At Serampore
Fr.P.T.Geevarghese got more time for prayer and contemplation. He came across the writings of
St. Basil on monasticism. Basilian monastic vision had a great influence on him. Besides the visits to the
Sabarmati Ashram of
Mahatma Gandhi and
Santiniketan of
Rabindranath Tagore gave him a new vision of Indian Sanyasa (monasticism). These experiences made him to reflect upon starting an order of missionaries to carry out the task of evangelization in India. Slowly the residence of
Fr.P.T.Geevarghese and his followers at Serampore became an Ashram (Monastery), and they began to live a sort of religious life according to the monastic rules of St. Basil, adapting them to
Indian culture. As he accepted this as his way of life, he resigned from the Serampore College. On his return from Calcutta,
Fr. P.T.Geevarghese looked for a location to establish an ashram. One of his friend Advocate E. J. John donated of land at Mundanmala,
Ranni-Perunadu,
Kerala at the meeting place of the rivers Pampa and Kakkatt. The adjacent area of was bought from the
Government of Travancore at a rate of 5
rupee per
acre using the fund of about 2000
rupee from his father. The place was thickly filled with thorny bushes and herbs.
Fr. P.T.Geevarghese and his followers built a small thatched hut made out of the branches of trees and bamboo. This turned to be the first Ashram in Malankara on 15 August 1919. He prayerfully searched for a name for the Ashram and opened the
Bible and he got the word "Bethany". He meditated upon it and came to the conclusion that it is an apt name for a religious order which upholds both contemplation and action. Eventually the
Bethany Ashram became a place of pilgrimage and spiritual experience. Spiritual retreats and discourses were given by
Fr. P.T.Geevarghese especially in the Passion Week.
Fr. P.T.Geevarghese envisioned the Ashram also being a shelter for the poor and the marginalised. Along with the Ashram he started a house for the orphans.
Fr. P.T.Geevarghese founded the
Bethany Madhom for religious women in 1925, with the help of the
Anglican sisters, entitled
Oxford Mission Sisterhood of the Epiphany working at
Serampore. == Bishop of Bethany ==