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Miller, William
1779 to 1856
Baptist
South Africa
William Miller was one of the leading figures in the foundation of the Baptist denomination in Southern Africa. Originally from England, he and his wife, Elizabeth Miller, were a part of a small Baptist congregation, consisting of only eleven people, who joined the "1820 Settlers," a group of pioneers who landed on South African soil in 1820 at Algoa Bay, situated in the current Eastern Cape Province. Shortly after their arrival the Baptists held their first service under a thorn tree in front of Miller's tent. Hereafter Miller began to assume the role of the spiritual shepherd for the small congregation.
The church was formally founded under the leadership of William Shepherd who built a cottage to accommodate their religious services in Salem and encouraged the congregation the recognize William Miller as the official pastor of the church. As soon as this was finalized, the Lord's Supper (communion) was celebrated for the first time in South Africa in a Baptist church. The small church at Salem began to grow slowly and opportunities opened for Miller to minister in the town of Grahamstown, some thirty miles away. For quite some time he moved back and forth between the two towns, at first by foot and later by horse, until he found it necessary to seek employment in a carpenter's shop in Grahamstown. This move allowed him to focus more specifically on the congregation in Grahamstown, which first outgrew the cottage they were borrowing initially for their services, and then even outgrew the carpenter's shop where Miller worked. Apparently the congregation became quite the talk of the town whenever they would march down to the river that ran through the town to baptize new converts. As the congregation was growing, they decided that it was time to build a proper church building. Miller laid the foundation stone and the congregation gave as much as they could, both in materials and financially and helped with the construction of the chapel as well. The first Baptist chapel was officially opened in July 1824. The congregation flourished under the leadership and care of their shepherd, William Miller.
Miller remained the pastor of the congregation for thirty years in total before stepping down, but even after this he remained intimately involved in the church until his death. He died on the November 29, 1856 at the age of seventy-seven. Although the name of his wife is given as Elizabeth at the time of his arrival in South Africa, the name on Miller's tombstone is Ann. Perhaps Elizabeth died and Miller remarried Ann. Unfortunately history on this point is unclear.
Miller founded the Baptist denomination with a mere handful of people, but from these humble beginnings the denomination has grown and has become one of the most wide-spread and active denominations in southern Africa, with hundreds of congregations and several theological training institutions.
Bradley Anderson
Bibliography:
Holt, Basil. Our 1820 Founder: A Memoir. South Africa: South African Baptist Historical Society.
Ayliff, John. "Memoir of Mr. Wm. Miller, Founder of the Baptist Interest in South Africa" in The South
African Christian Watchman and Wesleyan Church and School Record (vol. IV, no. 2, Feb. 1857)
pp. 37-45.
Roy, Kevin. Zion City RSA: The Story of the Church in South Africa. South African Baptist Historical
Society: Cape Town. 2000.
Hudson-Reed, Sydney (ed.). Together for a Century: History of the Baptist Union of South Africa. South
African Baptist Historical Society: Pietermaritzburg. 1977.
Hockly, Harold Edward. The Story of the British Settlers of 1820 in South Africa. 2nd enlarged and revised
edition. Cape Town and Johannesburg: Juta & Co. 1957.
This article, received in 2004, was written by Bradley Anderson, a student at Capetown Baptist Seminary, a DACB participating institution, under the supervision of Dr. Kevin Roy, liaison coordinator.
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