John McKim

Last updated

John McKim
Bishop of Tokyo
The Rt. Rev. John McKim.jpg
Church Anglican Church in Japan
Orders
Consecrationby  Abram N. Littlejohn, Theodore B. Lyman, Thomas U.Dudley
Personal details
Born(1852-07-17)July 17, 1852
Pittsfield, Massachusetts
Died4 April 1936(1936-04-04) (aged 83)
Honolulu, Hawaii
Education Griswold College
Nashotah House

John McKim (July 17, 1852 - April 4, 1936) was an American missionary who became Anglican Bishop of Tokyo (later North Tokyo) and Chancellor of Rikkyo University, which was part of the infrastructure he helped rebuild after a severe earthquake in 1923. [1] [2]

Contents

Early and family life

Born in Pittsfield, Massachusetts on July 17, 1852 to John and Mary Ann McKim, McKim attended the local public schools. After graduating from Griswold College in Iowa (named after Bishop Alexander Viets Griswold), McKim attended Nashotah House Theological Seminary in Wisconsin. At some point, he earned a Doctor of Divinity (DD) degree. Rt.Rev. McKim later received honorary degrees from Trinity College and Oxford University, as well as the Order of the Sacred Treasure from the Japanese government. [3]

McKim married twice. He married Ellen Augusta Cole on September 16, 1879. They had two sons, Rev. John Cole McKim (1881-1952, who became a missionary in Japan and then retired to Peekskill, New York and became a writer) and Wilson Moran McKim (1888-195, who lived near Sterling, Illinois). After she died in Tokyo on October 17, 1915, McKim remarried, to widow Elizabeth (Mrs. John) Baird of Quebec on May 4, 1924. He was survived by his second wife, sons and daughters Bessie and Nellie McKim (who remained in Japan on the Episcopal mission staff).

Career

McKim was ordained to the diaconate and priesthood in 1879 and immediately set sail for Japan. Upon arriving in 1880, Rev. McKim began working around Osaka. He became chaplain to St. Agnes School in Kyoto.

In 1881, bishop Channing Moore Williams announced his upcoming retirement. Two years later, the General Convention announced McKim would succeed Williams. McKim returned to the United States and was consecrated Bishop of Tokyo (with jurisdiction extending from Osaka to Aomori) on June 14, 1893 at St. Thomas Church, New York City. [4] During the same service Frederick Rogers Graves was consecrated bishop of Shanghai. [5]

During his 42-year episcopate, McKim traveled all over Japan, including rural and mountain districts. He saw the nation develop from a feudal state into a great power. Christianity grew from a dozen native Christians (and no native-born priests) and a reputation for being political emissaries trying to break Japanese from loyalty to their Emperor, into a constructive force within the nation (including many civil servants). By 1928, the nation had 400,000 Japanese Christians and about 2000 native clergymen. [6]

The diocese was divided four times, and had six bishops by the time McKim resigned in 1935. He oversaw the organization of the Japanese Anglican church two years before Japan adopted a constitution.

McKim became best known in missionary circles for his cable to New York after the Great Kantō earthquake of September 1, 1923: "All gone but faith in God." On December 7 and 9 of that same year, he officiated at the consecration of the first two native Bishops: Motoda and Naide. Bishop McKim then charged them to rebuild the church in the capital and established himself in the diocese of North Tokyo. Soon, he sailed to the United States for fundraising. Rebuilt church properties after the earthquake included St. Luke's Hospital and St. Paul's University. [7]

McKim, together with Edward Bickersteth, Bishop of South Tokyo, participated in the Fourth Lambeth Conference at Canterbury in 1897.

Death and legacy

McKim attempted to resign in 1934 due to ill health (and the death of his friend Rudolf Teusler, who had directed St. Luke's Hospital since 1900), but the House of Bishops urged him to remain. [8] He managed to retire to Honolulu in November, 1935, and died at his home on April 4, 1936. A funeral was held at St. Andrew's Cathedral in Honolulu and the body returned to Nashotah House for burial.

A memorial service was also held that November in St. Thomas's Episcopal Church in New York, led by that church's rector as well as Joseph Marshall Francis of Indianapolis (Vice Chairman of the house of bishops, and who had served in Japan under McKim) and John W. Wood (executive secretary of the Department of Foreign Missions. [9]

McKim's daughters remained in Japan working for the Episcopal mission. As World War II broke out, Bessie McKim was in Hawaii, and her sister Nellie McKim was in the Philippine Islands. Bessie McKim used her knowledge of Japanese language and culture working for the Office of War Information (and led the kindergarten department at St. Clement's Church), then returned to Japan to work at St. Luke's Hospital with her sister in 1947. [10] Nellie McKim was interned first in Sagada in northern Luzon, and then at Camp Holmes near Baguio. Her language proficiency helped mediate between the prisoners and their guards. She remained in Manila at the request of bishop Norman S. Binsted to assist the Office of War Information, and later as his secretary. [11] [12] [13]

See also

Related Research Articles

Anglican Church in Japan

The Nippon Sei Ko Kai, abbreviated as NSKK, sometimes referred to in English as the Anglican Episcopal Church in Japan, is the national Christian church representing the Province of Japan within the Anglican Communion.

Nashotah House

Nashotah House is an Anglican seminary in Nashotah, Wisconsin. The seminary opened in 1842 and received its official charter in 1847. The institution is independent and generally regarded as one of the more theologically conservative seminaries in the Episcopal Church. It is also officially recognized by the Anglican Church in North America. Its campus was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2017.

Rikkyo University

Rikkyo University, also known as Saint Paul's University, is a private university, in Ikebukuro, Tokyo, Japan.

Jackson Kemper

Jackson Kemper in 1835 became the first missionary bishop of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America. Especially known for his work with Native American peoples, he also founded parishes in what in his youth was considered the Northwest Territory and later became known as the "Old Northwest", hence one appellation as bishop of the "Whole Northwest". Bishop Kemper founded Nashotah House and Racine College in Wisconsin, and from 1859 until his death served as the first bishop of the Diocese of Wisconsin.

Charles Edward Jenkins III was the 10th bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Louisiana.

Anglican Diocese of Jerusalem

The Anglican Diocese of Jerusalem is the Anglican jurisdiction for Israel, the Palestinian territories, Jordan, Syria and Lebanon. It is a part of the Episcopal Church in Jerusalem and the Middle East, and has diocesan offices at St. George's Cathedral, Jerusalem.

Samuel Isaac Joseph Schereschewsky

Samuel Isaac Joseph Schereschewsky, also known as Joseph Schereschewsky, was the Anglican Bishop of Shanghai, China, from 1877 to 1884. He founded St. John's University, Shanghai, in 1879.

Frank Griswold

Frank Tracy Griswold III is a retired American bishop. He was the 25th Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church.

James Lloyd Breck

James Lloyd Breck was a priest, educator, and missionary of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America.

The Episcopal Diocese of Taiwan is the Anglican diocese in Taiwan and a member diocese of the Episcopal Church of the United States. It was established in 1954, five years after Chinese Episcopalians fled from mainland China to Taiwan following the Chinese Communist Revolution in 1949.

St. Lukes International Hospital Hospital in Tokyo , Japan

St. Luke's International Hospital (聖路加国際病院) is a general and teaching hospital located in the Tsukiji district of Chūō, Tokyo, Japan.

Edward Bickersteth (bishop of South Tokyo) 19th-century British Anglican bishop and missionary

Edward Bickersteth was an ordained Anglican missionary, Bishop of South Tokyo and a leading figure in both the establishment of the Cambridge Mission to Delhi and in the early years of the Anglican Church in Japan.

Chung Hua Sheng Kung Hui

Chung Hua Sheng Kung Hui, known in English as the Holy Catholic Church in China or Anglican-Episcopal Province of China, was the name of the Anglican Church in China from 1912 until about 1958.

Channing Moore Williams

Channing Moore Williams was an Episcopal Church missionary, later bishop, in China and Japan. Williams was a leading figure in the establishment of the Anglican Church in Japan. His commemoration in some Anglican liturgical calendars is on 2 December.

Albert Arthur Chambers was the seventh bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Springfield, serving from 1962 to 1972. He then retired in part because he opposed revising the Book of Common Prayer and ordaining women as priests, which would be expressly authorized by the General Convention in 1976.

Paul Rusch

Paul Frederick Rusch was a lay missionary of the Anglican Church in Japan.

James McDonald Gardiner American architect

James McDonald Gardiner was an American architect, lay Anglican church missionary and educator who lived and worked in Japan during the Meiji period.

Rudolf Bolling Teusler M.D. was a medical physician and lay missionary to Japan who worked under the auspices of the Foreign and Domestic Missionary Society of the American Episcopal Church.

Joseph Marshall Francis

Joseph Marshall Francis was an American Episcopal bishop. He was the sixth Bishop of Indiana in The Episcopal Church.

References

  1. Hemphill, Elizabeth (1969). The Road to KEEP (First ed.). New York and Tokyo: John Weatherhill, Inc. p. 15.
  2. "Bishops of China and Japan" (PDF). New York Times Archive. June 11, 1893. Retrieved 1 May 2014. bad link on Dec.7, 2016
  3. "Bishop John M'Kim Dead in Honolulu", New York Times April 5, 1936 p. N11
  4. New York Times obituary
  5. New York Times June 6, 1933 p. 23
  6. "Sees Christianity Spreading in Japan", New York Times Dec. 10, 1928 o. 30
  7. New York Times obituary
  8. New York Times October 14, 1934 p. 31
  9. New York Times Nov. 2, 1936 p. 16
  10. Hawaiian Church Chronicle Vol. 37, no 9. p. 5 (Nov. 1947)
  11. Donald E. Mansell and Vestal W. Mansel, Under the Shadow of the Rising Sun: the true story of a missionary Family's Survival and Faith in a Japanese Prisoner of war Camp During WWII (Pacific Press Publishing, 2003) p. 69
  12. The Living Church Vol. 110 p. 17 (April 15, 1945)
  13. Frances B. Cogan, Captured: the Japanese Internment of American Civilians in the Philippines 1941-1945 (University of Georgia Press 2003) pp. 246-247