Mariamkutty’s theory is that only Trisshurian Syro-Malabars are “true native St. Thomas Christians” and that the rest of us - the other Syro-Malabar eparchies, the entire Syro-Malankara Catholic Church, the entire Malankara Orthodox Church, and the entire Syriac Orthodox Church are phonies pretending to be St. Thomas Christians but were originally Latins.
Another problem with her theory is that all of the St. Thomas Christians accept that one of the 7 original Churches that St. Thomas founded is Nilakkal… where is Nilakkal located? No where near Trisshur, in fact it is deep inside Pathanamthitta.
Another is Niranam, where is NIranam located?
Not near Trisshur, but close to Kotttayam.
Are these people who were converted by St. Thomas himself, not “St. Thomas Christians”? This is Mariamkutty’s theory.
It defies logic.
One needs to trace the history of Christianity in Malabar Coast (Kerala) in different periods:
- From the arrival of Portuguese in 1500 to Synod of Diamper 1599. The areas on Malabar Coast which were under their control. The missionaries who worked on the Malabar Coast. Franciscans, Dominicans, Augustinians (under whose watch Synod of Diamper took place), Jesuits (worked with the native St Thomas Christians).
- From Synod of Diamper to capture of Portuguese trade bases on Malabar Coast starting 1658, culminating in capture of Cochin in 1663.
- The Dutch period 1658 - 1795. The areas along Malabar Coast which came under their control directly from the Portuguese and also newly conquered territories.
- Work of Carmelites on Malabar Coast who came in 1657, shortly before Dutch captured Cochin. Two native religious orders were formed on their watch - Travancore Order of Carmelites Discaled (TOCD), which changed its name to CMI; and Franciscan Clarist Congregation (FCC). Both started as Latin Rite orders but slowly transformed themselves into Syrian Rite orders.
- The British Raj starting 1795 - 1947. British (English East India Company) had a trade post in Anjego, Travancore, starting 1685. Beginning with the visit of Rev Dr Claudius Buchanan, many European Protestant groups worked on Malabar Coast.
***The term Jacobite Syrians began to be used for non-Catholics of Malabar Coast only after the visit of Rev Dr Claudius Buchanan in 1806. The non-Catholics he visited were a migrant community and NOT the native St Thomas Christians who had been in communion with RCC since 1599. ***
The story about the schism of native St Thomas Christians, who supposed lived in the Portuguese colony at Mattancherry in 1653, did not exist at the time of his visit.
**Those who have agreed to the seven and half churches tradition of Apostle Thomas also are particular to point out that Christianity had died out in all places by the time Portuguese arrived in 1500 and there were two ancient churches left - Kodungallur (Cranganore) and Palayur (Palur), both in present Thrissur District. Malayatoor (in Ernakulam District) which belongs to the ancient tradition is hardly mentioned because Apostle Thomas did not establish a church there, although he visited it, because ? he probably was martyred there (and not at Mylapore).
**
Jacobite Syrian Christians about whom Rev Dr Claudius Buchanan wrote in 1806 and the ancient native St Thomas Christians, with whom Jesuits worked about whom the Jesuits wrote, from 1542 - 1772 (when the Jesuit Order was suppressed), are two different communities on Malabar Coast.
It is not really clear how the two communities came to be taken as the same because no one had ever written about the Jacobite Syrian Christians before Rev Dr Claudius Buchanan in 1806, and it is clear that they are a migrant community. By the time Rev Dr Buchanan met them in 1806, Malabar Coast had already had two European colonial traders, each holding sway for one and a half centuries each: Portuguese from 1500 -1663, and Dutch from 1658 - 1795.
CMS missionaries arrived after the report of Rev Dr Buchanan, who was keen to establish a proper church for them and educate them. Apart from missionaries in Kottayam and Alappuzha, CMS missionaries also set up a
mission station in Cochin.
Rev Thomas Dawson was the first, after whose departure in 1818, missionaries from Kottayam visited Cochin regularly and conducted services in St Francis Church (used by Dutch Calvinists during their time in Cochin).
Rev Samuel Risdale in 1824 speeded up the mission work, and he worked among a mixed population consisting of Indian, Portuguese, Dutch, and English. **In 1836 **he had opened six outstations namely,
Kunnamkulam, Pazhani, Kandanadu, Thrippunithara, Kuttatodu and Chalakkudi. During the year, Risdale returned home leaving the
Rev. Henry Harley in charge, who **erected a Church at Trichur in 1840 and the next year set up the headquarters of the Cochin Mission there. Harley did most distinguished work in Cochin State for more than 20 years. **
*Lutheran Basel Mission worked intensely in Malabar District of North Kerala starting 1834, (and converted thousands to non-Latin version of Christianity) when British government gave permission for foreign missionaries to work on their territories. Plenty of work was done by European Protestant missionaries on Malabar Coast since the visit of Rev Dr Buchanan in 1806 before official churches claiming allegiance to Patriarchs in the Middle East were created in the nineteenth century. *