Saturday, June 19, 2027
Proper 6
Liturgical Color: White/Gold
The Third Sunday after Trinity
O Lord, from whom all good proceeds: Grant us the inspiration of your Holy Spirit, that we may always think those things that are good, and by your merciful guidance may accomplish the same; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.
The Fourth Sunday after Trinity
Sadhu and Evangelist
Anglican Commemoration
Sundar Singh was a Sikh boy of the Punjab who met the risen Christ in a vision and gave the rest of his life to following him, not in the clothes of a Western convert but in the saffron robe of an Indian holy man, a sadhu. Barefoot and penniless, he carried the gospel across India and up into the Himalayas toward Tibet, insisting that Christ belonged to his own people as much as to anyone. In 1929 he set out once more for the mountains and was never seen again.
Sundar Singh was born in 1889 in Punjab to a Sikh family. Following a conversion experience in which he encountered the risen Christ, he became a Christian, a decision that led to his rejection by family and community. Rather than adopting Western ecclesiastical forms, Singh made the radical decision to become a Christian sadhu—adopting the saffron robes, ascetic practices, and wandering lifestyle of Hindu holy men—as a means of making Christ accessible to Indian seekers. For decades, he traveled throughout India, Tibet, Central Asia, and beyond, preaching Christ through parables, spiritual teaching, and personal witness. His life exemplified a form of radical inculturation, demonstrating that one could follow Christ while honoring and utilizing the spiritual frameworks of one's own culture. Singh's legacy consists of devotional writings and accounts of his spiritual experiences, though the authenticity of some attributed texts remains disputed. Around 1929, while attempting to evangelize Tibet, he disappeared in the Himalayan mountains under circumstances that remain unclear. He is presumed to have died around that time, though some accounts suggest he may have continued his ministry in secret. His life and witness continue to inspire Christians concerned with cultural sensitivity, mystical spirituality, and the contextualization of the gospel.
Sundar Singh exemplifies the principle of inculturation—the conviction that Christian faith can be authentically expressed within non-Western cultural and spiritual forms. He is honored by missiologists, contextual theologians, and those concerned with Christian-Hindu and Christian-Buddhist dialogue. His sadhu lifestyle anticipates later concerns with the indigenization of Christianity in Asia. He is venerated as a faithful witness to Christ who refused the false choice between Christian faith and cultural identity. The mystical and apophatic dimensions of his spirituality appeal to contemporary seekers of contemplative Christianity.