
1880s — ????
Mrs. Liu
Volunteer Bible woman and evangelist with the China Inland Mission
In the 1880s, the Wenzhou church was still taking its first tiny steps of faith. One woman named Liu was widowed at the age of 19 and was left to fend for herself and her baby son, with no family to help take care of them. She struggled terribly and was barely able to produce enough food to stay alive. In her desperation, Liu sought spiritual help from all the idols she could find. However, the more lifeless forms she prostrated herself before, the emptier she felt inside.
One day a Christian firewood seller visited Liu’s village and told her and a neighbor about the living God who could forgive their sins and make their lives worth living. Each time the Christian visited he seemed full of life and joy, and both Liu and her neighbor opened their hearts and believed in Jesus.
As she surrendered herself to the mercies of God, Liu found that her skill as an embroiderer became sought after, and she was now better able to make ends meet. Moreover, a great spiritual hunger arose in the hearts of the two new believers, and they longed to learn all they could from the Bible. Missionary Grace Stott visited and held Bible classes in their homes.
After a time, the Holy Spirit seized control of Liu’s heart in such a powerful way that the formerly shy single mother began to proclaim boldly the gospel throughout the city. Stott wrote about Liu’s unquenchable zeal, saying:
She went about the city, entering every open door to tell of Christ. She voluntarily gave up her work one day a week to accompany me in visiting the women. Often have tears of joy come to my eyes when I have heard her declare to 30 or 40 women gathered around us in some courtyard that this Jesus, of whom they had just heard, had put away her sin, and could therefore put away theirs. She never wearies of telling them of Christ and His love for lost sinners. This she does solely out of love for Him, for she has never received from us the slightest remuneration …
We had long prayed for the conversion of one who could work among the women and now felt sure our prayers had been answered. Indeed, we could hardly have hoped for one so suitable in every way. Beside being an earnest Christian, she was able to read, was comparatively young, and was free.
I asked if she would give up her needlework and devote her whole time to gospel work and come to live with us that she might help me to train up the girls in our boarding school. She answered, “I shall be so glad. I have often wished I could do enough work that I could be your servant, and to hear God’s Word every day.” She refused the offer of money, saying that, if boarded with the girls, she would have enough for all her needs.
A short time later, Mrs. Liu’s mother-in-law died and left a considerable property to her. Taking possession of the property, however, required that Liu perform a complex array of ancestral rites and ceremonies. Knowing that such things were an abomination to God, Liu declined the inheritance. Her relatives were amazed, and many who heard about Liu’s stance pondered what kind of transformation had taken place in her heart that allowed her to spurn worldly wealth for even greater spiritual riches.
Liu went on to become a “Bible woman,” and a key pillar of the church in Wenzhou. [Bible women were female Christian workers, usually attached to a church or a mission society, who evangelized and taught women, usually after receiving training in the Scriptures and in effective methods of Christian work.] She led many women to Jesus Christ and was a tireless evangelist, never missing an opportunity to share God’s Word with everyone she met.
Liu later moved to Taizhou, where she brought God’s light to the inhabitants. Her son grew into a wholehearted disciple of Christ. He married a dedicated believer, and their children also loved Jesus. Liu lived a long and productive life for the kingdom of God. Many people today marvel at the size and influence of Christianity in Wenzhou, but few know that God chose a broken-hearted single mother to be one of His foundation stones of the Church in the city, which today boasts the largest concentration of Christians in China.
Sources
Taken with permission from Paul Hattaway, Zhejiang: The Jerusalem of China. Volume Three in The China Chronicles: Inside the Greatest Christian Revival in History: Asia Harvest and SPCK, 2019, 54-56.
The quotation in the text was from Mrs. George Stott, “Story of a Bible Woman,” China’s Millions, March 1881, 26.
About the Author
Paul Hattaway is the international director of Asia Harvest, an organization committed to serving the church throughout Asia. He is an expert on the Chinese church and author of the The Heavenly Man and Back to Jerusalem.