Alexander Duff
India and India Missions (1839)
MissionaryPresbyterian
Chapter VII, p. 215
The caste system is the great barrier to the progress of Christianity in India. It pervades all Hindu society, and separates man from man with a rigidity which no other institution in the world can parallel. So long as caste stands, Christianity cannot make real progress.
✦ Commentary
Duff explicitly identifies caste as an impediment to conversion — the way it blocks his evangelical agenda. This instrumental motive is the unspoken truth behind most missionary caste critique.
Themes
Caste as Impediment to ConversionCaste as HinduismCaste as a Totalizing System
Discursive Strategies
Moralizing Discourse
Source Type
Published Book
↯ Tracing the Causal Chain
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Bureaucraticcodified
Government of India, Census of India, 1871-72: General Report
“The Brahmins form a priestly class which exercises considerable influence over the religious and social life of the Hindu population. They are the custodians of sacred learning and perform all the pri...”
Duff's frustration that caste blocks conversion leads to intensive missionary study of caste. This missionary ethnography directly shapes the census categories decades later — the bureaucratic "caste tables" are built on frameworks missionaries developed to understand why conversion failed.