David Paton (missionary)

David M. Paton (1913-1992) is an Anglican missionary to China, working under the Church Missionary Society.

Early life

Born in Hampstead, London, David M. Paton was the eldest son of William Paton (1886-1943), a missionary to Calcutta, India and one of the founding members of the World Council of Churches. He finished his high school in Repton College and undergraduate in the University of Oxford. Before his overseas ministry, he spent three years as secretary of the Student Christian Movement at the University of Birmingham.[1]

Ministry

In 1939, he went to Beijing to learn Chinese and was sent to Chongqing from 1941 to 1944. He was ordained by Ronald Hall in Hong Kong in 1941. After his return to England for three years, he taught at Fujian Union Theological College between 1947 and 1950.[2]

Since then, he worked in a parish in Birmingham served as an editor of the SCM Press, and in London for ecumenical work of the Church of England. He was also the chairman of the China Study Project of British Churches. He was Chaplain to the Queen between 1972 and 83.[3]

Writings

  • Christian Mission and the Judgment of God. Cambridge: William B. Eerdmans, 1996.
  • R.O.: The Life and Times of Bishop Hall of Hong Kong. Gloucester: The Diocese of Hong Kong and Macao and The Hong Kong Diocesan Association, 1985.
gollark: "Pluck it out" is also easy to say, but it's actually even harder.
gollark: "Find useful stuff" also sounds pleasantly easy, but it's *not*. Even a human reading a repository or paper may struggle to find "useful" bits; reasoning about the relevance of a new set of information or methods for a project is a difficult general intelligence task.
gollark: I mean, "list of AI" is probably easy enough, you could just... search github using some keywords, and maybe research papers.
gollark: Just because you can describe a task in a sentence or so doesn't mean you can give a description clear and detailed enough to think about programming it.
gollark: Early attempts at AI back in the last millennium tried to create AIs by giving them logical reasoning abilities and a large set of facts. This didn't really work; they did some things, hit the limits of the facts they had, and didn't do anything very interesting.

References

  1. Ng, Peter Tze-Ming (2012). Chinese Christianity : an interplay between global and local perspectives. Leiden: Brill. ISBN 9789004225756. OCLC 777375518.
  2. MacDonald., Paton, David (1985). R.O. : the life and times of Bishop Ronald Hall of Hong Kong. [Hong Kong]: Diocese of Hong Kong and Macao. ISBN 0951085107. OCLC 13513647.
  3. "Obituary: Canon David Paton". The Independent. 1992-07-20. Retrieved 2018-12-15.
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