In 1974,[5] Oliver headed the Rural Agricultural and Gramodyog Development Society in Khammam,[5] which was involved in improving quality of life among the rural folk.[6] During the next decade, Oliver moved over to Hyderabad and was leading the Centre for Promoters of Rural Development (CPRD)[7] and was also associated with the Andhra Pradesh Voluntary Health Association.[8]
Historical studies
As an academic, Oliver has been a member of the fully ecumenical, Church History Association of India (CHAI), Bangalore,[9][10] where he has been providing the required support for conduction of the regional meetings of the CHAI since the 1980s,[11] espousing the cause of scholarly spirit among the Church historians in the study of History of Christianity and the emergence of the Church as an academic discipline.
Telugu literature
Oliver has been espousing the cause of Telugu literature, as chairperson of the Telugu Theological Literature Board (TTLB), which has been in the forefront of publishing the Telugu Bible Dictionary[12] since many decades.[13] Also, as state representative of the National Council of Churches in India (NCCI),[14][15][16][17] he is involved in overseeing the translation of a Daily Bible Reading book published by the International Bible Reading Association from English into Telugu by taking the assistance of Theologians who include the Systematic Theologian B. J. Christie Kumar, STBC,[18] the Christian educator, Johanna Rose Ratnavathi, AELC[19] among others, which helps in Bible reading among the faithful by providing the devotional in Telugu language .
Since the beginning of the 1980s, Oliver had been in the forefront of Interfaith dialogue and promotion of communal amity. In 1986,[21] Oliver spoke on the Role of Church in peace making conducted by the Henry Martyn Institute for Islamic Studies, Hyderabad during the tenure of its Director Sam V. Bhajjan,[21] which was well attended by Religious scholars of diverse faiths from the notable Universities in the country.[21] When the 1990 Hyderabad riots occurred during the tenure of then Chief Minister, Marri Chenna Reddy, Oliver as a Citizen of Hyderabad interacted with the religious heads of different faith traditions and led a peace march around Clock Tower, Secunderabad together with a Pujari, Imam, Jathedar, Bhikkhu, Jain monk, and a Catholic Priest, all of whom held hands and walked side by side as a show of togetherness in the presence of the Hyderabadi Historian Vasant K. Bawa.[22]
Ecumenism and the unity of the Churches
In fostering ecumenism and unity among the Churches, Oliver has made his contribution through the regional[23][24] Councils of Churches which are affiliated to the National Council of Churches in India, Nagpur and was also its vice-president[25] in the 1990s and had made immense contribution to the revision of the Constitution of the NCCI.[26]
Oliver was honorary secretary of the Andhra Pradesh and Telangana Council of Churches and used to maintain brotherly relations with the Catholic, Orthodox, Protestant and the New and Indigenous Churches and liaised with Archbishops S. Arulappa[27] followed by M. Joji. Keeping doctrinal differences aside, during the tenure of Oliver, many small and indigenous Churches were welcomed into the fold of the Council of Churches, including the Good Samaritan Evangelical Lutheran Church,[28] and Oliver also participated in a central committee meeting of the World Council of Churches in 1992.[29]
2000 - Recolonisation, Globalisation and the Role of the Church.[25] - this writing was also referred to by the Social ethics Scholar, I. John Mohan Razu.[32]
^"University Grants Commission and Serampore College (University)". Archived from the original on 12 June 2017. The Senate of Serampore College (University) is a University within the meaning of Section 2 (f) of the UGC Act, 1956 under which a University means a University established or incorporated by or under a Central Act, a Provincial Act or a State Act, and includes any such institution as may, in consultation with the University concerned, be recoginsed by the Commission in accordance with the regulations made in this behalf under this Act. The UGC took the opinion that the Senate fell under the purview of Section 2 (f) of the said Act since The Serampore College Act, 1918 was passed by the Government of West Bengal
^I. John Mohan Razu (2000). P. Moses Paul Peter (ed.). "Dialogue on globalisation". Bangalore: Student Christian Movement of India. p. 57.
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