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Stuart Wolfendale, Imperial to International: A History of St. John's Cathedral, Hong Kong (Hong Kong:Hong Kong University Press, 2013), pp. 376, ISBN 978-988-8139-87-3.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 August 2013

Martyn Percy*
Affiliation:
Ripon College, Cuddesdon, and King's College, London
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Abstract

Type
Book Review
Copyright
Copyright © The Journal of Anglican Studies Trust 2013 

This book is one of the first of a new series focusing on the study of Anglicanism in China. And in focusing on St John's Cathedral, founded in 1849, we are given a unique window into how not only a denomination (Anglicanism), but also a nation, has moved from being imperial to becoming international. St John's, Hong Kong is the oldest neo-gothic cathedral in East Asia and China still in operation, and its current ministry includes outreach to migrants, many thousands of domestic workers who pour in from the Philippines and Indonesia, and a focus on AIDS/HIV. The cathedral is probably one of the most international in the Anglican Communion – with Sunday services in English, Mandarin, Cantonese and Filipino (Tagalog).

Wolfendale's book is the fruit of meticulous research. But it is also written in a warm, fresh and approachable style – at times bordering on an eye-witness account. The book traces the origins of the cathedral from being a colonial parish church and bishop's seat to a truly cosmopolitan community, incorporating significant local and international ministries. As such, the book closely foreshadows the history of the Hong Kong Sheng Kung Hui – the Province that came into being after the British withdrawal in 1997.

The Church of England Yearbook – a volume not noted for its use of superlatives – describes that Province as ‘dynamic’ (2010). It is indeed that. Only inaugurated in 1998, it dates back to missionary endeavour of the mid-nineteenth century, supplanting the Province of Chung Hua Sheng Kung Hui (the Catholic Church in China) which was established as a joint enterprise by Canadian, American, Australian and British clergy and missionaries in 1912. Initially comprising Hong Kong, Macau and other outposts, the Province of Chung Hua Sheng Kung Hui ceased to exist in the 1950s when Mao's Communist party came to power. However, Hong Kong and Macau continued as independent dioceses in communion with Canterbury until the 1990s.

With Hong Kong returning the Chinese sovereignty in 1997, the Province was formed in 1998 as Hong Kong Sheng Kung Hui. It is one of the smallest Provinces in the Anglican Communion. Yet it is one of the most influential –serving eight million people, through a network of entrepreneurial welfare bodies, community centres and projects, and through dozens of schools. It is one of the most remarkable and dynamic forms of Anglicanism.

There are several strengths in the book. The first to mention, perhaps, is the careful way Wolfendale charts the leadership of the laity. Indeed, they are at the core of many developments in the Province, lending their spiritual and material support to key initiatives. These have included the Street Sleepers Society in the 1920s, the Taipo Orphanage and the St James’ Settlement, that began in the 1950s, the Domestic Helpers support network. The financial expertise, musical and architectural gifts have all been powerfully brought to bear on shaping the construction of the cathedral and its community.

The movement from imperial to international is also reflected in the composition of the clergy serving the cathedral. Although many of the clergy in the late-Edwardian period were English, this quickly changed to involve Eurasian and Chinese chaplains. Andrew Chan was the first Chinese Dean (now Bishop of Western Kowloon), and he was succeeded by Matthias Dar, whose sermon at his installation was delivered by him in four different languages, reflecting the diversity of the core congregations. Since the formation of Hong Kong Shen Kung Hui in 1998, St John's Cathedral has been the seat of the Archbishop, and the cathedral for the Province as a whole.

Wolfendale's volume complements Archbishop Paul Kwong's excellent Identity in Community: Toward a Theological Agenda for Hong Kong (2011). The great strength of Wolfendale's book is the historical detail and pen portraits. Of particular note is the careful and moving account of St John's during the Japanese occupation, and the great tenacity and resilience of clergy and members of the congregation in caring for refugees, renegades and resistors. The cathedral – like many Christian churches under Japanese occupation – was treated with contempt by its captors. With the nave used as a canteen, the chancel as a cinema and sanctuary for fencing practice and jujitsu, the work of rebuilding after the reoccupation in 1945 was immense.

What Wolfendale's account gives us, so memorably, is a history of hardiness, and resolve; a triumph of faith, hope and love. More than anything else, perhaps, it is this spirit that has helped transform a formerly imperial church into one of the world's great international cathedrals. But this is no standard history of past cathedral glories. Hong Kong is still the main gateway to China. And Wolfendale shows that St John's now stands as a living sign of what Anglicanism does when working and praying for all who it can touch, and all who touch it. In what is quickly becoming an undeniably Chinese century, St John's Cathedral's most pivotal and strategic role is surely yet to come. As Paul Kwong states in his foreword, ‘Hong Kong is very much a secular city … but it is also a society deeply influenced by people of faith and by religious communities and individuals’. The presence, engagement and ministry of the cathedral continue to be a focus and foundation for that ongoing work.