Greater Britain -the English-speaking settler colonies of the British empire which we are more likely now to refer to as the British world -was an idea as much as a set of territories. 1 For the free Christian churches of the peoples of Great Britain and Ireland, it was also a mission field. This is a novel idea and one which I hope to argue throughout the course of this book. Chapter 1 begins by examining the idea of Greater Britain , first as a concept in the writing of Charles Wentworth Dilke , and then as it was taken up by the churches who adopted the term as their own in the last decades of the nineteenth century. It also introduces topics raised in subsequent chapters which examine the arrangements and organisations that were marshalled across the empire in order to provide religious services for colonists. In subsequent chapters, this book considers the development of missions to British settlers, including the colonial missionary societies ( Chapters 3 to 7 ), missionary training colleges for colonial clergy ( Chapters 8 to 10 ), church emigration societies ( Chapter 10 ), and Christian colonisation ( Chapters 11 and 12 ). Together, these provisions for the colonial churches helped shape the powerful, shared sense of British identity that suffused the British world and to which Dilke was able to give a name.In 1897, the English Baptist pastor and writer , John Clifford , completed a tour of Australia , New Zealand and Canada , during which he was swept up in the elaborate colonial celebrations for the Queen 's diamond jubilee. 2 Experiencing at close hand the wave of colonial devotion to the Queen, he confidently predicted a great coming federation of Greater Britain , which would be made up of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, the Dominion of Canada and Newfoundland , 1Colonialism, colonisation and Greater Britain1 For settler loyalism and the 'imagined British world', see C. Bridge and K. Fedorowich, eds.,