India - William Carey Church
India - William Carey Church
The former Lal Bazaar Chapel, Calcutta.
A 360 degree view of the interior of the former Lal Bazaar Chapel, Kolkata, now called Carey Baptist Church. Filmed in April 2008.
KOLKATA, TO SHRIRAMPUR, FOR A HISTORICAL PLACE JOHN NAGAR, WILLIAM CAREY'S CHURCH ,
WILLIAM CAREY'S CHURCH, JOHN NAGAR, SHRIRAMPUR, WEST BENGAL, INDIA.
William Carey right now at Serampore: Reporting of Purono Kolkatar Golpo
Condition of his grave
Peace Harvest India West Bengal - Church started by William Carey (English)
William Carey and his ministry established this church nearly 200 years ago. This village church stopped functioning and disintegrated few years ago. Peace Harvest India Pastor’s has now brought together old and new believers and have started church fellowship.
WW William Ward of Serampore - Introduction. 720HD.
An Introduction to William Ward of Derby and Serampore, including a Postscript.
Subjects include: Jedidiah Strutt; UNESCO Derwent Valley Mills World Heritage Site; the painter Joseph Wright of Derby; Richard Arkwright; arrival at Serampore; the founding of Serampore College; the Serampore Printing Office; Baptist Mission Press, Kolkata; and the arrival of printing in India.
TESTIMONY OF #WILLIAM CAREY#_episode - 02
WILLIAM CAREY LIFE STORY LIVE PART - 1
FOLLOW US ON : Facebook page
William Carey, (born August 17, 1761, Paulerspury, Northamptonshire, England—died June 9, 1834, Frederiksnagar [now Shrirampur], India), founder of the English Baptist Missionary Society (1792), lifelong missionary to India, and educator whose mission at Shrirampur (Serampore) set the pattern for modern missionary work. He has been called the “father of Bengali prose” for his grammars, dictionaries, and translations.
A Baptist from 1783, Carey served for several years as a pastor in Moulton, Northamptonshire, where he also taught school and continued his trade as a shoemaker. In 1789 he transferred to the Baptist church at Leicester and three years later published a pamphlet titled An Enquiry into the Obligations of Christians to Use Means for the Conversion of the Heathens, which led to his forming, with a dozen other ministers, the English Baptist Missionary Society.
The society’s first missionaries, Carey and John Thomas, a doctor, went to Calcutta (Kolkata) in 1793. The following year, Carey removed himself from the society’s financial support when he became superintendent at an indigo plant in Mudnabati, Bengal. There he also preached, taught, and began his first Bible translation. Compelled to leave British Indian territory, he and his family moved to the Danish colony of Frederiksnagar, near Calcutta, in 1800. There he and Joshua Marshman and William Ward, collectively known as the “Serampore trio,” founded the mission described by the English philanthropist William Wilberforce as “one of the chief glories” of the British nation.
Appointed in 1801 to teach Bengali, Sanskrit, and Marathi at Fort William College, Carey translated the Bible into Bengali, Oriya, Marathi, Hindi, Assamese, and Sanskrit. He also translated parts of it into 29 other languages and dialects. He edited, with Marshman, a grammar in Bhotia and prepared six other grammars in different languages. In addition to dictionaries in Bengali, Sanskrit, and Marathi, Carey and Marshman prepared a translation of three volumes of the Hindu epic poem Ramayana. Having established a press at Serampore, Carey edited and published two works by horticulturist William Roxburgh, Hortus Bengalensis (1814) and Flora Indica (1832), and helped distribute prose texts for use in schools. His social work extended beyond education to urge the government to outlaw such practices as infanticide and suttee (in which Hindu widows immolated themselves on their husbands’ funeral pyres). He also encouraged the use of Indians as missionaries and led in the formation of the Agricultural Society of India in 1820.
THANKS FOR WATCHING :
TESTIMONY OF #WILLIAM CAREY#_episode - 01
WILLIAM CAREY LIFE STORY LIVE PART - 1
FOLLOW US ON : Facebook page
William Carey, (born August 17, 1761, Paulerspury, Northamptonshire, England—died June 9, 1834, Frederiksnagar [now Shrirampur], India), founder of the English Baptist Missionary Society (1792), lifelong missionary to India, and educator whose mission at Shrirampur (Serampore) set the pattern for modern missionary work. He has been called the “father of Bengali prose” for his grammars, dictionaries, and translations.
A Baptist from 1783, Carey served for several years as a pastor in Moulton, Northamptonshire, where he also taught school and continued his trade as a shoemaker. In 1789 he transferred to the Baptist church at Leicester and three years later published a pamphlet titled An Enquiry into the Obligations of Christians to Use Means for the Conversion of the Heathens, which led to his forming, with a dozen other ministers, the English Baptist Missionary Society.
The society’s first missionaries, Carey and John Thomas, a doctor, went to Calcutta (Kolkata) in 1793. The following year, Carey removed himself from the society’s financial support when he became superintendent at an indigo plant in Mudnabati, Bengal. There he also preached, taught, and began his first Bible translation. Compelled to leave British Indian territory, he and his family moved to the Danish colony of Frederiksnagar, near Calcutta, in 1800. There he and Joshua Marshman and William Ward, collectively known as the “Serampore trio,” founded the mission described by the English philanthropist William Wilberforce as “one of the chief glories” of the British nation.
Appointed in 1801 to teach Bengali, Sanskrit, and Marathi at Fort William College, Carey translated the Bible into Bengali, Oriya, Marathi, Hindi, Assamese, and Sanskrit. He also translated parts of it into 29 other languages and dialects. He edited, with Marshman, a grammar in Bhotia and prepared six other grammars in different languages. In addition to dictionaries in Bengali, Sanskrit, and Marathi, Carey and Marshman prepared a translation of three volumes of the Hindu epic poem Ramayana. Having established a press at Serampore, Carey edited and published two works by horticulturist William Roxburgh, Hortus Bengalensis (1814) and Flora Indica (1832), and helped distribute prose texts for use in schools. His social work extended beyond education to urge the government to outlaw such practices as infanticide and suttee (in which Hindu widows immolated themselves on their husbands’ funeral pyres). He also encouraged the use of Indians as missionaries and led in the formation of the Agricultural Society of India in 1820.
THANKS FOR WATCHING :
CCCP-What is Christmas
Carey Child Care Program - Carey Baptist Church - Kolkata
Peace Harvest India West Bengal - Church started by William Carey (Malayalam)
William Carey and his ministry established this church nearly 200 years ago. This village church stopped functioning and disintegrated few years ago. Peace Harvest India Pastor’s has now brought together old and new believers and have started church fellowship.
Come on Ring those Bells - CCCP
Carey Child Care Program - Carey Baptist Church - Kolkata
Jawhar Sircar Talks About ‘William Carey:An enquiry into obligations of a Social Reformer’ Part I
Carey Lecture- 2014 by Jawhar Sircar on ‘Rev. William Carey:An enquiry into the obligations of a Social Reformer’. Organized by The Bible Society of India,Calcutta Auxiliary on 17th August,2014 at Kala Mandir,Kolkata
PASTOR WILLIAM CAREY ---- Church of Sardis
Christian missionaries using Hindus school kids to collect money for conversion racket
In this video, conversion activities of Christian missionaries is exposed!
Support Dianne (missionary trip to Calcutta, India)
This video seeks your support for Dianne De La Cruz.
Pretty Little Baby by CCCP Children
Carey Child Care Program - Carey Baptist Church, Kolkata
Mother Teresa's Ministry
Social 10-1