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Roland Allen "Christ has given the apostles a world-wide commission, embracing all the nations; but intellectually they did not understand what He meant. They found that out as they followed the impulse of the Spirit." -from Pentecost and the World, 1917
The son of an Anglican clergyman, Allen was a graduate of St. John's College, Oxford, and then trained at the Leeds Clergy Training School before being sent by the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts (SPG) to China. Allen was ahead of his time in his theological views, and his personality managed to alienate most colleagues with whom he came in contact. After eight years in China, he resigned and returned to a parish in England, said it was a non-Christian place, and left it as well. Allen spent the rest of his life writing about mission issues and serving as a nonstipendiary minister, the model for ministry he favored from his reading of the New Testament. Drawing on 1 Peter 4:10, he argued that priesthood belonged inherently to all Christians. He believed that indigenous peoples should be given control of their own churches--including control of finances--and responsibility for supporting their own churches. In a 1902 report he wrote: Allen's feisty temperament made waves among the Nairobi settler community. While he was in Kenya during World War II he told the settler community not to wrap the Bible in the Union Jack, lest both be thrown out together, and when a local Colonel Blimp issued a blanket denunciation of everything German, Allen dueled back in the local paper, "I might ask him whether he 'hates' all drugs invented by German chemists, whether he 'hates' all German music; blind hatred is not Christian." During a 1935 sermon in All Saints' Cathedral he urged the settler community to be their own ministers:
Allen completely turned traditional missionary attitudes on their ear. In his emphasis on an immediate, intense, local experiencing of prayer and community, he lessened the need for hierarchical control of the institutional church. In his total trust of local congregations to raise up ministers, he presaged the sort of Canon III (locally ordained) ministries now recognized in Alaska and certain parts of the United States where seminary-trained clergy are not available. In his trusting of the Holy Spirit and welcoming of local leadership, Allen expressed ideas that a later generation of liberation theologians and post-Vatican II mission strategists would find important to the future of world mission. Frederick Quinn
Notes: 1. USPG: Africa & Asia, vol. 2, 1902, in Raymond Eveleigh, "Roland Allen: Prophet of Non-Stipendiary Ministry," www.revray.co.uk/ministry/nsm.html.
This article is reproduced from African Saints: Saints, Martyrs, and Holy People from the Continent of Africa, copyright © 2002 by Frederick Quinn, Crossroads Publishing Company, New York, New York. All rights reserved. |