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Making Catholicism Chinese - Stephanie M. Wong

Making Catholicism Chinese

The Catholic Church in a Modernizing China
Buch | Hardcover
260 Seiten
2026
Oxford University Press Inc (Verlag)
9780197623695 (ISBN)
CHF 108,00 inkl. MwSt
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Making Catholicism Chinese examines a little-known chapter of Catholic life in China, when a coalition of foreign-born and Chinese Catholics strove to make the Church indigenously “Chinese.” This book demonstrates how this movement, begun as a bid to render Catholicism a Chinese religion, came to support Chinese state-building instead.
Making Catholicism Chinese examines a little-known chapter of Catholic life in China, when a coalition of foreign-born and Chinese Catholics strove to make the Church indigenously "Chinese." This book demonstrates how the indigenization movement, begun as a bid to render Catholicism a Chinese religion, came to support Chinese state-building instead.

In the first half of the 20th century, China transformed from a faltering and semi-colonized empire to a tentatively pluralistic republic to an increasingly militarized one-party state. Religious communities were driven to "modernize" for the sake of the new nation. In the case of Catholicism, the Belgian-born Lazarist Vincent Lebbe most publicly advocated for a Chinese Church, though the wider movement was guided by an array of Chinese clergy, newspaper magnates, scholar-politicians, artists, and army medics and combatants striving in various ways to be both faithful Catholics and patriotic citizens. Their indigenization project coincided with a national embrace of modernity as an ideal, leading Catholics to take up a variety of causes: promoting Chinese clergy as bishops in opposition to French dominance in the missions, experimenting with new forms of education and mass media, and ultimately joining the right-leaning Nationalist regime's war effort against Japan. Stephanie Wong thoroughly documents this history and definitively shows that the movement failed to establish the local Church as a distinct Chinese religion

Stephanie M. Wong, Assistant Professor of Theology and Religious Studies at Villanova University, is a scholar of East Asian religions, especially Chinese Catholicism. She has published in a range of journals and books in the fields of World Christianity, Chinese Christianities, interreligious studies, and comparative philosophy. She earned her doctorate at Georgetown University and her master's degree from Yale Divinity School.

PART 1. Setting the Stage
Chapter 1: Catholic Witness and Chinese Religion in Republican Era China
Chapter 2: Transnational, National, and Local: Catholicism in Semi-Colonized China
Part 2. Making the Church Chinese
Chapter 3: The Early Life of Vincent Lebbe
Chapter 4: A Church Like Any Other-Lobbying for a Chinese Episcopate
Chapter 5: Race and the Local Church: Theological Analysis
Part 3. The Church in Service of Nation
Chapter 6: The Later Life of Vincent Lebbe
Chapter 7: A Church for Chinese Culture: Shaping Aesthetics
Chapter 8: A Church for the Modern State: Defending the Nation
Chapter 9: Mission and Politics: Theological Analysis
Chapter 10: Conclusion: Indigenization Beyond Nationalization

Erscheint lt. Verlag 8.4.2026
Verlagsort New York
Sprache englisch
Maße 156 x 235 mm
Gewicht 3 g
Themenwelt Religion / Theologie Christentum Kirchengeschichte
ISBN-13 9780197623695 / 9780197623695
Zustand Neuware
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