Rebirth of the church in Myanmar: missionaires' legacy still lingers 35 years later.THE FOREIGN missionaries have been gone for 35 years, expelled from Burma (Myanmar) in 1966 as part of a nationalistic sweep by the military government that plunged the country into decades of self-imposed isolation. But their legacy lingers. Despite the justifiable pride Burma's Christian denominations List of Christian denominations (or Denominations self-identified as Christian) ordered by historical and doctrinal relationships. (See also: Christianity; Christian denominations). Some groups are large (e.g. take in having re-established themselves, practically overnight, as indigenous, active and expanding churches, some nostalgia for the "time of the missionaries" refuses to die. Older generations, especially those who actually remember pre-1966 days, "want to retain the traditions taught by the missionaries," said Anglican archbishop Samuel San Si Htay of the Church of the Province of Myanmar The Church of the Province of Myanmar is a member Church in the Anglican Communion, located in Asia. The province is bordered by China on the north, Laos on the east, Thailand on the southeast, Bangladesh on the west, and India on the northwest, with the Andaman Sea to the south, . When it comes to church practices as fundamental as forms of vestments and types of music, "we are still using the old style of service," agreed Assistant Bishop Philip Aung Khin Thein of the Diocese of Mandalay, at 42 the province's youngest bishop, "It's not easy to change because we are fixed for so many years." But young people especially are ready for something new, he said. "They want folk music folk music: see folk song. folk music Music held to be typical of a nation or ethnic group, known to all segments of its society, and preserved usually by oral tradition. Knowledge of the history and development of folk music is largely conjectural. during the service. They want to sing with guitars." In order to be sensitive to the feelings of older parishioners, said Aung Khin Thein, "we have to take time. Certainly we cannot change immediately, but we hope in the future to change." A newly adopted prayer book published in Burmese, but not yet translated into English, tries to merge and update the spirits of the 1662 and 1960 liturgies that had been in use before. The revised prayer book intentionally introduces three-fold litanies reminiscent of Buddhist forms of blessing as a way to make the liturgy more accessible to potential Buddhist converts. Specifically female imagery for God in the prayer book, however, has yet to be considered. And while the province long ago accepted the principle of female ordination, no women have yet been ordained or·dain tr.v. or·dained, or·dain·ing, or·dains 1. a. To invest with ministerial or priestly authority; confer holy orders on. b. To authorize as a rabbi. 2. as priests. "We've accepted the ordination of women In general religious use, ordination is the process by which one is consecrated (set apart for the undivided administration of various religious rites). The ordination of women in principle, but not the practice," said the Rev. Saw Maung Doe, principal of Holy Cross Theological College in Rangoon, the Anglican seminary. In part the hurdle is local rather than specifically Christian culture. Because of the premium placed on ethnic identity among the majority Burmans as well as the country's numerous ethnic minorities, traditional models of male dominance can be hard to shake. The province's Anglo-Catholic roots, combined with the country's long isolation, may also have much to do with it, suggested the Rev. Napoleon Aung Tun TUN, measure. A vessel of wine or oil, containing four hogsheads. , a deacon and provincial coordinator of mission and evangelism. "A lot of people don't understand. They think that Anglo-Catholicism is the only Anglican tradition. They don't know Don't know (DK, DKed) "Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party. there are many faces of Anglicanism." One Anglican church leader suggested that in some dioceses with parishes that might accept female priests, such as the Diocese of Yangon, there are enough male candidates to fill any open pulpits, and "so women do nor need to be ordained." In the dioceses with shortages of clergy, such as Hpa'an, which is heavily Karen, or Mandalay, which is mostly Burman, however, cultural norms present barriers, he said. At Holy Cross, where women have been accepted as students since 1976, 18 women, or nearly a third of the 56 students, are preparing for various forms of non-ordained ministry. After their four years of study, women will have earned the same bachelor of theology Noun 1. Bachelor of Theology - a bachelor's degree in theology ThB bachelor's degree, baccalaureate - an academic degree conferred on someone who has successfully completed undergraduate studies degree as male students, but usually will pursue work in religious education, youth ministry, or Mothers' Unions, will join staffs of provincial or diocesan offices, or teach in Bible colleges. While other denominations, including the Baptist mad Methodist, have ordained women, the number of female clergy throughout the country is still low. Somewhat paradoxically, the principals of two of the most prominent seminaries in Rangoon, the English-language Myanmar Institute of Theology The Myanmar Institute of Theology (MIT) is a Protestant Christian seminary located in Insein Township, Yangon, Myanmar. The Judson Research Center is part of the Myanmar Institute of Theology. (MIT MIT - Massachusetts Institute of Technology ) and the Burmese-language MICT MICT Mobile Intensive Care Technician MICT Manila International Container Terminal MICT Ministère de l'Industrie, du Commerce et de la Technologie MICT Master in Information and Communication Technology MICT Multi-Path Interference Correlative Timing , are both women. Archbishop San Si Htay's daughter, Snow, a student at Holy Cross, said that while she hoped there would be female priests in the future, she recognized the cultural barriers existing at the moment. Her own studies, she said, are prompted by a desire "to know more about theology," and to "help my father's ministry." Yet another male student asserted that women should be ordained now, underscoring that "we are in the same training" at Holy Cross. "I hope and believe that women will be ordained," he said. "We have to do something," concluded San Si Htay. He recommended encouraging the development of the diaconate di·ac·o·nate n. 1. The rank, office, or tenure of a deacon. 2. Deacons considered as a group. [Late Latin di as a distinct order that would attract both men and women, to get the church accustomed to the idea of ordained women. "If we can do that, I think it won't take long," he said. "We have never known the styles of women priests here. We just know that mothers are very good at keeping house and raising children." But resistance to even those initial steps is likely, he added. "I don't know the other bishops--there are some who may not like it," he said. "Even the Mothers' Union, they do not like it." The church also finds itself pushing against cultural norms as church-supported health workers attempt to respond to an epidemic of HIV/AIDS HIV/AIDS Human Immunodeficiency Virus/Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome infection. With AIDS rampant in Burma, despite government efforts to downplay the extent of the problem, a training program based at St. Mary's church St. Mary's Church, or St. Mary the Virgin's Church, or other variations on the name, may refer to: Azerbaijan
More than 20 women have received the three months' training provided by retired professors and other members of the congregation who have appropriate expertise, said Aung Khin Thein. With the church yet to ordain ORDAIN. To ordain is to make an ordinance, to enact a law. 2. In the constitution of the United States, the preamble. declares that the people "do ordain and establish this constitution for the United States of America. women, the issue of ordaining non-celibate homosexuals is difficult to even contemplate, Aung Khin Thein said. Burma's bishops apparently did not involve themselves extensively in debates over sexuality at the 1998 Lambeth Conference. "They came back from Lambeth Conference and just shared what they had heard from other countries," he said. "From our country, no reaction." |
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