The main aim of the present work is to discover John Roberts as a preacher, teacher, pastor, translator and author; who spent over 37 years in growing and developing Church on the Khasi Hills. This scholarly research will be an important resource not only to theologians & historians but also to missiologists addressing their questions aimed at seeking to understand the culture & society in which the church is situated.
During the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church of Wales (PCW held at Lampeter in 2007, I shared with Rev. David Andrew Jones, then serving as Mission Secretary (PCW), of my desire to have a book written on the life and contributions of Dr. John Roberts to the Mission in Khasi Jaintia Hills in general and to the cause of theological education as founding Principal of the Seminary. I also mentioned that it would be ideal to have the book released during the Quosquicentennial celebration in 2012. In spite of the immense responsibility he shouldered as the Missions Secretary, Rev. Andrew Jones finally decided to take up the challenge of gathering all the needed information for the book. While the book missed the dateline, and for genuine reasons as the author had to run from pillar to post for the materials, it finally came out. On a personal note, I wish to record my sincere thanks to Rev. Andrew Jones for his hard work and dedication to the project. I also do so on behalf of the Faculty, office Staff and students of the Seminary past, present and future, and on behalf of the Khasi Jaintia Presbyterian Assembly.
Dr. Roberts, the third of four children born to stonemason Richard Roberts and his wife Jane, hailed from Corris, a rural and slate-quarrying community in mid Wales in the middle decades of the nineteenth-century. Growing up in the forties and fifties of that century he was aware of the powerful and transforming influences of the day. These were associated with industrialisation and the movement of peoples into and out of Corris, the growth and development of education and perhaps more significantly the development of religious and cultural life expressive of Welsh Nonconformity, the Calvinistic Methodist variety. His inquisitive mind led to his reading substantial volumes and articles at an early age and although opportunities of formal education were spasmodic in 1864 he candidated for the Christian ministry and trained at Bala College before offering himself for missionary work overseas and further training in Edinburgh. Subsequently he married Sydney Margaret Jones, daughter of a minister and poet from Mold on the Welsh-English border, sailing to India in September 1871. He was the first missionary based in the newly established station at Shella in the Khasi Hills, moving to Cherra in 1876 to pursue a ministry in education in addition to pastoral work. This move eventually led to his establishing the Theological Institution and developing his Khasi literary skills through his contribution to the translation of the scriptures, hymns and other genre such as drama as well as producing his own Khasi compositions. With his death in 1908 the Mission lost one of its most committed and talented pioneer workers.
This study seeks to analyse the life and contribution of John Roberts as a Christian missionary against the background of his times. This contribution is recognised in general histories of the Welsh Mission on the Khasi Hills. The Rev.
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