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Anthony Norris Groves

Anthony Norris Groves (1 February 1795 – 20 May 1853) was an English Protestant missionary,[1] who has been called the "father of faith missions". He launched the first Protestant mission to Arabic-speaking Muslims, and settled in Baghdad, and later in southern India. His ideas influenced a circle of friends who became leaders in the Plymouth Brethren. Among these were George Müller, who had married Groves's sister Mary, as well as John Nelson Darby and John Vesey Parnell, 2nd Baron Congleton.

Anthony Norris Groves
Born1 February 1795
Newton Valence, Hampshire, England
Died20 May 1853
Bristol, England
Occupation(s)Dentist, missionary, author
Spouse(s)Mary Bethia Thompson, Harriet Baynes

Groves wished to simplify the task of churches and missions by returning to the methods of Christ and his apostles described in the New Testament. As a missionary, his goal was to help indigenous converts form their own churches without dependence on foreign training, authorisation or finance. His ideas eventually found wide acceptance in evangelical circles.

Biography edit

Groves was born in Newton Valence, Hampshire, England and was the only son in a family of six.[2] His father was a businessman and the family were Anglicans. Having trained as a dentist[1] in London, he set up practice in Plymouth, at the age of 19. Two years later he married his cousin Mary Bethia Thompson, and moved to Exeter.

Call to missionary work edit

In 1826, while continuing his dentistry in Exeter, he enrolled as an external student of theology at Trinity College Dublin, with a view to ordination in the Church of England and appointment with the Church Missionary Society.[3] His study of the New Testament led him to believe that the practices of the early church should be considered a model for every age and culture, and this caused him to consider withdrawing from Trinity College, from the CMS, and from the Anglican communion on his wife's advice. However, he had already laid the money aside and considered that he would be thought fickle if he suddenly abandoned his application. The morning before he was due to depart for Dublin, however, he was awoken by a noise and, on investigating, found that a burglary had taken place. Two packets of money were in his drawers - one containing £40 for the Irish trip and the other containing £16 for taxes: only the packet containing £40 was taken. Groves took this as a sign from God that he was not to go to Dublin and thereafter he gave up the idea.[4]

He met with other Christian believers in private houses for study of the apostles' doctrine, for fellowship, breaking of bread, and prayer, as was the custom of the early church (Acts 2:42), without requiring the presence of any ordained minister.[3] It was here that he met JN Darby and others who were later to become prominent leaders in the Plymouth Brethren movement. He became increasingly concerned with the drift of the Plymouth Brethren[5] towards sectarianism under the leadership of Darby and aligned himself with George Müller when the brethren split in 1848 to form the Open Brethren and Exclusive Brethren.

Missionary to Baghdad edit

In 1829 Groves and his wife Mary set out for Baghdad, together with their two young sons, Henry and Frank,[6] and accompanied by several Christian friends, one of whom was John Kitto. A second party set out to join them the following year, including Francis William Newman and John Vesey Parnell. In March 1831 Baghdad entered upon a year of intense misery, with civil war, plague, floods and famine, in which Groves suffered the death of his wife Mary[1] on 14 May, and a recently born baby daughter on 24 August.

Missionary to India edit

At this time, a revised charter granted to the East India Company opened the way for unrestricted Christian missionary work in India. On invitation from Colonel Arthur Cotton, in 1833, Groves visited widely among missionaries in India, and found open doors for the gospel in many parts of the country. In 1834 he accompanied the Scottish missionary educator Alexander Duff from Calcutta to Scotland, nursing him slowly back to health.[7] Duff probably owed his life to Groves's attentions, as indeed did Arthur Cotton on an earlier occasion.

During his time in Britain, Groves married for a second time to Harriet Baynes.[3] The wedding took place on 25 April 1835 at St Mary's Church, Great Malvern. She accompanied Groves when he returned to India in 1836. Groves was accompanied by John Kitto, Edward Cronin and John V Parnel (2nd Baron Congleton). Rejoined by his sons and others from Baghdad, he established a missionary team in Madras supported largely through his dentistry, and later a farm and mission settlement in Chittoor. He recruited a number of missionaries to assist existing efforts in several parts of India, and to pioneer new ventures, notably in the Godavari Delta and Tamil Nadu.

Groves advocated the adoption of the New Testament as a manual of missionary methods. As a primitivist among missiologists, he pre-dated the more celebrated Roland Allen by eighty years. One of Groves's Indian disciples was John Arulappan who adopted his principles. As a full-time evangelist, Arulappan lived "by faith" and stimulated the creation of a network of indigenous Indian fellowships.[3] Groves's ideas were later taken up in India by descendants of Arulappan associated with Bakht Singh, and, in a Chinese context, by Watchman Nee.

Groves continued preaching and teaching in India until ill health forced him back to England in 1852. His niece, Lydia Müller, wrote at the time 'Leaning his head on his hand, he sweetly fell asleep in Jesus, at twelve on Friday, 20 May 1853'[8] in the home of his sister's husband George Müller.[3] He is buried in Arnos Vale Cemetery in Bristol.[9] He considered his life a failure, and did not live long enough to see the worldwide impact of his ideas and example on a new generation of "faith missions" springing from the 1859-60 Revivals.

Influence edit

Author edit

In 1825, Groves wrote a small booklet Christian Devotedness, expounding Jesus' teaching concerning stewardship of material possessions. He exhorted all Christians to live economically, trusting God to supply their needs, and devoting their income to the cause of the Gospel. This booklet had a major impact upon George Müller, and through him on James Hudson Taylor (who soon after conversion attended the Kennington meeting where Edward Cronin was local) and many other significant Christian leaders.

Groves' early journals Journal of a Residence in Baghdad were edited by AJ Scott and published by J Nisbet, London in 1831 & 1832. After his death, his memoirs were published in 1856 by his widow Harriet Groves, under the title Memoir of the late AN Groves, containing Extracts from his Letters and Journals.

Letters edit

Throughout his life, Groves corresponded with several prominent leaders of the early Brethren movement. His letters are a notable primary source for historians of the Plymouth Brethren.

Sectarianism, Communion & Ordination edit

Groves, an Anglican, came to recognize fellowship of genuine Christians based on "Life, not light."[10] In a letter to J. N. Darby (10 March 1836,) he wrote, "I ever understood our principle of union to be the possession of the common life or common blood of the family of God (for the life is in the blood); these were our early thoughts, and are my most matured ones..." and "I would infinitely rather bear with all their evils, then separate from their good. These were the then principles of our separation and inter-communion."[11] Thus he gathered with others of like mind for communion that ignored sectarian divisions, setting the stage for "Open communion" based on faith in Jesus alone, not denominational affiliation. And he later came to realize that ordination - official recognition of authority and privilege in ministry - was itself unbiblical. "One day, the thought was brought to my mind, that ordination of any kind to preach the gospel is no requirement of Scripture. To me it was the removal of a mountain."[12] These principles had an effect on non-conformist churches then and non-denominational churches today.

Father of faith missions edit

The biography by RB Dann shows that Anthony Norris Groves may be rightly regarded as the "father of faith missions," i.e., the principle that a missionary, if called and sent by the Holy Spirit, should go to their mission in faith, believing that God will thus provide for all their needs - and without first raising funds from supporters. In addition, such a missionary should not publish their financial needs but rather wait in faith for God to provide. By his example, Groves challenged much of previous (and current) thinking about the missionary task through his journeys to Mesopotamia and India which he undertook without the backing of the State or Church. Instead, he put into practice what he believed to be the Biblical principle of trusting God alone to supply his needs.

Publications edit

  • Christian Devotedness (1829)[13]
  • Journal ... During a Journey from London to Bagdad (1831) [1]
  • Remarks on a Pamphlet, entitled: The Perpetuity of the Moral Law. (1840)
  • Journal of a Residence at Bagdad: during the years 1830 and 1831 (1832)
  • A Brief Account of the Present Circumstances of the Tinnevelly Mission (1835)
  • The Present State of the Tinevelley Mission. Second Edition Enlarged, with an Historical Preface and Reply to Mr. Strachan's Criticisms; and Mr. Rhenius's (farewell) Letter to the Church Missionary Society (after Receiving His Dismissal) (1836)
  • Memoir of Anthony Norris Groves

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d Brethren Archive website, Anthony Norris Groves
  2. ^ Groves 1869, p. 2.
  3. ^ a b c d e Borivali Assembly website, Anthony Norris Grove
  4. ^ Tayler 1866, p. 80.
  5. ^ Groves 1869, p. 538.
  6. ^ Brethren Archive website, Henry Groves
  7. ^ Brill website, Immersed in Dependency: American Missionaries, Empires, and India in the 1830s, by Darin D. Lenz, published in the Journal of early modern history, Volume 26 (2022), page 123
  8. ^ Groves 1869, p. 501.
  9. ^ Boase 1885.
  10. ^ Groves 1869, p. 540.
  11. ^ Coad 1976, p. 25.
  12. ^ Coad 1976, p. 22.
  13. ^ GoodReads website, Anthony Norris Grove

References edit

Books edit

  • Boase, George Clement (1885). “Groves, Anthony Norris,” in Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900, in 63 vols. London: Smith, Elder, & Co.
  • Coad, Roy (1976). A History of the Brethren Movement. 2nd edition. London: Paternoster Press.
  • Dann, Robert Bernard, Father of Faith Missions : The Life and Times of Anthony Norris Groves, (Authentic Media, 2004), ISBN 1-884543-90-1
  • Dann, Robert Bernard, The Legacy of Anthony Norris Groves, (International Bulletin of Missionary Research, Vol 29, No 4, Oct 2005)
  • Groves, Anthony Norris (1829). . James Nisbet.
  • Groves, Anthony Norris (1833). On the Nature of Christian Influence. American Mission Press.
  • Groves, Anthony Norris (1834). On the Liberty of Ministry in the Church of Christ. Original Printing, Mission Press, Neyoor, 1834.
  • Groves, Harriet (1869). Memoir of Anthony Norris Groves  (3rd ed.). London: James Nisbet & Co.
  • Lang, GH, Anthony Norris Groves: A Combined Study of a Man of God and of the Principles and Practice of the Brethren, reprint, 2012, Kingsley Press
  • Lang, GH, The History and Diaries of An Indian Christian: JC Aroolappen, USA, Schoettle Publishing Co, Inc, 1988, Schoettle Publishing Company 8 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  • Stunt, Timothy CF, Anthony Norris Groves in an International Context: A Re-assessment of his Early Development, in The Growth of the Brethren Movement: National and International Experiences (Studies in Evangelical History & Thought), edited by Neil TR Dickson and Tim Grass, (Carlisle, Paternoster Press, 2006), ISBN 1-84227-427-9. pp  223–40.
  • Tayler, William Elfe (1866). Passages from the Diary and Letters of Henry Craik, of Bristol. London: J. F. Shaw & Co.

Video edit

  • Anthony Norris Groves – the Quiet Trailblazer , (2004), Christian Television Association for Echoes of Service

External links edit

  • Works by Anthony Norris Groves at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Anthony Norris Groves at Internet Archive
  • – has some brief biographical data plus a bibliography relating to AN Groves, that includes a modern reprint of his Memoirs.
  • Bearing Witness to the Original Principles of the Early Brethren: As Found in a Letter Written by A.N. Groves to J.N. Darby in 1836 (Updated Version)

anthony, norris, groves, february, 1795, 1853, english, protestant, missionary, been, called, father, faith, missions, launched, first, protestant, mission, arabic, speaking, muslims, settled, baghdad, later, southern, india, ideas, influenced, circle, friends. Anthony Norris Groves 1 February 1795 20 May 1853 was an English Protestant missionary 1 who has been called the father of faith missions He launched the first Protestant mission to Arabic speaking Muslims and settled in Baghdad and later in southern India His ideas influenced a circle of friends who became leaders in the Plymouth Brethren Among these were George Muller who had married Groves s sister Mary as well as John Nelson Darby and John Vesey Parnell 2nd Baron Congleton Anthony Norris GrovesBorn1 February 1795Newton Valence Hampshire EnglandDied20 May 1853Bristol EnglandOccupation s Dentist missionary authorSpouse s Mary Bethia Thompson Harriet BaynesGroves wished to simplify the task of churches and missions by returning to the methods of Christ and his apostles described in the New Testament As a missionary his goal was to help indigenous converts form their own churches without dependence on foreign training authorisation or finance His ideas eventually found wide acceptance in evangelical circles Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Call to missionary work 1 2 Missionary to Baghdad 1 3 Missionary to India 2 Influence 2 1 Author 2 2 Letters 2 3 Sectarianism Communion amp Ordination 2 4 Father of faith missions 3 Publications 4 Notes 5 References 5 1 Books 5 2 Video 6 External linksBiography editGroves was born in Newton Valence Hampshire England and was the only son in a family of six 2 His father was a businessman and the family were Anglicans Having trained as a dentist 1 in London he set up practice in Plymouth at the age of 19 Two years later he married his cousin Mary Bethia Thompson and moved to Exeter Call to missionary work edit In 1826 while continuing his dentistry in Exeter he enrolled as an external student of theology at Trinity College Dublin with a view to ordination in the Church of England and appointment with the Church Missionary Society 3 His study of the New Testament led him to believe that the practices of the early church should be considered a model for every age and culture and this caused him to consider withdrawing from Trinity College from the CMS and from the Anglican communion on his wife s advice However he had already laid the money aside and considered that he would be thought fickle if he suddenly abandoned his application The morning before he was due to depart for Dublin however he was awoken by a noise and on investigating found that a burglary had taken place Two packets of money were in his drawers one containing 40 for the Irish trip and the other containing 16 for taxes only the packet containing 40 was taken Groves took this as a sign from God that he was not to go to Dublin and thereafter he gave up the idea 4 He met with other Christian believers in private houses for study of the apostles doctrine for fellowship breaking of bread and prayer as was the custom of the early church Acts 2 42 without requiring the presence of any ordained minister 3 It was here that he met JN Darby and others who were later to become prominent leaders in the Plymouth Brethren movement He became increasingly concerned with the drift of the Plymouth Brethren 5 towards sectarianism under the leadership of Darby and aligned himself with George Muller when the brethren split in 1848 to form the Open Brethren and Exclusive Brethren Missionary to Baghdad edit In 1829 Groves and his wife Mary set out for Baghdad together with their two young sons Henry and Frank 6 and accompanied by several Christian friends one of whom was John Kitto A second party set out to join them the following year including Francis William Newman and John Vesey Parnell In March 1831 Baghdad entered upon a year of intense misery with civil war plague floods and famine in which Groves suffered the death of his wife Mary 1 on 14 May and a recently born baby daughter on 24 August Missionary to India edit At this time a revised charter granted to the East India Company opened the way for unrestricted Christian missionary work in India On invitation from Colonel Arthur Cotton in 1833 Groves visited widely among missionaries in India and found open doors for the gospel in many parts of the country In 1834 he accompanied the Scottish missionary educator Alexander Duff from Calcutta to Scotland nursing him slowly back to health 7 Duff probably owed his life to Groves s attentions as indeed did Arthur Cotton on an earlier occasion During his time in Britain Groves married for a second time to Harriet Baynes 3 The wedding took place on 25 April 1835 at St Mary s Church Great Malvern She accompanied Groves when he returned to India in 1836 Groves was accompanied by John Kitto Edward Cronin and John V Parnel 2nd Baron Congleton Rejoined by his sons and others from Baghdad he established a missionary team in Madras supported largely through his dentistry and later a farm and mission settlement in Chittoor He recruited a number of missionaries to assist existing efforts in several parts of India and to pioneer new ventures notably in the Godavari Delta and Tamil Nadu Groves advocated the adoption of the New Testament as a manual of missionary methods As a primitivist among missiologists he pre dated the more celebrated Roland Allen by eighty years One of Groves s Indian disciples was John Arulappan who adopted his principles As a full time evangelist Arulappan lived by faith and stimulated the creation of a network of indigenous Indian fellowships 3 Groves s ideas were later taken up in India by descendants of Arulappan associated with Bakht Singh and in a Chinese context by Watchman Nee Groves continued preaching and teaching in India until ill health forced him back to England in 1852 His niece Lydia Muller wrote at the time Leaning his head on his hand he sweetly fell asleep in Jesus at twelve on Friday 20 May 1853 8 in the home of his sister s husband George Muller 3 He is buried in Arnos Vale Cemetery in Bristol 9 He considered his life a failure and did not live long enough to see the worldwide impact of his ideas and example on a new generation of faith missions springing from the 1859 60 Revivals Influence editAuthor edit In 1825 Groves wrote a small booklet Christian Devotedness expounding Jesus teaching concerning stewardship of material possessions He exhorted all Christians to live economically trusting God to supply their needs and devoting their income to the cause of the Gospel This booklet had a major impact upon George Muller and through him on James Hudson Taylor who soon after conversion attended the Kennington meeting where Edward Cronin was local and many other significant Christian leaders Groves early journals Journal of a Residence in Baghdad were edited by AJ Scott and published by J Nisbet London in 1831 amp 1832 After his death his memoirs were published in 1856 by his widow Harriet Groves under the title Memoir of the late AN Groves containing Extracts from his Letters and Journals Letters edit Throughout his life Groves corresponded with several prominent leaders of the early Brethren movement His letters are a notable primary source for historians of the Plymouth Brethren Sectarianism Communion amp Ordination edit Groves an Anglican came to recognize fellowship of genuine Christians based on Life not light 10 In a letter to J N Darby 10 March 1836 he wrote I ever understood our principle of union to be the possession of the common life or common blood of the family of God for the life is in the blood these were our early thoughts and are my most matured ones and I would infinitely rather bear with all their evils then separate from their good These were the then principles of our separation and inter communion 11 Thus he gathered with others of like mind for communion that ignored sectarian divisions setting the stage for Open communion based on faith in Jesus alone not denominational affiliation And he later came to realize that ordination official recognition of authority and privilege in ministry was itself unbiblical One day the thought was brought to my mind that ordination of any kind to preach the gospel is no requirement of Scripture To me it was the removal of a mountain 12 These principles had an effect on non conformist churches then and non denominational churches today Father of faith missions edit The biography by RB Dann shows that Anthony Norris Groves may be rightly regarded as the father of faith missions i e the principle that a missionary if called and sent by the Holy Spirit should go to their mission in faith believing that God will thus provide for all their needs and without first raising funds from supporters In addition such a missionary should not publish their financial needs but rather wait in faith for God to provide By his example Groves challenged much of previous and current thinking about the missionary task through his journeys to Mesopotamia and India which he undertook without the backing of the State or Church Instead he put into practice what he believed to be the Biblical principle of trusting God alone to supply his needs Publications editChristian Devotedness 1829 13 Journal During a Journey from London to Bagdad 1831 1 Remarks on a Pamphlet entitled The Perpetuity of the Moral Law 1840 Journal of a Residence at Bagdad during the years 1830 and 1831 1832 A Brief Account of the Present Circumstances of the Tinnevelly Mission 1835 The Present State of the Tinevelley Mission Second Edition Enlarged with an Historical Preface and Reply to Mr Strachan s Criticisms and Mr Rhenius s farewell Letter to the Church Missionary Society after Receiving His Dismissal 1836 Memoir of Anthony Norris GrovesNotes edit a b c d Brethren Archive website Anthony Norris Groves Groves 1869 p 2 a b c d e Borivali Assembly website Anthony Norris Grove Tayler 1866 p 80 Groves 1869 p 538 Brethren Archive website Henry Groves Brill website Immersed in Dependency American Missionaries Empires and India in the 1830s by Darin D Lenz published in the Journal of early modern history Volume 26 2022 page 123 Groves 1869 p 501 Boase 1885 Groves 1869 p 540 Coad 1976 p 25 Coad 1976 p 22 GoodReads website Anthony Norris GroveReferences editBooks edit Boase George Clement 1885 Groves Anthony Norris in Dictionary of National Biography 1885 1900 in 63 vols London Smith Elder amp Co Coad Roy 1976 A History of the Brethren Movement 2nd edition London Paternoster Press Dann Robert Bernard Father of Faith Missions The Life and Times of Anthony Norris Groves Authentic Media 2004 ISBN 1 884543 90 1 Dann Robert Bernard The Legacy of Anthony Norris Groves International Bulletin of Missionary Research Vol 29 No 4 Oct 2005 Groves Anthony Norris 1829 Christian Devotedness James Nisbet Groves Anthony Norris 1833 On the Nature of Christian Influence American Mission Press Groves Anthony Norris 1834 On the Liberty of Ministry in the Church of Christ Original Printing Mission Press Neyoor 1834 Groves Harriet 1869 Memoir of Anthony Norris Groves 3rd ed London James Nisbet amp Co Lang GH Anthony Norris Groves A Combined Study of a Man of God and of the Principles and Practice of the Brethren reprint 2012 Kingsley Press Lang GH The History and Diaries of An Indian Christian JC Aroolappen USA Schoettle Publishing Co Inc 1988 Schoettle Publishing Company Archived 8 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine Stunt Timothy CF Anthony Norris Groves in an International Context A Re assessment of his Early Development in The Growth of the Brethren Movement National and International Experiences Studies in Evangelical History amp Thought edited by Neil TR Dickson and Tim Grass Carlisle Paternoster Press 2006 ISBN 1 84227 427 9 pp 223 40 Tayler William Elfe 1866 Passages from the Diary and Letters of Henry Craik of Bristol London J F Shaw amp Co Video edit Anthony Norris Groves the Quiet Trailblazer 1 2004 Christian Television Association for Echoes of ServiceExternal links edit nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Anthony Norris Groves Works by Anthony Norris Groves at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Anthony Norris Groves at Internet Archive Anthony Norris Groves 1795 1853 has some brief biographical data plus a bibliography relating to AN Groves that includes a modern reprint of his Memoirs Bearing Witness to the Original Principles of the Early Brethren As Found in a Letter Written by A N Groves to J N Darby in 1836 Updated Version Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anthony Norris Groves amp oldid 1214778837, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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