Nanjing Union Theological Seminary

The Nanjing Union Theological Seminary (Chinese: 金陵协和神学院; pinyin: Jīnlíng xiéhé shénxuéyuàn) is the flagship theological seminary of Protestant Christianity in China today. It is managed by the China Christian Council.

Nanjing Union Theological Seminary

Prior to the founding of the People's Republic of China, the institution had its beginnings as Nanjing Theological Seminary, established in 1911. In November 1952, ten other theological seminaries in East China would join it to form Nanjing Union Theological Seminary. In 1961, Yanjing Union Theological Seminary of Beijing would likewise join, making a total of twelve seminaries which formed the new seminary.[1]

Seminary during the Japanese occupation

During the massacre in Nanjing during December 1937, the pre-consolidated Nanjing Theological Seminary housed thousands of Chinese civilians in an effort to offer protection from the Japanese soldiers.[2] However, Christian affiliated schools and seminaries suffered during the Japanese Invasion, and many were unofficially moved into unoccupied areas of Free China.[3]

During the People's Republic of China

In early 1952, the Three-Self Patriotic Movement worked to reform theological education. The new government saw Christianity as a potentially subversive power and seminaries lost funds from overseas denominations. Y. T. Wu was at the head of a committee to work towards the union of seminaries in East China. By November 1952, eleven theological seminaries from East China were incorporated as Nanjing Union Theological Seminary:[4]

  • Trinity Theological Seminary, Ningbo (宁波三一圣经学院)
  • Central Theological Seminary, Shanghai (上海圣公会中央神学院)
  • China Theological Seminary, Hangzhou (杭州中国神学院)
  • China Baptist Theological Seminary, Shanghai (上海中华浸会神学院)
  • Jiangsu Baptist Bible College, Zhenjiang (镇江浸会圣经学院)
  • Ming Dao Bible Seminary, Jinan (济南明道圣经学院)
  • Nanjing Theological Seminary (南京金陵神学院)
  • North China Theological Seminary, Wuxi (无锡华北神学院)
  • Minan Theological Seminary, Changzhou (漳州闽南神学院)
  • Fujian Union Seminary, Fuzhou (福州福建协和神学院)
  • Cheloo Theological Seminary, Jinan (济南齐鲁神学院)

In 1961, a twelfth institution would join the union, Yanjing Union Theological Seminary, Beijing (燕京协和神学院).

In December 1952, K. H. Ting would be elected by the board of directors as the new principal. The union brought together a wide theological spectrum of instructors and students.

The seminary has long been the main center for training religious leaders, and was reopened as one of China's primary institutions for religious study in 1981.[5]

Protestantism regained popularity in China during the 1980s, and the Jinling Theological Seminary, which was the only graduate-level seminary at the time, began publishing a new Theological Review; the Jinling shenxuezhi, or Jinling Theological Review, as well as the publication entitled Zongjiao, or Religion.[6]

Historical figures associated with the Seminary

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gollark: Mathematics tends to get applied later when someone comes up with clever uses for existing mathematical things.
gollark: Biology gets tons of funding because there are companies actively working in it and short-term-er applications.
gollark: The applications turn up afterward.
gollark: Well, it's not like we know yet.

See also

References

  1. "金陵协和神学院" [Nanjing Union Theological Seminary] (in Chinese). Baidu. Retrieved April 7, 2016.
  2. Woods, John E. (1998). The Good man of Nanking: the Diaries of John Rabe. p. 274.
  3. Book, Timothy. “Christianity Under the Japanese Occupation” in Christianity in China: From the Eighteenth Century to the Present, ed. Daniel H. Bays. Stanford University Press, Stanford, California, 1996.
  4. Wickeri, Philip (2007). Reconstructing Christianity in China: K. H. Ting and the Chinese Church. Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books. pp. 106–111, 394n35. ISBN 1-57075-751-8.
  5. Goldman, Merle. "Religion in Post-Mao China". Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, vol 483 (1986), 146-156.
  6. Bays, Daniel H. "Chinese Protestant Christianity Today". The China Quarterly, no 174 (2003): 488-504
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