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Old 11-08-2013, 06:45 AM   #2
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Default Re: 2005 Article: Watchman Nee and the Little Flock movement in Maoist Chin

WN was arrested in 1952 in northeast of China, not in Shanghai, and tried in 1956. His coworkers were arrested and tried in 1956. In 1950 WN went to Hongkong and many saints including WL asked him to stay, but he insisted to go back to Shanghai.

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Originally Posted by aron View Post
There is an article on Watchman Nee in the magazine "Church History", which seems to be a fairly mainstream scholarly publication (American Society of Church History/Cambridge U. Press).

The author is Joseph Tse-Hei Lee, who teaches history at Pace University. The issue is in "Church History" issue 74(1) March 2005, pp. 68-96. His bias seems somewhat pro-LSM in that he often uses their jargon ("attack", etc). But it seems to attempt even-handedness.

Here is an interesting quote (among several):

"During the Hundred Flowers Campaign, a short period of liberalization in May
and June 1957, some of the Little Flock members followed Mao
Zedong's call "to criticize the Communist Party from without to let
fresh air into its hermetic Leninist shell." Xia Xiulian of the Chongqing
Assembly in Sichuan province published a letter criticizing
the local bureaus of public security and religious affairs. But when
the Anti-Rightist Campaign was launched to punish those who had
spoken out against the Party, Xia Xiulian and most of the Little Flock
leaders were arrested and condemned by the state as counterrevolutionaries."


Sounds like Steve Isitt's experience to me.

There is also information on Watchman Nee's "Jerusalem" model in which he consolidated power, overturning the principle of "locality" upon which he had established his church ministry. Many Protestant congregations had left their Western affiliations en masse and moved to the Little Flock, and now Nee was centralizing the program, and his hold on the reins.

There is also a part on the infiltration of the Communist Party by Little Flock members, and vice versa.

If you get access to the JSTOR program at your local library you should be able to find this article.

It amazes me how little we really know about what happened in China in the first half of the century. For example, the article says that WN was arrested and tried in 1956. I had assumed that this occurred immediately following the Chinese Communist take-over following WWII. But actually it seems that he was quite active there for a number of years following.
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