Showing posts with label christianity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label christianity. Show all posts

The Heavenly Man: The Remarkable True Story of Chinese Christian Brother Yun (Hendrickson Classic Biographies) Review

The Heavenly Man: The Remarkable True Story of Chinese Christian Brother Yun (Hendrickson Classic Biographies)
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The Heavenly Man: The Remarkable True Story of Chinese Christian Brother Yun (Hendrickson Classic Biographies) Reviewthis book was chock full of inspiration and nail biting saga. It is based upon his life, and what a life he lived in China. God's miracles displayed in this book will inspire you completelyThe Heavenly Man: The Remarkable True Story of Chinese Christian Brother Yun (Hendrickson Classic Biographies) Overview

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Manichaeism in the later Roman Empire and medieval China (Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament) Review

Manichaeism in the later Roman Empire and medieval China (Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament)
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Manichaeism in the later Roman Empire and medieval China (Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament) ReviewAll of his major books are exceptional reading and extremely informative. They aren't for someone who wants a casual understanding of Manichaeism, but they are never unreadably obtuse or so loaded with jargon as to be incomprehensible. I used them extensively in university and was sad when I had to return them to the library.Manichaeism in the later Roman Empire and medieval China (Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament) Overview

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Reading Christian Scriptures in China Review

Reading Christian Scriptures in China
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Reading Christian Scriptures in China ReviewChloe Starr, ed., Reading Christian Scriptures in China. London & New York: T & T Clark, 2008.*
We are all aware that Christianity, especially Protestantism, has grown at an astonishing rate in China over the past few decades, and that believers can be found among all strata of society, from the rural peasant to the university professor. What we may not know so well is how the Bible has been read and understood by Chinese.
Since the Bible serves as the main source of Christian doctrine, the nature of its reception, interpretation and influence must be understood in order for us to comprehend the varying streams of Chinese Christian faith and practice and the different responses to Christianity among non-Christians.
Despite the very modest aims and claims of the editor, this volume provides a great deal of information and insight in a dozen well-written essays preceded by a splendid introduction.
As Dr. Starr writes, because of China's millennia-long history of interpreting sacred texts, "we cannot read pre-twentieth century Chinese responses to Scripture without some understanding of the framework of imperial scholarship." The interplay of classical and biblical texts forms a prominent - and fascinating - theme in this book. Other factors influenced the way Chinese read the Bible also, notably the history of Western biblical interpretation and application that came with the translations of the Bible.
These essays also explore the tensions between "traditional Chinese heritage and scriptural mores [ethical norms]," and those "between personal and individual readings and institutional or academic ones." Readers before 1949 concentrated on the former of these, while the latter have been more pronounced under the communist regime.
A further distinction must be made within contemporary readings of the Bible in China: That between the more "literal" and the more "liberal" - the first representing the unregistered churches and the second the official state-sanctioned bodies, especially the Protestant Three-Self Patriotic Movement, or at least its leaders.
Attention to such complexities makes this book especially valuable. Indeed, as Dr. Starr states, we do learn a bit about both Christian and secular history as we watch how Chinese have responded to the Christian Scriptures over the past two hundred years.
Part 1, The Bible in China "looks at the history of readings through to the present and of contextual settings of the Bible in China, while Part 2 focuses on hermeneutics, presenting case-studies of individual Chinese biblical exegetes and their approaches to reading."
The only major deficiency in this otherwise excellent volume is hinted at in the editor's introduction: There are only a few references to the very extensive corpus of high-level biblical studies among Chinese Christians in Hong Kong, Singapore, Taiwan, and North America. Several dozen of these scholars have engaged in robust studies; a number of them - and more of their publications - have exercised influence in China proper, and should therefore be considered a part of the "Reading of Christian Scriptures in China." As Dr. Starr admits, their "reading practices... offer a counterbalance to mainland trajectories, and open up avenues for comparative research."
That being said, the contents of this collection are already sufficiently rich, with each chapter contributing substantially to our understanding of the reception of the Bible in China. As the back cover says, it is "wonderfully informative."
Perhaps the most striking contribution of Reading Christian Scriptures in China is the variety of perspectives it gives us to glimpse the powerful - one might even say determinative - role which their cultural and social context has played in the understanding of the Bible by Chinese.
These studies are so valuable, in fact, that the book may be considered required reading for anyone wanting to understand Christianity in China, both past and present.*
G. Wright Doyle.
Global China Center
* For a more detailed treatment of this book, go to http://www.globalchinacenter.org/analysis/christianity-in-china/reading-christian-scriptures-in-china.php
God and Caesar in China: Policy Implications of Church-State TensionsChristianity in China: From the Eighteenth Century to the PresentJesus in Beijing - Revised and updated
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Bill Wallace of China (Library of Baptist Classics) Review

Bill Wallace of China (Library of Baptist Classics)
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Bill Wallace of China (Library of Baptist Classics) ReviewIn a recent chapel sermon at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, Dr. Paige Patterson recommended reading "Bill Wallace of China." Most people know of William Wallace of Scotland through Mel Gibson's movie "Braveheart," but relatively few have heard of William Wallace of China. What a shame. . . .
I have had this book in my personal library for several decades but it never seemed to make its way to the top of the "next to be read" stack of books that I keep by my bedside. Like most booklovers I have a problem . . . a big problem . . . well, an obsession - - - I buy more books than I can read. If I started reading right now and read twelve hours a day for the rest of my life I would not be able to read even half of the books in my personal library. So, it is not uncommon for me to own but neglect a book. I regret that I neglected this book as long as I did.
When Dr. Patterson recommended this book I had just finished reading Homer Hickam's book "The Coalwood Way" (which, by the way is a great read), so to paraphrase Augustine, "I heard the voice on the other side of the wall calling out `Pick up the book and read.'"
As a young man in Tennessee Bill Wallace felt called of God to prepare for service as a medical missionary. After completing his preparations he was appointed by the Southern Baptist Foreign Mission Board (now International Mission Board) to serve in Southern China. Nothing so amazing there, . . . so why the book? Wallace served in China during the Boxer Rebellion, the Japanese invasion during World War II, and in the subsequent revolutionary war when the Communists wrested control from the Nationalists.
The book is full of drama, intrigue, and suspense. Without those elements the book would not succeed. But, what makes the book compelling is that the reader experiences Wallace in a similar fashion as did the Chinese people. The reader, like the Chinese, is introduced to the quiet unassuming Wallace, gradually comes to like Wallace, then respect him, love him and finally finds that Wallace's life story compels both introspection and committed personal action.
I add my voice to Patterson's in recommending this book. The book is a quick read, but the reader will take much away from it in terms of clearly defined informational content as well as a tacit knowledge that drives volitional intent.Bill Wallace of China (Library of Baptist Classics) Overview

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Fine China Is for Single Women Too Review

Fine China Is for Single Women Too
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Fine China Is for Single Women Too ReviewThis is a wonderful book. I'm only halfway through it right now, but I am eager to finish it. Unlike many other single's books, this one doesn't try to help you understand the shortcomings of the opposite sex. Instead it makes you look at your own faulty thoughts by examening the truths of God's Word. Rather than idealizing marriage and not trusting God to be doing what is best in our lives, this book encourages single women to enjoy their singleness, and see that God is using it for His own glory.Fine China Is for Single Women Too Overview

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Science and Civilisation in China: Volume 7, The Social Background; Part 1, Language and Logic in Traditional China Review

Science and Civilisation in China: Volume 7, The Social Background; Part 1, Language and Logic in Traditional China
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Science and Civilisation in China: Volume 7, The Social Background; Part 1, Language and Logic in Traditional China Reviewof a major topic too little known in the history of logic. Few authors have the linguistic know- ledge for a balanced account of Chinese logic, both native and Buddhist, as well as the necessary comparisons with Indian and Greek traditions. It would be ungrateful nit-picking to find the author's handling of the relation between language and reasoning unsatisfying in a work which will stand as the major orientation for future study.Science and Civilisation in China: Volume 7, The Social Background; Part 1, Language and Logic in Traditional China Overview

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Mission to China: Matteo Ricci and the Jesuit Encounter with the East Review

Mission to China: Matteo Ricci and the Jesuit Encounter with the East
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Mission to China: Matteo Ricci and the Jesuit Encounter with the East ReviewNo doubt motivated by growing international interest in China, two books have just come out (2011) on Matteo Ricci, the Jesuit who took residence in Beijing in 1601 and the first European to do so since Marco Polo. These two books, however, give a quite different treatment to their material. Po-Chia Hsia's A Jesuit in the Forbidden City is essentially a biography of Ricci, while Mary Laven's Mission to China is a book about cultural encounters. The results are interestingly complementary even if, or perhaps especially because, the books occasionally clash, whether in their overall portrayal of the famous Jesuit or in their rendering of specific scenes. (A comparative review of both books follows.)
A Jesuit in the Forbidden City has now become the most up-to-date and complete biography of Ricci (it certainly isn't the first). Tracing Ricci's life from his birth in Macerata in the Papal States to his death in Beijing, this offers an exhaustive if traditional account of the missionary's life and accomplishments. Hsia has given close attention to the Italian and Latin material, which are the most abundant, but his advantage is that he is able to read Chinese, and he has managed to unearth new snippets from Ming gazettes and other contemporary materials - this is all the more important that the source material is unsurprisingly weighted towards Ricci's own writing, with all the distortions and gaps this implies. Hsia was also prepared to delve more thoroughly than was done before into the lives of the various Chinese protagonists, and he sheds new light on key turning points in the mission's progress, for example the Jesuit's crucial first permanent move to Zhaoqing. He is able to provide extra background on the intellectual equipment, Buddhist and Confucian, of many of Ricci's interlocutors, bringing to life debates which, in the Jesuit's published Journal, are given an expectedly one-sided treatment. Hsia's Epilogue, finally, tracing Ricci's legacy from his death to the present, is particularly forceful and interesting.
For all the scholarly quality of A Jesuit in the Forbidden City, though, Laven would disagree (up to a point) with its portrayal of the Ricci mission. Mission to China places its argument both within the historical debate on Ricci - to what extent Ricci was intellectually honest with the Chinese in adapting Christianity to the Confucian philosophy cherished by the mandarins who were his friends, supporters, and patrons - and without it. Ricci was undoubtedly a man of exceptional intelligence: he was capable, after all, not just of learning Chinese but of holding his own in debates with China's intellectual elite, scholars and men who had gone through the most competitive and difficult examination process ever conceived, or of performing such feats as reciting the Confucian classics backwards and writing books on mathematics in his hosts' language. But Laven argues this has mislead historians into giving too much credit to his mission's intellectual dimension and not enough to the role of objects, shared social norms, and images. Hers is a wider point about cultural dialogue, and East-West dialogue in particular: 'We therefore cannot limit the history of encounter to the history of encounter between learned ideas [...] We need to acknowledge a world of rituals, images, and objects, which often speak more eloquently about the interplay between East and West than the learned texts for which the missionaries became famous.' (Mission to China, page 30).
Laven's book is more entertaining if less thorough in discussing Ricci's life than A Jesuit in the Forbidden City. Beginning with a weird and disquieting Soviet secret-service geographical survey of Cambridge, it make a whole set of unexpected points about the meeting of cultures past and present. It goes through, for example, the Jesuits' shopping list for the Chinese emperor, complete with ostrich feathers, astrolabes, fabric cuts, and folding screen, drawing intriguing conclusions as to the Jesuits' keen sense of dress. It shows how European and Ming Chinese notions of friendship curiously intersected at the time of Ricci's mission, and pays close attention to the role of gifts within them. It also explains how coincidental booms in book-printing in Europe and China aided the Jesuits. And it ultimately demystifies Ricci, though without necessarily subtracting from his achievements. A Jesuit in the Forbidden City and Mission to China are likely to appeal to different readers, and Hsia's biography may be essential for students looking for a full and complete chronological account, but they form a wonderful pair: challenging, interesting, and colourful.Mission to China: Matteo Ricci and the Jesuit Encounter with the East Overview

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The Emperor's New Clothes: A Tale Set in China Review

The Emperor's New Clothes: A Tale Set in China
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The Emperor's New Clothes: A Tale Set in China ReviewDemi retells Hans Christian Anderson's tale of "The Emperor's New Clothes" with Chinese-style illustrations. Always a pleasure, her artwork in this book- bold compositions with bright colors and lots of "gold leaf"- is similar to that in many of her other books, such as "Kites: Magic Wishes That Fly in the Sky." Her use of Chinese symbols and imagery here is not as relevant here as it is in her "Kites" book; it merely provides a new twist to an old tale. The book has several fold-out spreads, which kids enjoy, but these are not integral to the story as they are in her magnificent book, "One Grain of Rice: A Mathmatical Folktale." The ending of Demi's version of this fairy tale is not quite satisfactory: we do not see the emperor embarrassed by his situation. Instead he obstinatly marches on, seeming without shame or remorse. In short, "The Emperor's New Clothes" is not Demi's best or most original work, but it is an attractive new version of a favorite story.The Emperor's New Clothes: A Tale Set in China Overview

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Redeemed by Fire: The Rise of Popular Christianity in Modern China Review

Redeemed by Fire: The Rise of Popular Christianity in Modern China
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Redeemed by Fire: The Rise of Popular Christianity in Modern China ReviewRedeemed by Fire by Lian Xi is an academic investigation of the indigenous Chinese Christian Church from the 19th century to the present day. This book focuses almost exclusively on native Protestant Christian movements in China and is thus largely silent on the development of foreign Protestants or Catholics during this same time period. Xi organizes his book around the major indigenous churches of the 19th and 20th centuries, devoting chapters to the Taiping Rebellion, the Jesus Family, the True Jesus Church, the Bethel Band, and the Little Flock, as well as some heretical cults. In the epilogue, Xi draws all of the historical evidence together to make his central point that China's exploding Christian population is "of the masses...not of the elite" and will thus be limited in its ability to affect large scale changes in Chinese culture and politics (pg. 244).
One of this book's best attributes is the meticulous research that Xi has done in regards to these movements. Every major indigenous Christian leader's back story is given so that the reader has a full understanding of the context in which these people lived, giving vital insight into how and why these figures developed their distinctive theologies and styles of leadership. Furthermore, Xi is careful to note the historical setting in which these indigenous revivals take place so that the reader always understands how the surrounding environment shapes the nature of different Christian movements (see pgs. 47, 148, 193 for examples of this contextualization). Also, Xi points out relevant sociological and psychological studies that help give the reader a frame of reference for phenomenon such as "spirit-possession" and the higher rates of female Christian conversion (see pgs. 71-72, 239). Lastly, Xi does an excellent job of proving his point that modern Chinese Christianity has been largely shaped by its indigenous forebears, both theologically and stylistically, rather than by Western Christian movements (see pg. 223, on Watchmen Nee and premillenial dispensationalism).
While I found this book extremely informative, there were some aspects that I found rather frustrating. By organizing his book by religious movements (Xi generally focused on one movement or leader per chapter) it made it hard to grasp a clear chronology of the events. Be prepared to cope with jumping back and forth among different time periods as Xi moves from chapter to chapter to focus on different groups who often overlap chronologically. Furthermore, Xi has a tendency to state confidently the inner motivations of the characters in his book in a manner that is inconsistent with the historical scientific approach he takes for the majority of his work (see pgs. 84, 115, 118).
While this book does have some flaws, I would wholeheartedly recommend it to anyone who wants to do a serious study on the history of indigenous Chinese Christianity as well as any prospective Christian missionaries in China (especially Western ones). Redeemed by Fire is definitely not a pleasurable read, but it lays out a well-researched history of native Christianity in China that gave me an amazing insight into how the modern Chinese Church has developed in the past two centuries. This knowledge would be invaluable to those who want to be on the mission field in China and anyone interested in an academic approach to the subject.Redeemed by Fire: The Rise of Popular Christianity in Modern China Overview

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God Is Red: The Secret Story of How Christianity Survived and Flourished in Communist China Review

God Is Red: The Secret Story of How Christianity Survived and Flourished in Communist China
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God Is Red: The Secret Story of How Christianity Survived and Flourished in Communist China ReviewTo begin, this is not a 'Christian' book. Liao, the author, is not a Christian and is writing about Christianity in China from the perspective of an observer of a community (in this case the Christian community) positioned on the fringe of Chinese society. Therefore, he is not writing to proselytize or evangelize the Christian faith. I found this approach to understanding Christianity in China both refreshing and fascinating as it allows the reader to understand and analyze the Chinese Christian community from multiple perspectives (Christian, historical, sociological, political, anthropological, the list could go on).
With that said, this book will no doubt become popular within the Christian literary community, and while I don't want to dwell on this aspect of the book (I will no doubt leave it for another reviewer more concerned with presenting the book solely or, at least, more strongly from a 'Christian') I will say that it is a powerful and moving read from a Christian perspective.God Is Red: The Secret Story of How Christianity Survived and Flourished in Communist China Overview

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Typhoon Coming On: The Separation of Church and State Review

Typhoon Coming On: The Separation of Church and State
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Typhoon Coming On: The Separation of Church and State ReviewThe size problem of today's modern corporation is now coming into public focus. But Too Big to Fail is not the real problem. These and other considerations are addressed in the author's second book of memoirs. Significant is the Jeffersonian context in which his observations are placed. Of interest is a 29 stanza poem that recounts his six-year corporate experience in Indonesia.
The major problem with today's modern corporation is its vast, undifferentiated size. Dr Elliot Jaques addresses this problem. His approach to structured behavior is somewhat mirrored in the US Constitution with its balance of powers, and therefore is not as radical as some would have.
Hamilton might have argued (implied power) that corporate personhood although not provided for in the Constitution would have been legitimate because it disclosed an individual property right.
Taken as a whole, the modern corporation can be considered a developing institution coming to fruition when as a requisite bureaucracy it functions in place. That achieved, the board of directors would have the accountability and transparency needed to do their job responsibly for corporate stockholders.
Also, Typhoon Coming On hints at oversight tracking using business-process documents, thereby introducing a legal perspective to work-flow process. This is something that would benefit governments involved in Third World reconstruction, fearing corporate unconstitutional activity. The book makes its points in deft poetry and prose.
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