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A Voluntary Exile - Chinese Christianity and Cultural Confluence since 1552 (Paperback)
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A Voluntary Exile - Chinese Christianity and Cultural Confluence since 1552 (Paperback)
Series: Studies in Christianity in China
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Western missionaries in China were challenged by something they
could not have encountered in their native culture; most Westerners
were Christian, and competitions in their own countries were
principally denominational. Once they entered China they
unwittingly became spiritual merchants who marketed Christianity as
only one religion among the long-established purveyors of other
religions, such as the masters of Buddhist and Daoist rites. A
Voluntary Exile explores the convergence of cultures. This
collection of new and insightful research considers themes of
religious encounter and accommodation in China from 1552 to the
present, and confronts how both Western Europeans and indigenous
Chinese mitigated the cultural and religious antagonisms that
resulted from cultural misunderstanding. The studies in this work
identify areas where missionary accommodation in China has
succeeded and failed, and offers new insights into what contributed
to cultural conflict and confluence. Each essay responds in some
way to the "accommodationist" approach of Western missionaries and
Christianity, focusing on new areas of inquiry. For example,
Michael Maher, SJ, considers the educational and religious
formation of Matteo Ricci prior to his travels to China, and how
Ricci's intellectual approach was connected to his so-called
"accommodationist method" during the late Ming. Eric Cunningham
explores the hackneyed assertion that Francis Xavier's mission to
Asia was a "failure" due to his low conversion rates, suggesting
that Xavier's "failure" instigated the entire Chinese missionary
enterprise of the 16th and 17th centuries. And, Liu Anrong
confronts the hybridization of popular Chinese folk religion with
Catholicism in Shanxi province. The voices in this work derive from
divergent scholarly methodologies based on new research, and
provide the reader a unique encounter with a variety of
disciplinary views. This unique volume reaches across oceans,
cultures, political systems, and religious traditions to provide
important new research on the complexities of cultural encounters
between China and the West.
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