dc.description.abstract |
This article examines the relationship between the Society of St
John the Divine, an Anglican sisterhood which was founded in
Pietermaritzburg in 1887, and the bishops of Natal, in the
context of the work of the community in the diocese of Natal
and the developments in monastic life in the Church of
England, which had implications for religious communities
throughout the Anglican Communion.1 The article shows that
the sisterhood enjoyed considerable freedom from episcopal
control in carrying out their various works in childcare, parochial
work and education in Natal. However, this freedom also
meant that the sisters received no money from the diocese, but
raised funds to support this work themselves. Their independence
also reflected that of religious communities in England,
where the Church of England bishops had no canonical or legal
control over Anglican religious communities. In the 1930s,
however, bishops in the Church of England set up structures to
bring the Anglican religious communities under episcopal
authority, and these measures were also adopted by the Society
of St John the Divine in Natal. |
en |