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Introduction to the
Biographical Dictionary
of Chinese Christianity
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Christianity has an ancient history in China,
dating back at least to 635 A.D. when an official mission of the Church of
the East was invited to the Tang court. The first Roman Catholic presence was
recorded in the 13th century Yuan period; the Russian Orthodox faith entered China with the eastward expansion of Russia
in the late 17th century; and Protestantism arrived with Robert Morrison at
the beginning of the 19th century. By 1949, Chinese Christians numbered about
4,200,000 (including Protestants, Catholics and Orthodox). During the past
fifty years, Christians in China
have not merely survived severe persecution, but have multiplied themselves
many times, with estimates ranging from fifty to a hundred million.
Government-sanctioned churches, house churches, Christian fellowships, and
Bible study groups all are flourishing in urban and rural areas, in business
companies, and on university campuses. Christianity has spread its influence
among Chinese communities around the world, where Chinese churches also are
growing rapidly.
Who are the persons who have played
important roles in this tremendous growth? In the modern era, the prodigious
efforts of Western missionaries carried the Gospel message throughout the land of China. But what are the names and
stories of Chinese indigenous church leaders and lay persons who embraced the
Gospel, pioneered and nurtured the churches, led independent Christian
movements, and applied biblical values to Chinese social and political
challenges? Incredibly, the majority of them are virtually unknown. Other
than a few dozen church leaders, theologians, and evangelists, their stories
have been lost even to Chinese Christians, as well as to the rest of the
world.
Concern about this situation brought a group
of China scholars to a
consultation in New Haven,
Connecticut, in October 2005 to
consider how to narrow the gap between current reference materials and
contemporary Chinese Christian demography.
Inspired by the Dictionary of African Christian Biography (DACB), and with a gracious offer of
advice, office space, and technical assistance by DACB founder and director Jonathan Bonk and manager Michele
Sigg, consultation members decided to launch the Biographical Dictionary of Chinese Christianity (BDCC) as a multi-year project.
The BDCC
is an international undertaking aimed at producing an electronic database
containing the essential biographical facts of Chinese and foreign Christian
missionaries, church leaders, evangelists, and laity chiefly responsible for
laying the foundations and advancing the growth of Chinese Christian
communities and their influence in societies around the world. While the
database is widely inclusive of time periods and faith traditions, the
distinctive focus of the project will be on the lesser-known Chinese
Christians of the modern era.
An international team of scholars is
facilitating the project. Contributors are drawn from academic, church, and
mission communities in China,
Asia and elsewhere. After the start-up phase
through June 2006, during which the website will be designed and launched,
work to sustain the database is expected to continue. The launch phase of the
project will focus on the period from 1800 to 1950 and will place a high
priority on finding and preserving the stories of indigenous church leaders
and laypersons. With a solid base in academic expertise, the project
nevertheless would aim to introduce the personal stories of grass-roots
Chinese Christians and their communities in a lively writing style.
The database will begin with already
published biographies from quality reference materials and in cooperation
with the Ricci Institute at the University
of San Francisco, which
sponsors the current best digital source of Chinese Christian biographies,
mainly those of Roman Catholic missionaries and Chinese Catholic clerics,
primarily in English and French. See www.usfca.edu/ricci/
. The BDCC will be designed
to complement this resource.
The dictionary eventually will cover the
whole of Chinese Christianity from earliest times to the present and in every
country where Chinese communities are found. Broadly inter-confessional,
historically descriptive, and exploiting the full range of oral and written
records, the dictionary is being produced electronically, both in Chinese and
in English. The project is designed to stimulate local data gathering from
universities, churches, seminaries and colleges, and para-church agencies,
with faculty members, graduate students, and organizational staff doing
research and writing.
Biographical subjects are discovered and
selected on the basis of their perceived local, regional, national, or
international importance. No subject is excluded if, in the opinion of
communities of local believers, his or her contribution is deemed singular.
Regional coordinators will collect and verify the contributions, for project
staff to add to the electronic database. The database will be kept current
and available on the www.bdcconline.net
website, and a CD-ROM version will be shared annually with each participating
institution. See www.dacb.org for
our model.
BDCC, a digital database like its DACB
precedent, is a dynamic way to access, maintain, and disseminate information
vital to the understanding of Christianity in China. Multimedia material can be
made quickly and simultaneously accessible to readers around the world for
reproduction locally in printed form. The dictionary will fill important gaps
in historical and theological studies and will inform, challenge, and enrich
both academic and church communities by its internationally collaborative
character. It will bring into focus for younger generations the richness of
lives of faith and service.
The Global
China Center
in Charlottesville, Virginia, under the directorship of Dr.
Wright Doyle, is providing administrative oversight, with senior associates
Dr. Carol Lee Hamrin as project coordinator and Dr. Yading Li as managing
Director. The Overseas Ministries Study Center (OMSC) of New Haven, Connecticut,
under the directorship of Dr. Jonathan J. Bonk, is providing advice, office
space, and technical support for the start-up phase of the project.
Affiliations with major universities in Asia, North America, and Europe are being arranged.
AN
INVITATION IS HEREBY EXTENDED TO RESEARCHERS, WRITERS, AND PARTICIPATING
INSTITUTIONS TO JOIN IN OUR TEAM EFFORT.
Participants will be trained and mentored for the task of recording stories
of specific church leaders and influential laypersons. BDCC staff and advisors will serve as
facilitators for researchers and institutions, supplying resources and
expertise in oral history and archiving. Guidelines for compiling the
biographies and information about institutional participation may be obtained
from the BDCC website or
managing Director.
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