Justice R. Balasubramanian Justice V. Bharathidasan Judge S. Bhaskaran
Moderator
Vacant
Deputy Moderator
Vacant
Distinct fellowships
Christian Conference of Asia, National Council of Churches in India, Communion of Churches in India
Associations
Anglican Communion, World Methodist Council, World Council of Churches, World Communion of Reformed Churches
Region
Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Puducherry, Telangana and Sri Lanka
Origin
27 September 1947 (Day of Union, not date of establishment) Tranquebar, Tamil Nadu (Presently Under the Pastorate of Karaikal - Tranquebar, Tiruchirappalli - Thanjavur Diocese)
Merger of
Anglican Church, the Methodist Church, South India United Church (which was a union in 1904 of the Presbyterian and Congregational Churches), Basel Mission Churches in South India[3]
Separations
Anglican Church of India (1964) Anglican Catholic Church (1984)
Congregations
14,000[4][5]
Members
3,800,000[4][5][6]
Ministers
3,300[4]
Hospitals
104[5]
Secondary schools
2000 schools, 130 colleges[5]
Official website
www.csi1947.com
Part of a series on
Christianity in India
Communities
Bengali Christians
Bettiah Christians
Bombay East Indians
Marathi Christians
Meitei Christians
Mizo Christians
Naga Christians
Punjabi Christians
Saint Thomas Christians
Tamil Christians
Telugu Christians
People
Saint Thomas the Apostle
Saint Alphonsa
Saint Francis Xavier
Saint Gonsalo Garcia
Saint Euphrasia Eluvathingal
Saint Kuriakose Elias Chavara
Saint Mother Teresa
Bl.Devasahayam Pillai
Mar Sabor and Mar Proth
Mar Baselios Eldho
Paremmakkal Thoma Kathanar
Thomas of Cana
Ignatius Elias III
Mar Gregorios of Parumala
Mar Varghese Payyappilly Palakkappilly
Mar Joseph C. Panjikaran
Mathews Mar Athanasius Metropolitan
Mar Geevarghese Dionysius
Abraham Malpan
Giuseppe Maria Bernini
Sadhu Sundar Singh
Palackal Thoma Malpan
Mar Augustine Kandathil
William Carey
Denominations
Saint Thomas Christian denominations
Catholic
Syro-Malabar Catholic, Syro-Malankara Catholic, Latin Catholic
Oriental Orthodox
Malankara Jacobite Syrian Orthodox Church, Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church
Independent Oriential Orthodox
Malabar Independent Syrian Church
Church of the East
Chaldean Syrian
Oriental Protestant Christian
Mar Thoma Syrian, St. Thomas Evangelical
Protestant denominations
Andhra Evangelical Lutheran, Assemblies Jehovah Shammah, Christian Revival Church, Church of North India, Church of South India, Garo Baptist, Indian Brethren, Indian Pentecostal Church of God, Church of God (Full Gospel), North Bank Baptist Christian, Northern Evangelical Lutheran, Methodist Church, Presbyterian, The Pentecostal Mission, Seventh-day Adventist, United Evangelical Lutheran
Organisations
National Council of Churches in India
All India Conference of Indian Christians
All India Catholic Union
v
t
e
The Church of South India (CSI) is a united Protestant Church in India. It is the result of union of a number of Protestant denominations in South India that occurred after the independence of India.[3][7]
The Church of South India is the successor of a number of Protestant denominations in India, including the Church of England; Church of India, Burma and Ceylon (Anglican); the South India United Church (Congregationalist); the British Methodist Church; and the Church of Scotland after Indian Independence. It combined the South India United Church (union of the British Congregationalists and the British Presbyterians); the then 4 Anglican dioceses of South India and one in Sri Lanka; and the South Indian District of the Methodist church.[8]
The Church of South India is a member of the Anglican Communion, World Methodist Council and World Communion of Reformed Churches.[9][3] It is one of four united Protestant churches in the Anglican Communion, World Methodist Council and World Communion of Reformed Churches, with the others being the Church of North India, the Church of Pakistan, and the Church of Bangladesh.
Being a United Protestant denomination, the inspiration for the Church of South India came from ecumenism and the words of Jesus as recorded in the Gospel of John (17.21); as such "That they all may be one" is the motto of the Church of South India.[5]
With a membership of nearly four million,[4][5] it is the second-largest Christian church based on the number of members in India.
^"History". Church of South India. 2010. Archived from the original on 14 February 2021. Retrieved 22 August 2020. The Church of South India is the result of the union of churches of varying traditions Anglican, Methodist, Congregational, Presbyterian, and Reformed. It was inaugurated in September 1947, after protracted negotiation among the churches concerned. Organized into 22 dioceses, each under the spiritual supervision of a bishop, the church as a whole is governed by a synod, which elects a moderator (presiding bishop) every 23 years. Episcopacy is thus combined with Synodical government, and the church explicitly recognizes that Episcopal, Presbyterian, and congregational elements are all necessary for the church's life.
^Watkins, Keith (3 November 2014). The American Church that Might Have Been: A History of the Consultation on Church Union. Wipf and Stock Publishers. pp. 14–15. ISBN 978-1-63087-744-6. The Church of South India created a polity that recognized Episcopal, Presbyterian, and Congregational elements and developed a book of worship that bridged the liturgical traditions that came into this new church. It set up a plan by which existing ministries were accepted while including processes which would lead to the time, a generation later, when all ministers would have been ordained by bishops in apostolic succession. The Church of South India was important as a prototype for a new American church because two factors had come together: the cross-confessional nature of its constituent parts and the intention to be, in effect, the Protestant Christian presence in communities all across the southern territories of its nation.
^ abc"Church of South India". World Methodist Council. 9 November 2019. Retrieved 25 June 2020. The Church of South India is a United Church that came into existence on 27 September 1947. The churches that came into the union were the Anglican Church, the Methodist Church, and the South India United Church (a union in 1904 of the Presbyterian and Congregational churches). Later the Basel Mission Churches in South India also joined the Union. The Church of South India is the first example in church history of the union of Episcopal and non-Episcopal churches, and is thus one of the early pioneers of the ecumenical movement. The CSI strives to maintain fellowship with all those branches of the church which the uniting churches enjoyed before the union. It is a member of the World Methodist Council, the Anglican Consultative Council, the World Alliance of Reformed Churches, the Council for World Mission, and the Association of Missions and Churches in South West Germany.
^ abcdTeam, CWM Communications (7 March 2018). "Member Church Feature: Church of South India (CSI)". Council for World Mission.
^ abcdef"Church of South India International Resource Center". CSI Congregation of Great Lakes, Michigan. 2007. Retrieved 11 January 2013.
^Cite error: The named reference WCC-CSI was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
^Author:Sushil Mittal, Gene Thursby -Religions of South Asia: An Introduction
^"oikoumene.org". Oikoumene.org. January 1948. Retrieved 15 August 2014.
^"The Church of North India (United)". Anglican Communion Office. Retrieved 17 September 2018. Along with the Church of South India, the Church of Pakistan, and the Church of Bangladesh, it [the Church of a North India] is one of the four United Churches.
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