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The History of Chinese American Protestantism

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Before the May Fourth Movement of 1919, Chinese religious nationalism drew from ... Mabel Lee Circular letter (addressees unknown), 3 July 1925. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The History of Chinese American Protestantism


1
The History of Chinese American Protestantism
  • Asian American Christianity
  • Timothy Tseng
  • Logos Evangelical Seminary Jan. 17, 2006

2
Chinese American Church History From Ecumenical
to Evangelical
3
Significance of the Diasporic Context in the 19th
Century
  • The Chinese Diaspora early commerce and labor in
    Southeast Asia.
  • Opium War (1839-1842) opening up Euro-American
    entry and use of Chinese labor for Colonial
    projects (e.g. Chinese in SE Asia, the Americas,
    India, and South Africa).

4
Significance of the Diasporic Context in the 19th
Century
  • C. Missionary tenacity and complicity.
  • D. Rise of Chinese Christian nationalism (took
    anti-Ching turn at end of century).
  • Taiping Rebellion (1850-64)
  • Revolutionary Republicanism (1895-1911)
  • Ecumenical elitism (1925-1949)

5
The 19th Century Context in the USA
  • A. First missions in 1850s Presbyterian,
    Baptist, Congregationalist, Methodist,
    Episcopalian, Roman Catholic
  • B. American racial discrimination against the
    Chinese - served two purposes
  • to protect labor unions (labor unions chose not
    to work with Chinese)
  • to create White Nation unite European ethnics
    into Whiteness. See Alexander Saxton, The
    Indispensable Enemy Labor and the Anti-Chinese
    Movement in California (1971)

6
The 19th Century Context in the USA
  • C. Chinese partnership with Protestants to fight
    discrimination.
  • William Speers defending the Chinese against
    Miners Tax law in California and other
    discriminatory legislation.
  • Ecumenical Lobby against Chinese Exclusion
    (1892).
  • Numerous challenges to naturalization and
    immigration laws ironically resulted in the
    formation of the Immigration and Naturalization
    Bureau and its power to deport without due
    process.

7
Facing anti-Chinese discrimination
  • Responding to racism in North America
  • 1860 Chinese not permitted to naturalize
  • 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act
  • 1892, 1902 Exclusion renewed
  • Segregation from schools, work, and public life.
  • Anti-Chinese violence

8
Facing anti-Chinese discrimination
9
Chinese American Christians at turn of the Century
  • D. Bachelor society church equivalent to
    religious-political fraternities inspired by
    Buddhism and Taoism. But changing!

New York Chinese Baptist Church, 1920s
10
Ecumenism in 20th Century China
  • Birth of ecumenism in China. Missionaries
    discovered that they had to work together.
    Anti-Chinese Exclusion work in 1892 was an
    example.
  • Rise of theological liberalism and the social
    gospel in the US and China. Not identical, but
    were closely associated. Growing numbers of
    Chinese who came to the U.S. to get training.
  • Formation of theologically moderate-liberal
    Chinese Christian elite in China. Y. T. Wu.

11
Chinese Ecumenism in early 20th Century USA
  • Ecumenical and Civic Evangelicalism among the
    Chinese Christians in the United States
  • 1. Nationalism and Civic Evangelicalism

12
Chinese Christian Nationalism
  • True of Chinese Christians in China and the
    Chinese Diaspora.
  • Chinese Christians were more radical than Kang Yu
    Weis (1858-1927) Reformist Baohuang Hui (or
    Protect the Emperor Society). Kang worked for
    constitutional monarchy. Chinese Christians
    advocated a republican democracy.

13
Chinese Christian Nationalism
  • Sun Yat-sens (1866-1925) network in the Diaspora
    and North America were all Christians, who were
    chief supporters of the Tongmeng Hui.
  • it was mostly from the church that I learned the
    truth of revolution. The establishment of the
    Republic today is due, not to my efforts, but to
    the service of the church.
  • Sun Yat-sen, Tsung-Li chüan-shu (Complete works
    of the President), 12 vols. (Taipei The Central
    Committee of the Kuomintang, 1956), p. 7A, 144
    trans. Chester C. Tan in his Chinese Political
    Thought in the Twentieth Century (Newton Abbot
    David Charles, 1971), p. 150.

14
Chinese Christian Nationalism
  • Sun Yat-sens (1866-1925) network in the Diaspora
    and North America.
  • Presbyterian minister, Ng Poon Chew (Wu Panzhao,
    1866-1931), founding editor of the Chung Sai Yat
    Po, (China-West Daily) was one of the strongest
    advocates of Chinese Republicanism and Chinese
    American civil rights.

15
Chinese Christian Nationalism
  • Evangelical Proto-Nationalism (pre-1900)
  • Sermon of Jee Gam (1880)
  • And by faith I venture to say right here that
    China will, before long, become a Christian
    country, and rank high when compared with all her
    sister nations

16
Chinese Christian Nationalism
  • Evangelical Proto-Nationalism (pre-1900)
  • Hong Sing, a Christian student
  • It is not China that is old and weak, but our
    heathen customs of worshipping ancestors and
    buying luck at the shrine of Joss, etc., etc.
    Put the doctrine of Christ into these and it will
    burst them certainly but put it into China, and
    it will make her stronger and fairer than ever

17
Chinese Christian Nationalism
  • Evangelical Proto-Nationalism (pre-1900)
  • Hong Sing
  • It is not China that is old and weak, but our
    heathen customs of worshipping ancestors and
    buying luck at the shrine of Joss, etc., etc.

18
Chinese Christian Nationalism
  • Evangelical Proto-Nationalism (pre-1900)
  • Hong Sing
  • It is not China that is old and weak, but our
    heathen customs of worshipping ancestors and
    buying luck at the shrine of Joss, etc., etc.

19
Chinese Christian Nationalism
  • Progressive Protestantism and Revolutionary
    Politics, 1900-1919
  • Chung Sai Yat Po (1908)
  • The Christian teaching brings the idea of a
    republican form of government such as we find in
    the United States and in some parts of Europe. .
    .The people make their own laws. Both high and
    low have common rights. . . The Chinese wish very
    much that they had the republican form of
    government to-day, but they have not learned and
    do not understand it, so how can we legislate
    laws? . . . Are we going to continue to have a
    monarchy? Monarchies will never bring prosperity
    and freedom.

20
Chinese Christian Nationalism
  • Before the May Fourth Movement of 1919, Chinese
    religious nationalism drew from Western cultural,
    political, and religious sources for the sake of
    equality in the United States and national
    salvation overseas.
  • No self-denigration appears among any of the
    Chinese Protestants of this period. Rather,
    Chinese Protestants was remarkably similar to the
    leaders of the May Fourth Movement a decade
    later. It, too, opposed Chinese culture out of
    love for the Chinese nation.
  • Lucien Bianco, Origins of the Chinese
    Revolution, 1915-1949 (Stanford Stanford
    University Press, 1971), p. 42.

21
Chinese Christian Nationalism
  • In the 1920s, Chinese Protestants were forced to
    choose between identifying themselves as
    anti-imperialist nationalists or as the lackeys
    of foreign oppression.
  • What had changed for Chinese Protestants was a
    decisive rejection of the earlier desires to
    emulate the Euro-American model.

22
Chinese Christian Nationalism
  • An Angry Resurgence Chinese Protestants in the
    1920s
  • In 1925, Dr. Mabel Lee of the Chinese Baptist
    mission in New York City was still able to
    declare that Christianity is the salvation of
    China despite being deeply wronged by various
    governments.
  • Dr. Mabel Lee, daughter of Rev. Lee To, the
    pastor of the Chinese Baptist mission in New York
    and one time president of New Yorks Consolidated
    Chinese Benevolent Association, completed her
    doctorate at Columbia in 1922 before assuming her
    fathers mantle at the mission. A close friend of
    Hu Shih, she also associated with future
    Kuomingtang leaders such as H. H. Kung. Mabel
    Lee Circular letter (addressees unknown), 3 July
    1925. Letter located in the First Chinese
    Baptist Church, New York City.

23
Chinese Christian Nationalism
Dr. Mabel Lee
24
Chinese Christian Nationalism
Rev. Lee To
Womans Group
25
Chinese Christian Nationalism
  • An Angry Resurgence Chinese Protestants in the
    1920s
  • One young Chinese Protestant declared to his
    missionary teacher,
  • China must have Christianity, but it must be its
    own Christianity, not what some one else thinks.
  • From Ocean to Ocean, 1926-27 (Womans American
    Baptist Mission Society, 1927), p. 212

26
Chinese Christian Nationalism
  • An Angry Resurgence Chinese Protestants in the
    1920s
  • Charles Shepherd
  • The Chinese in the United States have naturally
    become interested in the affairs in China to the
    point of absorption and obsession... With the
    exception of a small minority, their attitude
    toward Christianity ranges from cold, placid,
    indifference to aggressive hatred and opposition.
    Their objection and animosity is not to
    Christianity per se, but as practised by
    so-called Christian nations.
  • American Baptist Home Mission Society 1927
    Annual Report, 37.

27
Chinese Christian Nationalism
  • Chinese Protestants in the 1930s
  • In 1932, retired NY Presby Pastor Huie Kin
  • Inspite sic of her present sorrows and
    difficulties . . . my faith in Chinas future
    remains unshaken...since the opening of the
    Century, which marked the birth of the modern era
    in our country, I see China marching steadily
    forward in the fundamental things which pertain
    to a nations real greatness, - education,
    agricultural and economic improvement,
    communications, public health, municipal reform,
    growing strength of public opinion through an
    enlightened press, and the new national life
    symbolized in the Nanking Government.
  • Huie Kin, Reminiscences, p. 112. Throughout his
    career, he identified Protestantism with modern
    civilization and appropriated both towards
    nationalistic ends, see pages 51, 53-54.

28
Chinese Christian Nationalism
  • Chinese Protestants in the 1930s
  • Japanese incursion stimulated stronger Chinese
    nationalism

29
Chinese Christian Nationalism
  • Commonalities and Differences
  • Very diverse responses some sided with
    conservative Guomindong, others worked side by
    side with Communist organizers. Madame Chiang and
    Cora Deng. How did Christians become so prominent
    as leaders? Christian schools, foreign students,
    merchant class became wealthy. But all wanted
    modern and strong China.

30
Chinese Christian Nationalism
31
Chinese Christian Nationalism
  • Commonalities and Difference

Cora Deng (1900-1996) 96.7.8 (ANS) Cora Deng
(Deng Yuzhi), the long-time General Secretary of
the Chinese YWCA, passed away in Shanghai after a
long illness on October 1, 1996. Ms. Deng was
born in 1900, and received a degree in sociology
from Ginling Women's College in 1926. After
working for the YWCA in Shanghai for several
years, she went on to further her studies at the
London School of Economics, and later received a
master's degree from the State University of New
York. In 1932, Ms. Deng spent several months in
Geneva at the International Labor Bureau,
researching women's and children's issues.
Madame Chiang
32
Chinese Christian Nationalismafter 1949
33
Chinese Christian Nationalism
  • Post-1949 Nationalism

34
Chinese American Christianity after WW2 From
Ecumenical to Evangelical
  • A. Ecumenical and Civic Evangelicalism in the
    U.S.
  • 1. Nationalism and Civic Evangelicalism
  • 2. Asian Survey (1920s) sociological
    construction of assimilation.
  • 3. 1920s - 1960s Protestants fought against
    Chinese (Asian) Exclusion.

35
Chinese American Christianity after WW2 From
Ecumenical to Evangelical
  • A. Ecumenical Civic Evangelicalism
  • National Conference of Chinese Churches - CONFAB
    (f. 1955)
  • Edwar Lee (1902-1996)
  • Asian American Caucus movements (1970s)
  • PACTS (f. 1972)
  • Return to Chinese cultural roots

Rev. Dr. James Chuck
36
Chinese American Christianity after WW2 From
Ecumenical to Evangelical
  • B. Revivalism in 20th Century China
  • 1. Birth of revivalism in China. Holiness and
    Pentecostal missionaries related well to
    indigenous Chinese popular religion. Shangtung
    revivals in 1906 YMCA revivals in 1910s, Bethel
    Mission revivals (1930s-40s).
  • 2. Separatist spirit inherited in part from
    American missionaries but part of Chinese
    popular religious impulse to be freed of state.

37
Chinese American Christianity after WW2 From
Ecumenical to Evangelical
  • The Communist victory

38
Chinese American Church History From Ecumenical
to Evangelical
  • C. The Communist victory
  • 1. Mainline Protestant missionary work deflated.
  • 2. Mainline Protestants focus on ministry of
    racial integration
  • 3. Mainline Chinese Protestants lose momentum
    but in America, they attempted to organize
    CONFAB
  • 4. Diaspora Chinese (refugees to Hong Kong,
    Taiwan, SE Asia) growth of Evangelicals. Came to
    U.S.

39
Chinese American Christianity after WW2 From
Ecumenical to Evangelical
  • D. Separatist Chinese evangelicalism in North
    America
  • 1. Conflicts with mainline Chinese churches (eg.
    Peter Shih v. Andrew Tan in Boston)
  • 2. Church Planting (English and Chinese speaking)
  • 3. National mobilization NACOCE, CCCOWE.
  • 4. Diversity American Born (issues of
    assimilation and racialization)

40
Impact of Chinese Christian Separatism
  • Provided spiritual resources for the alienated
    and marginalized Chinese in China and the
    Diaspora.
  • Strengthened Christian identity in contrast to
    liberal tradition.
  • Powerful indigenous leaders (Andrew Gih,
    Christiana Tsai, Torrey Shih, Moses Chow, Thomas
    Wang, Sen Wong, etc.)
  • Laid the foundation for the renewal of Chinese
    Christianity.
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