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AUTONOMOUS - Madras Christian College

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QUARTOSEPTCENTENNIAL SPECIAL SOUVENIRthreat to his power was located. Herod uses the pretenceof asking questions so that he may go and worship thenew-born king too, but we know from the story how Herodslaughtered all the babies around Bethlehem, so that hispower would not be threatened. Power has often behavedlike this in human history in completely different culturesacross the world. But now, the wise men themselves go toBethlehem and find the infant Jesus in a manger and whenthey come, they find themselves in a completely differentposition for, on this occasion, the wise men are kneeling notbefore a sign of earthly power but before a sign of innocentand vulnerable humanity, and not one of their questionswould be answered because the baby cannot speak. All thetreasures, all the gifts, all the symbols of their wisdom arelaid at the feet of the infant Jesus, the ultimate sign of Godsharing in our humanity - a triangle of power, wisdom andinnocence. Wisdom chooses to kneel before innocence andserve humanity in this story.The sentence which we have chosen today and for the wholeof this year “Celebrating History and Serving Humanity”could well have been used of the three wise men kneelingto offer their gifts of gold, frankincense and myrrh to thenewborn child. But we use it for <strong>Madras</strong> <strong>Christian</strong> <strong>College</strong>.Celebrating history. Well, I suppose that history started inthe year 1837 with three wise men not from the East, butfrom the West, who came as three friends, a threefold cord,John Anderson called them, from Scotland so I can praisethem because I am from England and so I am not praisingmy own nation! They had come here with a desire to sharenot only their wisdom but also their conviction of the divinepresence within that Christ child, that vulnerable babywhich wisdom had known before in the Epiphany story. JohnAnderson always said that the local Sabbath school sowed inhis heart the incorruptible seed which was to grow and bearthe yoke of Christ and face all challenges in life. Joininghim too was his friend Robert Johnston from the same areain Scotland, and later their friend John Braidwood, threebrothers in Christ from the same university. Thinking ofthe story of the Christ child, we might ask though who werethe learners? Those who were accounted wise and broughtwisdom, would in this world’s terms be called teachers buthaving knelt at the feet of vulnerable humanity and receivedback a gift which changed their lives forever, I think thatthe wise men from the East, after their experience of themanger, would have said: “We learnt the most. Our wisdomwas totally transformed by this experience.” And we noticethat the last sentence in our story tells us that they wenthome by ‘another way’. ‘Follower of the Way’ is the first titlegiven to those who follow the <strong>Christian</strong> path in the Acts ofthe Apostles and I believe also that John Anderson, RobertJohnston and John Braidwood would themselves have said“Yes, we brought knowledge here to <strong>Madras</strong> at that timewhen we set the school in the middle of the city but welearned much more from that situation, that community,than we taught and we thank God that our wisdom wastransformed by those we came to teach”. “CelebratingHistory and Serving Humanity.” We want, this afternoon, tosay “Thank God” for those three who began this place andset it on a particular course. One feels with the story of<strong>Madras</strong> <strong>Christian</strong> <strong>College</strong> that its roots are so deep and itsfoundation so strong that those who learnt here and thosewho have taught have had the confidence to be brave andradical in what they said. I suppose there would be no moreconservative looking figure than the principal William Miller,who was here for an astonishing 47 years which really isamazing in modern terms. Yet, he was very sure where thetreasure that was being offered lay. We might for a momentturn to the words of Bishop Reginald Heber, whose name isalso valued here. Remember, in one of his hymns, one ofmy favourite hymns “Brightest and best of the sons of themorning”, an Epiphany hymn, he says “Say, shall we yieldHim in costly devotion, odours of Edom and offerings divine,gems of the mountain, and pearls of the ocean, myrrh fromthe forest, and gold from the mine? Vainly we offer eachample oblation, vainly with gifts would his favour secure,richer by far is the heart’s adoration, dearer to God are theprayers of the poor.”St Paul in his letter to the Colossians, tells us very firmlythat the real treasure is ‘Christ in you’. He is the sum of theriches and the treasure that God gives and shows us, andthis community has always been very sure of that and not ina narrow way. That was why I wanted to quote William Miller,for he said some very brave things indeed about the Church,which in many periods of history has gone very wrong, andalso about the fallibility of people like me who wear this sortof collar, and the missionaries in the past. One can hardlybelieve that this was being said in the late 19th century,but here he is talking to his students “You have not to do23

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