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Pitcairn Islands Study Center

News - November 16, 2016

Contact Study Center:

PHONE: 707-965-6244
TEXT:   707-229-1340
EMAIL: info@pitcairnstudycenter.org

Contact Herb Ford:
PHONE: 559-592-0980 or
559-732-0313
EMAIL: hford@puc.edu

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  [California Study Center]

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PITCAIRN ISLANDS STUDY CENTER, Pacific Union College, Angwin, California USA.

Herbert Ford, 559-592-0980, 559-732-0313.

WILL ANGLICANISM BECOME THE NEW - OR RETURNED - RELIGION OF PITCAIRN ISLAND?

                        ANGWIN (Napa County) Calif., November 16, 2016—An American priest of the Anglican Rite Old Catholic church has announced plans to challenge the 130-year-long history of the Seventh-day Adventist religious faith on Pitcairn Island, the small South Pacific island home of about 50 descendants of the ill-famed mutineers of the ship H. M.S. Bounty.

                        In a message to the Pitcairn Islands Study Center in California, John Brantley, vicar of the Holyrood Anglican Church of Princeton, North Carolina, has announced a four-stage plan to reintroduce Anglicanism, the faith the Pitcairners had loosely followed for several decades before an American Adventist layman introduced them to the Seventh-day Adventist faith in 1886.

                        "Our campaign will be done in four states," writes Brantley. "The first stage, fund-raising, is already partially completed.

                        "In the next few months we will be starting the second stage by sending boxes of literature (to Pitcairn), and doing further fund-raising.

                        "After 12-15 months of further fund-raising, we plan to send a mission priest - in April or May of 2018 is what we are shooting for - to the island to work and build a relationship with the islanders. His primary goal is not going to be to convert the people on the island, but, rather, to build a relationship with the community and relay back to us what the population needs.

                        "Stage four is to provide fulfillment of those needs to the people of the island and settle two or three Anglican families on the island. If the people of the island embrace Anglicanism, then we will be very blessed to have helped in the progress of God's work. If they choose not to, then we will continue to serve God and help the people of the island..

                        "We have put a great deal of research into the project," writes Brantley, "and we certainly don't expect it to be an easy one, but we do expect it to be a fulfilling one."

                        Today's Pitcairn islanders are eighth and ninth generation descendants of British sailors who in 1789 mutinied against captain William Bligh of the British ship H. M.S. Bounty. Nine of the mutineers, along with Polynesian consorts, settled on Pitcairn Island in 1790, where they hid away from the outside world for nearly two decades before they were found.

                        Scores of books and five widely-viewed movies about the mutiny have made the naval incident and Pitcairn Island famous worldwide.

                        The Anglican Book of Common Prayer and a Bible, taken from the ship Bounty when it was burned at Pitcairn by the mutineers in 1790, served as the basis for religion on Pitcairn through much of the 1800s until Adventist layman John Tay's arrival there in 1886. After five weeks of Tay's sharing his faith with them, practically all the island population decided to change their religion to that of the Seventh-day Adventist faith. Since then it has been the only organized religion on Pitcairn Island.

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