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‘Missionary Regiments for Immanuel’s Service’: Juvenile Missionary Organization in English Sunday Schools, 1841-1865
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 March 2016
Extract
Juvenile associations in aid of foreign missions made their appearance both in the Church of England and in the Nonconformist churches in the wake of the successful campaign in 1813 to modify the East India Company charter in order to open British India to evangelical missionary work. The fervour which the campaign engendered led to the formation of numerous local associations in support of the missionary societies. In some cases these associations had juvenile branches attached. However, until the 1840s children’s activity in aid of foreign missions was relatively sporadic. Children’s missionary literature was almost non-existent. Such children’s missionary activity as did take place was confined largely to the children of church and chapel congregations; before the 1840s there was little perception of the vast potential for missionary purposes of the Sunday-school movement.
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- Copyright © Ecclesiastical History Society 1994
References
1 Stanley, Brian, ‘Home support for overseas missions in early Victorian England, c. 1838-1873’ (Cambridge Ph.D. thesis, 1979), pp. 261–6 Google Scholar. I owe thanks to the Methodist Church Overseas Division (Methodist Missionary Society) and the Council for World Mission for permission to cite from their archives.
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