B. Prabhudass

Bishop Babbili Prabhudass[6] (died 1996[3]) was the first[1] elected Bishop - in - Karimnagar Diocese of the Church of South India which was ecclesiastically bifurcated from the Diocese of Dornakal of the Church of South India in early 1978. Prabhudass led the bishopric for a period of five years from 1978 through 1982.[1]


Bishop Babbili Prabhudass

Bishop
ChurchChurch of South India
DioceseKarimnagar
SeeCSI-Wesley Cathedral, Karimnagar
Elected1978
In office1978-1982
PredecessorPosition created[1]
SuccessorG. Benjamin Devasahayam[1]
Orders
Ordination1945
by Bishop Anthony Blacker Elliott
Consecration1978, CSI-Wesley Cathedral, Karimnagar
by The Most Reverend N. D. Ananda Rao Samuel (Principal Consecrator) and
The Right Reverend Solomon Doraiswamy (Co-consecrator)[1]
RankBishop
Personal details
Born
Babbili (Bobbili[2]) Prabhudass
Died1996[3]
BuriedChristian Cemetery, Narayanguda,[4] Hyderabad
17.4000° N, 78.0167° E
NationalityIndian
DenominationChristianity
OccupationPriesthood
Previous post(s)Priest, Diocese of Dornakal, Church of South India (1945-1974)
Lecturer, United Theological College, Bangalore(1974-1977[5])
EducationB.D. (Serampore),[5]
M. Th. (Serampore),[5]
Alma materUnited Theological College, Bangalore[5]

Prior to assuming the ecclesiastical office of the Bishop, Prabhudass was a seminary teacher[5] from 1974 to 1977 during the principalship of the Systematic Theologian Joshua Russell Chandran at a fully ecumenical[7][8] United Theological College, Bangalore, a Theologiate in Bangalore which had co-faculty drawn from the Carmelites of Mary Immaculate-Dharmaram College in Bangalore.

Writings

CSI-Epiphany Cathedral, Dornakal. During 1974, Prabhudass served as Cathedral Presbyter for a few months.[10]

Studies

Graduate

After Prabhudass discerned his avocation to become a Priest, the Diocese of Dornakal led by V. S. Azariah sent him for ministerial formation to the United Theological College, Bangalore,[11] one of the affiliated seminaries of the Senate of Serampore College (University)[8] where he pursued a spiritual course leading to Bachelor of Divinity[8] between 1941 and 1945[12] during the Principalship of Max Hunter Harrison. Other companions of Prabhudass during that period who were studying at varying intervals included A. E. Inbanathan, C. Arangaden, J. R. Chandran, S. J. Samartha, B. G. Prasada Rao and others.[5] Prabhudass was awarded the degree of B.D. during ensuing convocation of the University during the Registrarship of The Rev. C. E. Abraham.

Post-graduate

In 1951, during the bishopric of A. B. Eliott, Prabhudass was resent to the United Theological College, Bangalore for upgrading his academics where he enrolled for a postgraduate course leading to Master of Theology during 1951-1952,[13] during the Principalship of M. H. Harrison becoming the fifth[5] postgraduate student in the history of the College. The University awarded an M.Th. during its convocation the following year during the Registrarship of The Rev. W. W. Winfield.

Prabhudass also went for research exposure to England,[14] during the Bishopric of P. Solomon and returned to India in 1958.[14]

Ecclesiastical ministry

Soon after Prabhudass completed his seminary studies, he was assigned pastoral roles in the Diocese of Dornakal from 1945 onwards. Prabhudass was a Seminary Teacher at the Andhra Union Theological College (AUTC), Dornakal, teaching along with Eric J. Lott. By 1959,[15] much before the integration of the AUTC into the Andhra Christian Theological College, Rajahmundry, Prabhudass had moved out to medical ministry as a Chaplain at the CSI-Mission Hospital,[16] Phanigiri.[17]

During 1974 he was assigned the role of a Cathedral Presbyter of the CSI-Epiphany Cathedral, Dornakal[10] for a short period until he was sent to teach at the United Theological College, Bangalore the same year.

Seminary Teacher

Prabhudass was a Faculty Member from 1974 to 1977[5] at the United Theological College, Bangalore affiliated to India's first[18] University, the Senate of Serampore College (University) {a University under Section 2 (f) of the University Grants Commission Act, 1956}[19] with degree-granting authority validated by a Danish Charter and ratified by the Government of West Bengal.[5] Prabhudass was Lecturer of Pastoralia and Dean of Practical Work.[20] and taught both graduate and post-graduate students.[8] Prabhudass was also part of the literary circles of the college and was made a member of the editorial committee of the UTC-Gurukul Alumni Journal.[21]

In 1975[8] when the United Theological College, Bangalore embarked on a fully ecumenical initiative with co-faculty made available from the Carmelites of Mary Immaculate-Dharmaram College, Bangalore, Prabhudass was also featured in the souvenir marking the inauguration of the educational partnership.[8] During the teaching period of Prabhudass from 1974 to 1977 the candidates studying at that period comprised Christopher Asir, P. Surya Prakash, S. W. Meshack, Mani Chacko, D. N. Premnath and others from the graduate section while J. W. Gladstone, D. Dhanaraj and others hailed from the post-graduate section.[5] Prabhudass' stint at the College coincided with the Registrarship of D. S. Satyaranjan[8] who was the College Registrar and Lecturer - in - New Testament.

In 1977, while Prabhudass was teaching at the Theologiate in Bangalore, he was recalled to the Diocese of Dornakal led by P. Solomon[1] as there were plans for a greater role for Prabhudass in the Diocese. Based on the communication from the Bishop, Joshua Russell Chandran[22] Principal[5] relieved Prabhudass in 1977[5] enabling him to return to the Diocese of Dornakal in September 1977.[22]

The Diocese

The Diocese of Dornakal which was ecclesiastically erected in 1912[23] was led by Bishop V. S. Azariah right from the time of its inception until his sudden death in 1945[10] In the postcolonialism scenario, the geographical area of the diocese was considerably reduced during the bishopric of A. B. Eliott with the formation of new dioceses[1] in 1947 resulting in the Diocese of Krishna-Godavari,[10] Diocese of Rayalaseema[1][10][24] and Diocese of Nandyal.[10] As a result of the conversations that took place in the Church of South India Synod to further reduce the ecclesiastical jurisdiction of the Diocese of Dornakal, the Moderator, N. D. Ananda Rao Samuel announced the bifurcation of the Diocese of Dornakal as a result of which the Diocese of Karimnagar was erected on March 12, 1978[1] Subsequently, the CSI-Wesley Church in Karimnagar was consecrated as a Cathedral. Prabhudass was reassigned to the Diocese of Karimnagar upon bifurcation.

Consecration and ministry

With the erection of the Diocese of Karimnagar in 1978,[1] the Church of South India Synod announced the appointment of Prabhudass to lead the newly erected diocese. N. D. Ananda Rao Samuel then Moderator of the Church of South India Synod principally consecrated Prabhudass at the CSI-Wesley Cathedral, Karimnagar as the first Bishop - in - Karimnagar in the presence of the co-consecrator, Solomon Doraiswamy, the Deputy Moderator at the CSI-Wesley Cathedral in Karimnagar and P. Solomon, the Bishop-in-Dornakal. During the bishopric of Prabhudass from 1978 to 1982,[25] he was entitled to use the ecclesiastical prefix The Right Reverend and attended two conclaves of the Church of South India Synod,

Prabhudass was part of the Synod in 1982 which voted with 2/3rds majority for the Ordination of women as Priests in the Church of South India leading to the subsequent ordination of Elizabeth Paul in 1987 as the first ordained woman Priest of the Church of South India. Incidentally, J. R. Chandran, a companion of Prabhudass, co-founded the Association of Theologically Trained Women in India which took up the issue of Ordination of women not only with the Protestant Churches in India but also with the Catholic Church heads.

After ministering for nearly 5 years in the bishopric, Prabhudass vacated the Cathedra in Karimnagar in 1982[1] on attaining superannuation resulting in sede vacante following which the Church of South India Synod led by I. Jesudasan, then Moderator of the Church of South India Synod appointed G. B. Devasahayam[1] in 1982 to succeed Prabhudass.

Lambeth Conference

As Bishop - in - Karimnagar, Prabhudass attended the eleventh Lambeth Conference held at the University of Kent at Canterbury in 1978 presided by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Donald Coggan.

Administrator

Ever since Prabhudass was consecrated as a Bishop in 1978, he became an ex-officio member of the Board of Governors at the Andhra Christian Theological College, a vernacular medium Protestant Regional Theologiate in Hyderabad with near-ecumenical[26] composition consisting of,

The theologiate in which Prabhudass was a Board Member was notable for its Old Testament scholarship throughout India as two Old Testament Scholars Victor Premasagar[28] and G. Babu Rao[28] were teaching at the regional theologiate at that time. Prabhudass provided the required management especially at a time when the Principalship rotated[29] from the Church of South India to the Convention of Baptist Churches of Northern Circars due to the election of Victor Premasagar, CSI, Ph.D. (St. Andrews) as General Secretary of the Church of South India Synod in 1980[1] resulting in the appointment of Komaravalli David,[30] CBCNC, Ph.D. (Edinburgh) by the Board of Governors.

Honours

In 1959, the Edinburgh Medical Missionary Society reported,[15]

(Adapted) Prabhudass has a tremendous concern for evangelism and the building up of the Church

In 2007,[25] the Diocese of Karimnagar has named its Evangelistic Training School in memory[25] of B. Prabhudass. In 2010, a mission focusing on the leprosy-afflicted living in the suburbs[31] of the twin cities of Hyderabad and Secunderabad in India was instituted to the memory of Prabhudass jointly by Christ the King and the Episcopal Diocese of Fort Worth (Episcopal Church)[31] where annual charity events[32] are taken up for creating awareness and mobilizing resources for the mission.

References

  1. K. M. George, Church of South India: life in union, 1947–1997, Jointly published by Indian Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge and Christava Sahitya Samithi, Tiruvalla, 1999, pp.23, 34, 61, 106-108.
  2. Anantha Sudhaker Babbili, The Road from Poodur in Biographical Passages: Essays in Victorian and Modernist Biography : Honouring Mary M. Lago, University of Missouri, North America, 2000, p.128.
  3. David S. T. Driver, Deans father's foundation, Indian student group directly fund relief for tsunami victims in India in Middle Tennessee State University, Volume 80, Number 62, March 2, 2005.
  4. Hopewallaw Incorporated
  5. K. M. Hiwale (Compiled), Directory of the United Theological College 1910-1997, Bangalore, 1997. Former member of staff, p.4; Past students of the post-graduate course, p.103.
  6. The Church of England Year Book, Volume 97, 1981, p.249.
  7. fully ecumenical that is Catholics and Orthodox included.
  8. Shared Search - Souvenir of the inauguration of the academic collaboration between the United Theological College, Bangalore and the Dharmaram College, Bangalore, 1975, Bangalore, available at the Archives in the library of Karnataka Theological College, Mangalore.
  9. P. Solomon, B. Prabhudass, Sally, Sister Carol and the Church of South India in P. Dharmagnani (Edited), Sister Carol Graham, the Beloved "Amma", Christian Literature Society, Madras, 1989, p.32.
  10. M. Edwin Rao (Compiled), Prophet Azariah and the Blessed Dornakal: A centenary revisit 1912-2012, Dornakal Diocese, Dornakal, 2012, pp. 73, 127.
  11. In the UTC Yearbook 1975 (p.32), it has been written that B. Prabhudass studied for a B.D. during 1941-1945. However, K. M. Hiwale's compilation titled the UTC Directory fails to attest to this fact though there are two references to Prabhudass, one as having taught at the College during 1974-1977 and the other as having studied a postgraduate course during 1951-1952.
  12. The United Theological College, Bangalore Yearbook, 1975, p.32, Change of addresses of past students, p.32, available at the Archives in the library of Karnataka Theological College, Mangalore.
  13. The United Theological College Year Book 1976, Change of addresses of past students, p.41, available at the Archives in the library of Karnataka Theological College, Mangalore.
  14. Ancestry. UK, Outward Passenger Lists, 1890-1960 Passenger Lists
  15. Quarterly Paper - Edinburgh Medical Missionary Society, Volume 22, Issues 13-30, 1959, p.327.
  16. District Census Handbook, Andhra Pradesh, Census 1961: Nalgonda, Superintendent of Census Operations, Andhra Pradesh, 1967, p.94.
  17. The National Christian Council Review, Volume 85, 1965, p.365
  18. Sankar Ray, The Hindu (Business Line), 11 April 2008 Almost a century later, the charter was endorsed officially under the Bengal Govt Act IV of 1918. Internet, accessed 30 November 2008.
  19. The Senate of Serampore College (University) is a University within the meaning of Section 2 (f) of the UGC Act, 1956 under which a University means a University established or incorporated by or under a Central Act, a Provincial Act or a State Act, and includes any such institution as may, in consultation with the University concerned, be recoginsed by the Commission in accordance with the regulations made in this behalf under this Act. The UGC took the opinion that the Senate fell under the purview of Section 2 (f) of the said Act since The Serampore College Act, 1918 was passed by the Government of West Bengal.
  20. The United Theological College Annual Report 1974-1975, 1975, p.8, available at the Archives in the library of Karnataka Theological College, Mangalore.
  21. UTC-Gurukul Alumni Journal, October 1974, available at the Archives in the library of Karnataka Theological College, Mangalore.
  22. Joshua Russell Chandran, Principal's Annual Report adopted by the College Council at their meeting on 2.4.1977 in the United Theological College Annual Report 1976-1977, pp.11-33, available at the Archives in the library of Karnataka Theological College, Mangalore.
  23. The Silver Jubilee Diocese of Dornakal - 1912-1937, Mysore City, no date. Cited in Susan Billington Harper, In the Shadow of the Mahatma: Bishop V.S. Azariah and the Travails of Christianity in British India, William B. Eerdmans Publishing, Michigan, 2000, p.407.
  24. Originally formed as Diocese of Anantapur-Kurnool and Diocese of Cuddapah until their merger into Diocese of Rayalaseema in 1950
  25. P. Surya Prakash, Karimnagar Diocese 133 years and beyond
  26. Near-ecumenical, that is Catholics excluded.
  27. The Diocese of Madras, although situated in Tamil Nadu includes Chittoor which falls under Andhra Pradesh.
  28. H. S. Wilson (Edited), The Church on the Move, Essays in honour of Victor Premasagar, Christian Literature Society, Madras, 1988, p.vi.
  29. Principalship at the Protestant regional theologiate is on the basis of rotation every four years by the participating Church societies. Refer list of Principalships in article on Andhra Christian Theological College.
  30. K. David, Divine operation and human response : A comparison between Rudolf Bultmann's understanding of the Pauline perspectives and certain elements in recent Indian thought, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, 1973.
  31. Episcopal Diocese of Fort Worth (Episcopal Church), A nite at the races, 2012. Archived 29 January 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  32. Episcopal Diocese of Fort Worth (Episcopal Church), Benefit for medical mission work in India successful, 2015.
  33. M. Edwin Rao (Compiled), The Glorious Fifty Years of The Epiphany Cathedral, CSI Epiphany Cathedral, Dornakal, 1988, p.103.

Further reading

  • CSI UK Telugu Christians Souvenir commemorating the 70th year of the formation of the Church of South India (2016). "70 years of God's Faithfulness" (PDF). Archived from the original on 27 August 2017. Retrieved 13 May 2017. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
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