Bishop Taranath Sagar Passes away
Bishop Dr. Taranath Sagar, senior Bishop of the Methodist Church in India and the President of the National Council of Churches in India (NCCI) passed away at 8.00 p.m on Monday 19 October 2015. He died of a heart attack in a hospital in Bangalore, India. The funeral service will be held at 11.00 a.m on Wednesday 21 October at the Richmond Town Methodist Church, Bangalore.
Bishop Sagar has been actively involved in the ecumenical movement during the past three decades through various ecumenical and ecclesiastical organisations in India, Asia and at the global levels. He has been a member of the Executive Committee of the Christian Conference of Asia (CCA) since its last General Assembly held in Jakarta in May 2015. He was first elected to the Central Committee of the World Council of Churches at the Port Allegro Assembly, Brazil in 2006 and for a second term at the Bussan Assembly in 2013. He was the Presiding Bishop of the Methodist Bishop Conference in India, and President of the Asian Methodist Bishops Conference. He served numerous other church and ecumenical organisations in various capacities during the past several years including as the Secretary of the Maharashtra Christian Council, President of the Ecumenical Christian Centre, Bangalore and the United Theological College in Bangalore.
Recalling his ecumenical contributions, Dr. Mathews George Chunakara, General Secretary of the Christian Conference of Asia said that “With the passing away of Bishop Taranath Sagar, the Indian and Asian ecumenical movement lost a committed ecumenist who has been faithfully echoing the concerns and aspirations of the Asian churches in the global ecumenical movement. We thank God for the gifts God bestowed on Bishop Taranath Sagar, who guided the Church and various ecumenical organisations during the past three decades. He was a committed Christian, ecumenical Statesman, staunch defender, who was always raising his voice for justice and dignity of the marginalized and the persecuted. While tirelessly articulating his convictions, Bishop Sagar could relate to all sections of the people, and he spared no efforts to defend justice and dignity”.
Mathews George further added that “such was the personal charisma of Bishop Sagar that he became a servant of God and a leader in the Asian and global ecumenical movement. Bishop Sagar always possessed the strength to be in solidarity with the marginalized, uncompromising even in the face of fierce opposition out of his Christian commitment and convictions.”
Photo: Bishop Sagar at the 14th General Assembly of the CCA (Vineeth Methusaleh)