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Robert Morrison and the Protestant Plan for China

Posted: August 18th, 2013 | No Comments »

Morrison was of course the man who launched the Protestant missionary assault on China where before it had basically been an all Catholic affair. Just how this theological and converting assault was planned is the subject of Christopher Daily’s new book….

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Sent alone to China by the London Missionary Society in 1807, Robert Morrison (1782–1834) was one of the earliest Protestant missionaries in East Asia. During some 27 years in China, Macau and Malacca, he worked as a translator for the East India Company and founded an academy for converts and missionaries; independently, he translated the New Testament into Chinese and compiled the first Chinese-English dictionary. In the process, he was building the foundation of Chinese Protestant Christianity.

This book critically explores the preparations and strategies behind this first Protestant mission to China. It argues that, whilst introducing Protestantism into China, Morrison worked to a standard template developed by his tutor David Bogue at the Gosport Academy in England. By examining this template alongside Morrison’s archival collections, the book demonstrates the many ways in which Morrison’s influential mission must be seen within the historical and ideological contexts of British evangelism. The result is this new interpretation of the beginnings of Protestant Christianity in China.

Christopher A. Daily is a faculty member at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London, and a Fellow of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland. He has held research fellowships from the East-West Center, University of Hawai‘i and the British Academy.

“Christopher Daily’s refreshingly original work turns Morrison’s role around to analyse it as the outcome of something hitherto ignored: the troubled search by British Dissenters for an effective missionary strategy and an appropriate missionary training. This carefully researched study is bound to become a landmark in the history of China, Britain, and the relations between the two countries.”
―T. H. Barrett, Research Professor of East Asian History, SOAS, University of London, and author of Singular Listlessness: A Short History of Chinese Books and British Scholars

“Through a brilliant analysis of hitherto unexplored archival material, Christopher Daily offers important new insights into Robert Morrison’s missionary career at the gates of the Chinese Empire. This eminently readable book demonstrates with great clarity how the implementation of the Gosport ‘mission template’ was religiously observed by Morrison in an exceedingly hostile environment.”
―R. G. Tiedemann, Professor of Chinese History, Shandong University, and editor of Handbook of Christianity in China, Vol. II



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