The History of the Anglican
Church on Borneo soil commences on
the 29th June
1848, when a party of
missionaries arrived in Sarawak at the invitation of James
Brooke, Rajah of Sarawak. Their leader, Francis Thomas McDougall, was not only a
priest but also a doctor, which made him ideally suited for the
work.
The Borneo Church Mission
was established in England in 1846; its purpose was
to send Anglican missionaries to Borneo.
The missionaries
established their base on a tract of land provided by the Rajah in Kuching, at a short distance from
Sarawak
River. Here, allocation was made
for a church which was to serve as pro-cathedral for many years, a school which
later grew into St.
Thomas’s and St. Mary’s, and a
dispensary which speedily won McDougall the affection and trust of the Chinese
and Native townspeople who lived nearby. Within the walls of these buildings,
the mission station cradled the infant Church in Borneo.
It was soon realised that
the Church in the Rajah’s territory would be better administered as a bishopric.
The Society for the Propagation of the Gospel supported the proposal and
contributed a sum of £5,000 towards the endowment. But the political conventions
of the day ruled that no Anglican Diocese might be created outside the limits of
the British
Empire, and
Sarawak was technically an
independent principality of Rajah James Brooke. The difficulty was sidestepped
by founding the Diocese upon the Island of
Labuan, a Crown Colony since
1846. The Bishop of Labuan could then be appointed
Bishop of Sarawak by the Rajah; this practice prevailed until
Sarawak became a Crown Colony in
1946.
Letters Patent was issued on 6th August
1855, erecting the
“Island of Labuan and its Dependencies into
a Bishop’s See or Diocese to be styled the Bishopric of Labuan.” McDougall was nominated by the Crown as the first
Bishop, and was consecrated on 18th October
1855 in
Calcutta. On the 1st January
1856 he was appointed Bishop of
Sarawak.
The linked Diocese of Labuan and Bishopric of Sarawak increased in size as the
state of Sarawak grew, and Anglican work in
North
Borneo and
Brunei developed. It extended
further when, by an Act of Parliament in 1869, the Church in the
Straits
Settlements
(Singapore, Penang and Malacca) was separated
from the See of Calcutta and placed under the Episcopal care of the Bishop of
Labuan. This arrangement lasted into 1909, when the
Diocese of Singapore was founded.
The first sixty years of
the Church in Borneo are a chronicle of heroic
effort, much disappointment, long, faithful and lonely service by priests and
lay missionaries. Asian workers played an increasing part, as the formation of a
truly indigenous church had been intended from the
beginning.
After 1909, when the Bishop could
concentrate on Borneo alone, a new era in the
life and witness of the Church began. Three decades of well-planned growth and
development followed, with the longed-for ordination of Dayak and Chinese clergy in increasing
numbers.
After the devastation of
World War II, the Diocese of Labuan and the Bishopric
of Sarawak were joined into the Diocese of Borneo; Nigel Cornwall was
consecrated Bishop on 1st November 1949.
Cornwall’s immediate task was,
literally, to restore the ruins of the churches, schools and other mission
property destroyed during the years of the Japanese occupation. 1953 saw the
construction of the new St. Thomas's Cathedral to replace the quaint, leaky
wooden edifice built by McDougall. Most important, men prepared for ordination
at the House of Epiphany provided nine new priests in
1956.
By 1962, plans were
completed for the division of the Diocese of Borneo. The new Diocese of Jesselton (Sabah) including
Labuan, came into being on
24th July
1962. The remainder of the
Diocese including Brunei was reconstituted as the
Diocese of Kuching on the 13th August
1962; Nigel Cornwall continued
as Bishop.
The limits of the Diocese
are those of the present Administrative Divisions of the State of Sarawak and
Brunei Darussalam together with that part of Indonesian Borneo lying North of
the Equator, and West of longitude 115
º42’.
On 7th April 1970, the
Diocese of West Malaysia was formed to separate his region from
Singapore.
The present Bishop is the
Rt. Revd. Made Katib, who is
the 12th Bishop since 1855 when the Diocese was first
enacted.
adopted from the Constitution of
the Synod of the Church in the Diocese of Kuching