Channing Moore Williams

Channing Moore Williams

Channing Moore Williams
Missionary
Born (1829-07-18)July 18, 1829
Richmond, Virginia
Died December 2, 1910(1910-12-02) (aged 81)
Richmond, Virginia
Venerated in Anglicanism
Feast December 2

Channing Moore Williams (17 July 1829 – 2 December 1910) 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 saint's day in the Anglican calendar is 2 December.

Early life and education

Channing Williams was born in Richmond, Virginia, the fifth child of lawyer and delegate John Green Williams and Mary Anne Crignan. His father served on the vestry of Monumental Church and led its Sunday school. Channing's first and middle names reflected Virginia's second bishop, Richard Channing Moore, who also served as Monumental Church's rector due to the Episcopal Church's financial straits in Virginia after the Revolutionary War and disestablishmnet. John Williams died when Channing was three years old, so the devout Mary Williams raised her four sons and two daughters rather than marry again.

When Channing turned 18, he went to Henderson, Kentucky, to work in his cousin Alex B. Barrett's general store, as well as save money for future studies. There, he was confirmed by Benjamin Bosworth Smith, Kentucky's first bishop, on 7 April 1849, and also studied Greek at night under the guidance of the rector of St. Paul's Church.[1] Then, like his eldest sibling John (1823-1870, who became a long-serving rector at St. Peter's Church in Rome, Georgia), Channing attended the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia. He graduated with a master of arts degree in 1852, then attended the Virginia Theological Seminary in Alexandria, Virginia.

At VTS, Williams read The Spirit of Missions and other journals. Reports of VTS graduates who served as overseas missionaries, including Augustus Lyde, Henry Lockwood and Francis Hanson, inspired him. He also learned of Bishop William Boone, who a decade earlier had returned to the United States after his wife's death and finally persuaded the Foreign Mission Board to sponsor his work in China. In 1844, the General Convention elected Boone Bishop for China (after the Opium War and 1842 treaty opened Shanghai to foreign missionaries) and he and three recent VTS graduates sailed to China (arriving in June 1845). In 1851 Rt. Rev. Boone accepted another two recent graduates.[2]

Early missionary life

Bishop William Meade ordained Williams as a deacon at St. Paul's Church Alexandria on 1 July 1855, along with John Liggins and other graduating classmates. Williams served briefly at that church, but he and Liggins also traveled to New York for interviews with the Foreign Missions Board. By November, the aspiring missionaries sailed toward Shanghai, China to join Bishop Boone. They reached their destination almost eight months later, on 28 June 1856, having sailed around South America, and with stops at Rio de Janeiro and Sydney, Australia.[3]

At Shanghai, the new missionaries first needed to learn the local Wu dialect, as well as Mandarin and the literary Wen-Li language. They soon learned that of the about twenty missionaries who had traveled to Shanghai to work under Bishop Boone since 1845, only about half remained, since many experienced health problems, as well as the strains of cultural adjustment and physical dangers. Soon, they were able to substitute for the British chaplain who assisted foreign sailors, and by December Williams could read prayers in Chinese well enough to substitute for the bishop. Bishop Boone ordained both Williams and Liggins to the priesthood on 11 January 1857.[4]

Missionary work in Japan

In 1856, three years after Commodore Matthew Perry's four-warship entry into Edo Bay, Townsend Harris (a devout Episcopalian) had become the first American consul in Japan. Two years later, fellow missionary to China Edward Syle (and three chaplains of other denominations) had accompanied W.B. Reed (the U.S. ambassador to China) on his voyage to Nagasaki.[5] In 1859, together with his fellow VTS graduate Rev. John Liggins (a British-born missionary who had suffered a severe beating from an anti-foreign mob in Dzang Zok about 70 miles northwest of Shanghai, as well as repeated fevers attributed to the rice-fields surrounding Shanghai and had been sent to Nagasaki to recover), Williams was appointed by the Mission Board of the American Episcopal Church to begin missionary work in Japan. Williams arrived in Nagasaki on June 26, 1859.

Due to government restrictions on the teaching of Christianity and a significant language barrier, the religious duties of Liggins and Williams were initially limited to ministering to American and British residents of the Nagasaki foreign settlement. However, they could also serve as interpreters, as well as teach English. The first recorded baptism by Williams of a Japanese convert, a Kumamoto samurai named Shōmura Sukeuemon, was not until February 1866.[6]

Bishop Boone died in 1864, and the first postwar General Convention elected Williams as his successor. He saled for the U.S., and on October 3, 1866, during a meeting of the Board of Missions in New York City, Williams was consecrated Episcopal Bishop of China and Japan in St. John's Chapel and advised to remain in the United States that winter to tell Americans clergy and people about the great missionary fields in China and Japan.[7]

Rt.Rev. Williams returned to Japan, and moved first to reside in Osaka in 1869, then subsequently relocated to Tsukiji, Tokyo, in December 1873.[8][9]

In February 1874 Williams founded a private school in Tokyo, St. Paul's School, which ultimately became Rikkyo University.[10]

In 1887, in partnership with Bishop Edward Bickersteth, Williams worked to unite the various national Anglican missionary efforts into the Nippon Sei Ko Kai, (i.e. the "Holy Catholic Church"), the Anglican church in Japan. Williams stepped down two years later to make way for a younger generation of missionaries. Bishop John McKim was chosen as his successor in 1893. Williams then moved to Kyoto and evangelized in the Kansai area.

Death and legacy

Williams returned to America in failing health in 1908, two years before his death in Richmond in 1910. He is buried with his family at Hollywood Cemetery.

References

  1. Beverley D. Tucker, Channing Moore Williams: Apostle to Japan, 1829-1910 (bound manuscript dated 2000) pp. I-4-5
  2. Tucker pp. I-7-15
  3. Tucker, p. 1-15
  4. Tucker pp. 2-1 to 2-5
  5. Tucker at 2-22-25
  6. Ion, A. Hamish (1993). The Cross and the Rising Sun (2 ed.). Waterloo, Ontario, Canada: Wilifrid Laurier University Press. p. 37. ISBN 0-88920-218-4.
  7. Minor biography at p. 13
  8. Arnold, Alfreda (1905). Church Work in Japan. Harvard College Library: Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts.
  9. Arnold, Church Work in Japan, p.8.
  10. Rikkyo University Prospectus 2010, p. 5

External links

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