshall
WDC Representative- Bishop Devon Anglin
Finance and Property and Lay Member- Bro. Anthony Tomlinson
Marriages performed by Moravian ministers were legally recognised from 1835. [1]
Full legal recognition dates from Law 10 of 1884 entitled The Corporation of the Church of The Unity of the Brethren (commonly called Moravians) in Jamaica. [4]
During the first 100 years, 193 European brethren and sisters took part in the work in Jamaica. Of these, 64 died there, 98 returned home or went to serve in other islands and 31 were still in service at the centenary. [1]
Of the 64 who died: [1]
Years served | Died | Years served | Died | Years served | Died | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
drowned on the way to the island | 1 | 5 | 5 | 11 | 1 | ||
less than 1 year | 6 | 6 | 2 | 12 | 2 | ||
1 | 10 | 7 | 3 | 13 | 2 | ||
2 | 7 | 8 | 3 | 14 | 1 | ||
3 | 7 | 9 | 2 | 15 | 1 | ||
4 | 8 | 10 | 2 | 19 | 1 |
As can be seen, average life expectancy was low at the start of the work. It improved later as a side effect of moving the work to cool hilly areas which reduced the incidence of tropical diseases (yellow fever, malaria, typhoid). Nonetheless, many missionaries died from these diseases. One enduring consequence is that most congregations today are found in Westmoreland, St. Elizabeth and Manchester. [2]
The first building used exclusively as a church was erected in 1820 at New Eden. Prior to that, services were held in the hall of the missionaries dwelling house or under trees. Another eleven followed over the next thirty years: [1]
Note: these are building dates, not start of work which was always earlier.
Following emancipation, the church was involved in the setting up of Free Villages for the formerly enslaved, including one at Maidstone [5] (Nazareth) in Manchester, and at Beeston Spring and Beaufort near Darliston in Westmoreland. [2]
The church has always considered education to be an important part of its mission and as a result established 46 schools and two colleges, including the Bethlehem Moravian College (1861). The first school, at Lititz, was also the first primary school of any kind in Jamaica. [2]
The Jamaica Agricultural Society, which was established in 1895, benefited significantly in its early years from the involvement of the church, especially at Bethany, Mizpah and Nazareth in Manchester and Springfield in St. Elizabeth. [2] In particular, the Rev. George Lopp of Bethany, Manchester is credited with the introduction of the Irish potato to Jamaica in 1890. [2]
Moravians were the first to establish a public water supply in St. Elizabeth and Manchester by erecting water storage tanks and associated catchment areas. [2]
In c1740, one of the missionaries to the island of St Thomas became ill with fever and had no one to nurse him. It was not possible to obtain free servants then (there were none) so his congregation, slaves themselves, collected money and bought a slave that they presented to their minister to nurse him. This set a precedent whereby it became common for Moravian missionaries in the west Indies to hold slaves as servants. [1]
Accordingly, in 1755 the missionaries in Jamaica purchased (with the agreement of the directing board in Europe) a small estate of 700 acres (2.8 km2) at New Carmel (now called Old Carmel) near the Bogue estate), and supported themselves in their missionary work by the labour of 30 or 40 slaves. As a result, their credibility amongst the slaves generally was low and their success in converting them to Christianity correspondingly low. The estate was sold in 1823 and the church headquarters moved to Fairfield. [1]
This section reads like a directory .(September 2018) |
External links in this section are to WikiMapia.
3 Hector Street, Kingston 5, Jamaica.
The headquarters site and building was bequeathed to the church by Mary Morris Knibb who founded the adjacent Morris Knibb Preparatory School. [2]
The province is divided into four districts, with each having a minister who is a superintendent. Each superintendent serves on the seven-member executive board, which is completed by two laypersons and Dr. Gardner, who is president of the board which oversees the affairs of the province. There are 33 active ordained ministers in Jamaica, three in Cuba and two in the Cayman. [2]
Minister: Rev. Christopher Davis
Minister: Rev. Christopher Euphfa
Minister: Rev. Ockery Brown
Salem ( 18°08′47″N77°59′16″W / 18.146356°N 77.987866°W ).
Content ( 18°11′02″N77°56′02″W / 18.183922°N 77.933992°W ), Minister: Rev. Recardo Malcolm
New Hope Circuit:
Minister: Rev. Delwarren Palmer
Minister: Rev. Marvin Williams
Minister: Pastor Carlyle Nesbeth
Supplementary Minister: Rev. Sharon Frith-Barrett
Minister: Rt. Rev. Devon Anglin
Minister: Pastor Barnaba Nyirenda
Minister: Rev. Charmane Daley
Minister: Rev. Raymond Seymour
Minister: Rev. Efeso Sicisambwe
Minister: Rev. Everton Smith
Minister: Rev. Barrington Daley
Minister: Rev. Cedric Palmer
Minister: Rev. Joy Skeene
Minister: Rev. Simon Peter Jones
Minister: Rev. Lovern Skeen
Minister: Rev. Joy Skeen
Minister: Rev. Horatio Tomlinson
Minister: Rev. Joan Smith
Minister: Rev. Sacha Lambert
** Covenant
Minister: Rev. Jermaine Gibson
- Supplementary Minister: Rev. Patrick Coke
Minister: Rev Winston Jones
Portmore
Minister: Rev. Kevin Marshall
Supplementary Minister- Rev. George Williams
Harbour View
Supplementary Minister- Rev. Kofi Nkrumah-Young
Minister: Rev. Valerie Royes
** Redeemer
Minister: Rev. Marsha Edwards-Brown
** Four Paths
Minister: Rev. Shantol Davy
Minister: Rev. Ruth Stephenson
There is a youth camp at New Hope ( 18°06′22″N77°58′50″W / 18.10605°N 77.980683°W ) where summer schools are held.
The church established its own archives in 1957 at the Bethlehem Teachers' College, under the supervision of Mrs Vera MacLeavy. In 1974 the records were placed in temporary deposit at the Jamaica Archives. The five categories of records in the collection are:
The collection includes baptism, marriage and burial records, the earliest dated 1824. [7]
The Moravian Church in Jamaica founded and continues to oversee nearly 50 educational establishments at all levels, including Bethlehem Moravian College (formerly Bethlehem Teacher Training College), the first in Jamaica. [2]
The Lititz All Age School in St. Elizabeth is the successor to the first primary school established in Jamaica. It accommodated about 300 students. It is one of a total of 46 schools established by the Moravian Church on 68 parcels of land across Jamaica. "Where ever the Moravians founded a church, they also built a school.". [2]
The church also established a training college for men in 1840. But after 50 years it closed due to a lack of funds. [2]
There are three main architectural styles of Moravian church buildings in Jamaica:
These were mainly built during the early years of the work in Jamaica between 1826 and 1849. [1] They are often the main church of a circuit, where the minister resides in a manse.
They can typically accommodate 700–1000 worshippers. [1]
In addition to the ground floor, there is usually a balcony, often running around three sides of the interior. The balcony is usually the home of a large, 18th century European built pipe organ – originally hand pumped, later converted to electric pumping and now often superseded by a modern electric organ.
There is usually an altar table on a well raised Dais, a pulpit, a font and a lectern.
These buildings were modelled on German churches of the period, with some adaptations to the tropical climate.
The walls are usually built of local stone unrendered externally, plastered internally and painted white. Roofs are corrugated "zinc" sheets, often painted red to hide the inevitable rust. There is invariably a bell either in a separate tower or in a "cupola" over the main door at the front of the building. At the rear, behind the altar table will be a door to a small vestry. There is always a lightning conductor.
Examples: Bethabara, Broadleaf, Carmel, Fairfield, Lititz, Mizpah, Nazareth, Salem, Springfield, Zorn.
These were mainly built during the early years of the work in Jamaica. They are often the outstation churches of a circuit.
They can typically accommodate less than one hundred worshippers.
They comprise a single floor. Musical accompaniment was traditionally piano, now often augmented by a modern electric organ.
There is usually an altar table on a slightly raised Dais, a pulpit, a font and a lectern.
The walls are usually built of local stone unrendered externally, plastered internally and painted white. Roofs are corrugated "zinc" sheets, often painted red to hide the inevitable rust. There is invariably a bell either in a small separate tower (often no more than a pair of wooden uprights and a small roof) or in a small "cupola" over the main door at the front of the building. At the rear, behind the altar table will be a door to a small vestry. There is always a lightning conductor.
Examples:
This category covers any later building. Styles and sizes vary.
Construction is usually breeze block, plastered and painted white both internally and externally. Roofs may be corrugated "zinc" sheets (often painted red to hide the inevitable rust) or shingles (wooden tiles). Internal balconies are absent. Organs are modern electric. There is always a lightning conductor.
There is usually an altar table on a raised Dais, a pulpit, a font and a lectern.
Examples: New Beulah, Harbour View, Trinity.
The Moravian Church is a member of the World Council of Churches. Rev. Dr. Paul Gardner, the President of the P.E.C (the Executive Board of the church) is a member of the World Council of Churches governing body, the Central Committee and the Executive Committee
The Church is a founding member of the Jamaica Council of Churches.
The Moravian Church in Jamaica and the Cayman Islands is a member of the Jamaica Ecumenical Mutual Mission (JEMM)[ citation needed ]. JEMM began in 1979[ citation needed ] and includes two other denominations, the Methodist Church[ citation needed ] and the United Church. [8]
Programmes in which JEMM are involved include health care, skills training, agriculture, youth and adult exchanges and leadership development[ citation needed ]. JEMM also provides counselling centres all over Jamaica[ citation needed ].
JEMM's Annual Youth Exchange is a two-week program held each summer in collaboration with the St. Augustine Mutual Mission (SAMM). [9] Each denomination nominates three young people aged 15 to 17 to participate while[ citation needed ]. Many more similarly aged participants come from SAMM. [9] One week in spent in Jamaica and the other in Florida. [9]
Consecrated | Served until | Name |
---|---|---|
1889 | Hannah [6] | |
1901 | Peter larsen | |
1903 | 1939 | A P Westphal [6] |
1942 | 1960 | J Kneale [6] |
1961 | 1983 [10] | S U Hastings |
1983 | 1993 | Neville Neil [10] [11] |
1994 | 2013 | Robert Foster [11] |
2007 | Active | Stanley George Clarke [11] |
2015 | Active | Devon Oral Anglin |
Nazareth is a borough in Northampton County, Pennsylvania, United States. The borough's population was 6,053 at the 2020 census. Nazareth is part of the Lehigh Valley metropolitan area, which had a population of 861,899 and was the 68th-most populous metropolitan area in the U.S. as of 2020.
The Moravian Church, or the Moravian Brethren, formally the Unitas Fratrum, is one of the oldest Protestant denominations in Christianity, dating back to the Bohemian Reformation of the 15th century and the Unity of the Brethren founded in the Kingdom of Bohemia, sixty years before Luther's Reformation.
Wachovia was the area settled by Moravians in what is now Forsyth County, North Carolina, United States. Of the six 18th-century Moravian "villages of the Lord" established in Wachovia, today only the town of Bethania and city of Winston-Salem exist within the historic Wachovia Tract. The historical tract was somewhat larger than present-day Winston-Salem and somewhat smaller than present-day Forsyth County.
Old Salem is a historic district of Winston-Salem, North Carolina, United States, which was originally settled by the Moravian community in 1766. It features a living-history museum which interprets the restored Moravian community. The non-profit organization began its work in 1950, although some private residents had restored buildings earlier. As the Old Salem Historic District, it was declared a National Historic Landmark (NHL) in 1966, and expanded fifty years later. The district showcases the culture of the Moravian settlement in the Province of North Carolina during the colonial 18th century and post-statehood 19th century via its communal buildings, churches, houses and shops.
Nazareth Hall (1752–1929) was a school in Nazareth, Pennsylvania. It was built, by master mason Melchior Rasp, in 1754 in hopes that Count Nikolaus Ludwig Zinzendorf would return from Europe and settle permanently in the community; he never came back to America. It is located in the Nazareth Hall Tract, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980.
The Moravian Church in North America is part of the worldwide Moravian Church Unity. It dates from the arrival of the first Moravian missionaries to the United States in 1735, from their Herrnhut settlement in present-day Saxony, Germany. They came to minister to the scattered German immigrants, to the Native Americans and to enslaved Africans. They founded communities to serve as home bases for these missions. The missionary "messengers" were financially supported by the work of the "laborers" in these settlements. Currently, there are more than 60,000 members.
Selvin Uriah Hastings CD was the first Jamaican national consecrated as a bishop of the Moravian Church and the first Jamaican to be elected head of the Moravian Church Unity Board.
John Antes was the first American Moravian Missionary to travel and work in Egypt, one of the earliest American-born chamber music composers, and the maker of perhaps the earliest surviving bowed string instrument made in America. Although Antes is often recognized for his choral works, such as Go Congregation Go! and Surely he has Bourne our Griefs, his three string trios have also attracted attention and the lost "six Quartettos" remain a tantalizing mystery.
Bethabara Moravian Church is a congregation of the Jamaica Province of the Moravian Church. It opened for worship on 1841-07-28.
Fairfield Moravian Church and its surrounding settlement was founded in 1785 in Fairfield, Droylsden, Lancashire, England. It was founded by Benjamin La Trobe as a centre for evangelistic work for the Moravian Church in the Manchester area. Numbers 15, 28 and 30 Fairfield Square are Grade II* listed buildings.
Fulneck Moravian Church and its associated settlement were established on the Fulneck estate, Pudsey, in the West Riding of Yorkshire, England, in 1744 by Count Nicolaus Ludwig von Zinzendorf, a Moravian Bishop and Lutheran priest, following a donation of land by the evangelical Anglican clergyman, Benjamin Ingham. Fulneck is now part of the City of Leeds, West Yorkshire.
Christianity was introduced by Spanish settlers who arrived in Jamaica in 1509. Thus, Roman Catholicism was the first Christian denomination to be established. Later, Protestant missions were very active, especially the Baptists, and played a key role in the abolition of slavery.
William Cornelius Reichel was a Moravian author in the United States who did much to document and examine the early history of the Moravian church in the United States.
Carmel Moravian Church sits dramatically atop a hill 1.5 miles (2.4 km) west of the small market town of Newmarket in Westmoreland, Jamaica. It was founded in 1827 at the behest of a local family of planters who wished to teach Christianity to their slaves.
David Tannenberg (1728–1804) was a Moravian organ builder who emigrated to Pennsylvania. He is cited as the most important American organ-builder of his time. He constructed a number of organs during his lifetime, as well as other keyboard instruments. Many of the organs that he built are still in use.
Mary Matz was a Pennsylvania theologian who became the first woman ordained by the Moravian Church in North America. She also served as a vice president of the Moravian National Council of Churches.
The Moravian Historical Society in Nazareth, Pennsylvania, was founded in 1857. Its mission is to preserve, interpret, and celebrate the rich culture of the Moravians. It is the third oldest historical society in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. The Moravian Historical Society is housed in the 1740-1743 Whitefield House on the Ephrata Tract in downtown Nazareth. The Moravian Historical Society is affiliated with the Moravian Archives in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, the repository for records of the Moravian Church in North America, Northern Province.
Alexander Worthy Clerk was a Jamaican Moravian pioneer missionary, teacher and clergyman who arrived in 1843 in the Danish Protectorate of Christiansborg, now Osu in Accra, Ghana, then known as the Gold Coast. He was part of the first group of 24 West Indian missionaries from Jamaica and Antigua who worked under the aegis of the Basel Evangelical Missionary Society of Switzerland. Caribbean missionary activity in Africa fit into the broader "Atlantic Missionary Movement" of the diaspora between the 1780s and the 1920s. Shortly after his arrival in Ghana, the mission appointed Clerk as the first Deacon of the Christ Presbyterian Church, Akropong, founded by the first Basel missionary survivor on the Gold Coast, Andreas Riis in 1835, as the organisation's first Protestant church in the country. Alexander Clerk is widely acknowledged and regarded as one of the pioneers of the precursor to the Presbyterian Church of Ghana. As a leader in education in colonial Ghana, he designed curriculum and pedagogy, co-establishing with fellow educators, George Peter Thompson and Catherine Mulgrave, an all-male boarding middle school, the Salem School at Osu in 1843. In 1848, Clerk was an inaugural faculty member at the Basel Mission Seminary, Akropong, now known as the Presbyterian College of Education, where he was an instructor in Biblical studies. The Basel missionaries founded the Akropong seminary and normal school to train teacher-catechists in service of the mission. The college is the second oldest higher educational institution in early modern West Africa after Fourah Bay College in Freetown, Sierra Leone which was established in 1827. Clerk was the father of Nicholas Timothy Clerk, a Basel-trained theologian, who was elected the first Synod Clerk of the Presbyterian Church of the Gold Coast from 1918 to 1932 and co-founded the all boys' boarding high school, the Presbyterian Boys' Secondary School established in 1938. A. W. Clerk was also the progenitor of the historically important Clerk family from the suburb of Osu in Accra.
Christian Frederick Ramftler (1780–1832) was a German born teacher, minister, and supporter of missionaries, serving the Moravian Church, who worked for most of his career in England. He founded the Moravian Church in Brockweir, Gloucestershire.