A “NEW” CALLING - China Horizon



AN EXTENDED CALLING TO THE AMERICAN CHURCH?

A Request to Pray for Sam Ling

At 10:45 am yesterday, Washington D.C. was still cloudy and cool. I was having an early lunch on Connecticut Avenue, getting ready to head out to Baltimore’s airport for my flight back home. I was tired, very tired. Perhaps more than the lack of sleep, the exhaustion might be due to the fact that I had just given what I think is one of the most important messages I have ever delivered to my brothers and sisters in the church in America.

I returned to Los Angeles with a very serious sense of God’s claim on my life.

The occasion was a gathering for the major supporters of English Language Institute/China (ELIC), held immediately after ELIC’s board meeting. I was very graciously invited by Ken Wendling (president of ELIC) and his staff to be one of the speakers for the 3-day event. It was held at the Westin Fairfax, near Dupont Circle. The MC for the event was Hugh Maclellan. Thursday evening we heard a wonderful solo by Nancy Murphy (a congressman’s wife) who hosted us at the Congressional Club. Then my good friend, David Aikman, waxed eloquent about how China was the most advanced nation in the world in 1500, and will be again by 2050: what can we do to help China become a Christianized nation? (David’s final words were: There is nothing more exciting that I could talk about.)

Joe Stowell, president of Moody Bible Institute, gave Friday’ morning devotions based on the woman who anointed Jesus in Luke 10. After a 15-minute break, it was my turn. In the audience was a theological educator (Stowell); the former director of the Interdenominational Foreign Mission Association, Jack Frizen (who represents a Christian family foundation now); Hugh Maclellan, whose foundation had funded our research during the current year; Ken Wendling, head of ELIC who lives with his wife in Beijing, together with about half a dozen of his senior staff; Art Lindsley, scholar-in-residence at the C.S. Lewis Institute in Washington, D.C., and his wife Connie, who had taught English in China; Tom Cheely, missions pastor of Briarwood Presbyterian Church (PCA), Birmingham, Alabama; Mrs. Irene Li, board member, ELIC, and widow of a Baptist deacon killed by gunman at the worship service of First Chinese Baptist Church, Los Angeles about 15 years ago (a most gracious and wise Christian); Karen Longman, dean of Greenville College (Illinois) and former staff member at the Coalition of Christian Colleges and Universities, Washington, DC; and a good number of Christian entrepreneurs and their spouses (from Wisconsin, Michigan, Indiana, and elsewhere). Carol Hamrin joined us on Thursday, but could not be with us on Friday.

What should I say to this august congregation, representing the various forms of leadership and privilege in American evangelicalism (church, education, research, philanthropy, missions)? I must tell them about the Cultural Christians (people studying Christianity in mainland China, who have translated up to 80 theological books, none evangelical, into Chinese, and published them in the academic press in China). I did.

I must tell them that China faces four alternatives as her core value in the 21st century:

1. An angry, anti-foreign nationalism;

2. A resurgence of folk and native religions;

3. The pursuit of money and pleasure; or

4. The Christian worldview.

I did that.

I must tell them that the overseas Chinese church, their partner in China ministry, thanks them. The mainland Chinese church thank them.

I did that.

I needed to tell them to cultivate middle-management “China experts,” and these ambassador-statesmen and women must be cultivated through a 8-12 year plan. These must have China experience; learn the language (an absolute must which is neglected in missions today); be grounded in seminary training which believes in the inerrancy of Scripture; more experience among the Chinese; and perhaps a doctoral degree in Chinese history or missions.

I did that.

But more than anything else, I took the occasion to issue a strong call to the church in America, to return to an unqualified confidence in the Bible, the inerrant Word of God, and to bring China a high view of God, Scripture and the cross. What China needs in the 21st century more than anything else, is the clear message of the sound, complete gospel, not a watered-down version. America’s evangelical churches and seminaries are now slipping; many professors of Bible can no longer say, without qualification, that the Bible is inerrant.

This is serious. The cost to China can be very high.

I used the example of the colorful career of Timothy Richard, Welsh Baptist missionary to China from the 1870s to the 1910s, to illustrate how the best of intentions in missions is no guarantee for doctrinal orthodoxy. Richard had a very enlightened view of missions: as a student in Haverfordshire in England, he wanted his seminary to offer Asian languages and history as preparation for missionary work. He saw through direct involvement in disaster relief, that education was China’s greatest need. He dialogued with Confucian and Buddhist scholars, and befriended them sincerely. He introduced science, history and other branches of western learning to China. He hired Liang Qichao in 1895 to be his secretary; Liang was a leader in the 1890s, belonging to the younger generation of radical scholars who called upon the Emperor to institute a constitutional monarchy. Richard translated dozens of books and booklets into Chinese, including a 19th century history of Europe.

As Richard was busy translating books into Chinese and encouraging the radical reformers of China in the 1890s, Abraham Kuyper, Holland’s prime minister and founder of the Free University of Amsterdam, addressed Princeton University in the 1890s. The famous Stone Lectures have since been published under the title, Lectures in Calvinism. Kuyper, a theologian in his own right, reminded the church in America never to forget that the primary battle in history will always be an antithesis between truth and error, God-centered culture and man-centered culture. Kuyper’s theological descendants include Cornelius Van Til (Westminster Seminary) and Herman Douyeweerd (whose students staff the Institute of Christian Studies, Toronto). This call to soberness and battle needed to be heard again today in the church in America, and among America’s cross-cultural servants in China.

Richard and his fellow reformer-missionaries, some of the most brilliant minds whom the church in England and America sent to China, became Universalists by the 1910s. They no longer believed in the exclusive claims of the gospel of Jesus Christ. John Fryer, English missionary, saw the emergence of a union of all the world’s religions. (An audible gasp could be heard in the audience when I made this statement.)

Why? Richard and Fryer did not sail from Britain as liberals or Universalists. They were zealous evangelicals, burning with the fire of revival. What happened? What led to this downward spiral of doctrinal belief and vigilance? Was it the fact that he was enamored with Buddhism? (One person from the audience asked this insightful question.) No, I think not. He changed because he was enamored with the sleeping but awakening giant: China, represented by her most brilliant minds, the scholars/intellectuals, and he was not alert enough to realize his own need to keep his doctrinal vigilance. Lesson for us to learn: keep theological education, sound, biblical, evangelical training, as a life-long part of the diet of our English teachers in China. Keep them faithful to the Word of God!

Today we are sending English teachers, doctors, and businessmen in the name of Christ to China. We, too, are enamored by the awakening giant: except this time, the giant has awakened. Half of the world’s operating building cranes are in Shanghai: 20,000 of them. China is open to religious studies programs at universities; English teachers for her universities and schools; and many other forms of Christian involvement. We need to proceed in reaching China, as ELIC is doing, in a spirit of friendship, servanthood, and dignity, offering to be a blessing and friend to China, without jeopardizing the safety of the church of Jesus Christ in that land. All of this is wonderful; the American church can do this, which the overseas Chinese church cannot. The overseas Chinese church, of course, can do certain things which the American church cannot do, in China.

But we cannot afford to offer China a watered down version of the Word of God:

1. We must proclaim a God who is “infinite, eternal and unchangeable in his being, wisdom, power, holiness, justice, goodness and truth,” not a God who is so open and vulnerable to our fragile existence, that our surprises are God’s surprises too (Clark Pinnock’s chapter in The Openness of God, Inter Varsity Press, 1995, p. 114). Broken hearts and lives need a strong Savior, not just a sympathetic friend who will walk with them.

2. We must make the claim that Scripture is the divine address of a king, not just a document which witnesses to and record the eternal-existential encounter which is the Word of God (Karl Barth, Epistle to the Romans – currently very popular among American and Chinese evangelical theologians, like never before).

3. We must proclaim the cross of the Lord Jesus Christ as propitiation for the sins of men and women, not just as therapy for broken lives. The gospel has therapeutic powers and fruits; but therapy is not the gospel!

4. We must not forget that God has revealed himself through (a) the things which were created, and (b) his work in human hearts. This is general revelation. Man’s culture, art, philosophy and religion is NOT general revelation; they are man’s response to God’s revelation, subject to error and idol-building! We, in our benevolence, often say that God has revealed himself to the Chinese people through Chinese-language characters, and ideas in Confucius and Lao Tzu. Nothing can be more dangerous than this: the implications are enormous, for accommodation, syncretism, and paganization of the church in China.

5. We must affirm that the church’s mission in China is threefold: (a) evangelization, for the conversion of men, women and children; (b) the maturing of the church (which is a much better term, in my view, than indigenization or contextualization; contextualization is infected with Marxian epistemology at its base). The work of English teachers and other professionals in China contribute in a very valuable way to all three aspects of the goal! But we must not do one at the expense of another.

Major donors to the church’s seminaries, agencies and foreign ministries must inquire if our seminaries still believe in the inerrant Word of God, the Bible. Students and local churches must do likewise.

I also told them that the 21st century faces a tremendous challenge from postmodern, deconstructive philosophy, which claims that:

1. Words have no meaning (they are arbitrary signs).

2. History has no facts (only interpretation).

3. The universe has no truth, only narratives.

4. There is no right and wrong in morality, except that homosexuality is right.

We need research to undergird our belief that language is adequate as a tool for God’s revelation. And we need to reaffirm verbal, prepositional revelation.

I feel that my work up to this point has been to call the Chinese church in North America to doctrinal faithfulness. If the Lord opens doors, this call needs to be extended to the church in America. Of course there are some very capable prophets already calling the church in America back to Scripture, e.g. R.C. Sproul, James M. Boice, John MacArthur, Al Mulder (Southern Baptist Seminary), Ravi Zacharias, and others. Still others are faithfully proclaiming the Word of God in the church and through the media, week after week.

Please pray that God will confirm this call. This may be a new call, or simply an extension of what He has already called me to be: simply a preacher of God’s Word. For me, I am happy and content to be a servant of the Word of God among the overseas Chinese, in North America and Asia. Hitherto, calling the church in America (at least the missionary arm of the church) to doctrinal integrity has not been a top priority in my life.

However, in recent months I have come to realize that I must separate the secondary from the primary. In the last 20 years, I have done many good, meaningful, important, but secondary things:

1. I helped the immigrant church see the cultural challenge of American born Chinese.

2. I then called upon the Chinese church to reach out cross-culturally to mainland Chinese students and scholars (PRCs).

3. Through the encouragement of friends like Carol Hamrin and Brent Fulton, I called upon the American church to work in China with greater sensitivity to the safety of the church in China, and in greater partnership with the overseas Chinese church. I am beginning to also call upon the overseas Chinese church to work in China with a greater sense of partnership and appreciation of what American brothers and sisters are doing.

4. I have been calling American Christians to take a long-term perspective to cultivate civic space in China, so that Christians in China and those who go to China, may live out their lives as salt and light.

In these and other endeavors, I have used my training in history and culture (secondary) to provide insight and analysis, with a theological foundation. I feel that my theological insights, which God has so generously given to me through sound theological training at Westminster (1971-76), undergirded with the first 14 years of my life in fundamentalism (1951-65), should be used for the greatest (primary) challenge: the preservation of truth in the church, in the 21st century.

I have done different (secondary) things in and for the American church. There are other burning issues which the church in America must face: such as racism in ministry organizations; the exploitation of conditions in foreign countries for fund-raising opportunities (human rights/China is one); etc. But nothing can be more primary than our confidence in the Word of God, the inerrant Scriptures. For it is in Scripture where we meet Christ.

I am really grateful to God. I am overwhelmed by what the church faces. I need prayer and support.

I want to hear from you. Please give me feedback: sling@. Articles which contain similar messages can be found on our website: . Click “Publications.” One such article is entitled “An Urgent Call…” Your friendship and partnership in the ministry is appreciated.

Appendix I

AN ANCHOR IN THE TIME OF STORM:

Reaffirming the Faith of the Chinese Church

For the 21st Century

A sermon preached at the

Mandarin Baptist Church of Los Angeles

January 31, 2000

Scripture: Isaiah 55:1-11.

“An anchor in the time of storm:” older Christians know this hymn about Jesus’ constant presence in our lives. Above the flood waters of life, the Lord reigns: “God is our refuge and strength, an ever-present help in trouble. Therefore we will not fear, though the earth give way and the mountains fall into the heart of the sea, though its waters roar and foam…” (Psalm 46:1-3).

The Lord rules with his mighty word above the flood waters of history: “Nations are in uproar, kingdoms fall; he lifts his voice, the earth melts” (Psalm 46:6). This is true not only about history in general, but about the history and development of the church in particular.

STORMS OF CHANGE

As the Chinese church faces the 21st century, she is faced with several types of overwhelming change; she desperately needs an “anchor in the time of storm.” God will be gracious to the church, that she will not be shaken, but mature to the full stature of Christ (Ephesians 4:11-16).

Consider the changes happening around us:

The world’s culture is changing: the world no longer operates according to reason and science, as she used to in the past 400 years. We are in the postmodern period in history, when people no longer believe in the possibility of finding truth, let alone absolute truth. Christians are often ridiculed (especially by other Christians and theologians!) that we still hold on to an eighteenth-century view of knowledge and truth; we are outdated, and are pressured to change our ways of thought.

China is changing, rapidly, in profound ways. Which idea(s) will be leading China’s society in the 21st century? Several possibilities compete for leadership: (a) an ethnocentric, nationalistic antiforeignism; (b) the resurgence of Buddhism and folk religions, along with new forms (such as Falungong); (c) an undeterred drive for money and prosperity, without regard to the value of life or ethical concerns; or (d) the biblical worldview, with the gospel of Jesus Christ at its core. Which way will China be headed? In some measure, it depends on the power of the Chinese church’s witness.

America is changing. America is no longer a Christian nation, but a pagan, anti-Christian country which regards biblical Christianity as archaic, superstitious, and an obstacle to progress. Christians can expect to be harassed, discriminated again, or even persecuted. Chinese Christians who immigrated to America with a view that this was a “Christian land” will be disappointed time and again. How do we explain the prevalence of violence, murder, illicit sex and corruption in the workplace, in the schools and in our homes?

In the midst of all these changes, the Chinese church in North America is changing. We are now a multicultural community made up of mainland Chinese, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Southeast Asian and North American-born Chinese, along with other Asians and Caucasians in our midst. But the most important change is doctrinal: we are changing in the way in which we regard the Bible. We are changing in what we believe!

The church of Jesus Christ faces new challenges in every generation. Sometimes she stays her course, faithful to the Word of God and “the faith once delivered to the saints” (Jude 3). Sometimes, however, she strays from the truth, and either compromises the teachings of Scripture, or puts them aside by neglect.

COMPROMISE IN THE MIDST OF CHANGE

Four kinds of neglect or compromise are now common in the Chinese church:

First, the Chinese church is diluting her trust in the Bible as the very Word of God. Some believe that the Bible is “infallible” in the sense that the Bible is the highest authority; but they do not believe that the Bible is “inerrant.” They allow Christians to believe that there are errors in the Bible; or that there is an “inerrant” Word of God within the Bible (and there is an “outside crust” which is human and which contains mistakes). There are other versions (influenced by either existentialism or contemporary linguistic theories) of this watering down of the belief that the Bible is inspired by the Holy Spirit (II Timothy 3:16-17), and therefore is absolutely the truth, without the possibility of error in the areas of faith, life, history or science.

Second, the Chinese church is compromising in how she handles the Word of God. Sermons are not always direct, clear, systematic expositions of Scripture. We cater to the needs of men and women to the neglect of the faithful teaching and proclaiming of the “doctrines taught in Scripture.” Sometimes Bible study sessions turn into sharing times, without adequately digging into what a passage of Scripture says, and teaches.

Third, the Chinese church is compromising in how she uses the Bible. She has a weakened view of the sufficiency of Scripture. Scripture, being inspired, is “profitable for teaching, reproof, correction, and training in righteousness (II Timothy 3:16-17). Yet we look to methods in marketing, psychology, and entertainment for the fear that, if we don’t go to the “gurus” and get the latest “techniques,” people will no longer be attracted to come or stay in the church. We are fearful; in our fear, we look to the ways of men rather than the ways of God (Isaiah 55:6-9).

Fourth, the Chinese church is weakening in how she reads and studies the Bible. The average adult in the Chinese church, busy with responsibilities at church, at work and at home, has very little time for “Quiet Time.” Many active Christians who are deeply involved in the church’s ministry are simply not having regular devotional times before the Lord! For those who still manage to read the Bible and pray 4-6 times a week, we often forget what we have read, and find it very difficult to meditate, and internalize the Word of God. We doubt its relevance in our lives!

We are not exaggerating when we say that, perhaps there is a “famine of the Word of God” in some quarters of the Chinese church. It is high time for the Chinese church to return to the Word of God. It is high time that we reaffirm our belief that the Word of God is power: it is the “power of God and the wisdom of God” (I Corinthians 1:22-24). Pastors need to faithfully teach the Bible, systematically, in a meaningful order through the year, and bring the Word of God to bear on our lives. Sunday School teachers and Bible study group leaders should not be afraid to challenge students to dig into the Bible. Bible studies need to be times of studying the Bible!

In Isaiah 55, Isaiah looks forward to the time when the Messiah, the Suffering Servant (cf. Isaiah 53), will come and accomplish salvation (Isaiah 54). The Lord issues forth his Word, in one of the most tender, gentle and loving invitations to men and women to turn to Him. Consider what Isaiah says about the Word of God in this beautiful chapter:

THE WISDOM OF GOD FOR US

First, the Word of God truly satisfies the human soul. “Come, all you who are thirsty, come to the waters; and you who have no money, come, buy and eat! Come, buy wine and milk without money and without cost. Why spend money on what is not bread, and your labor on what does not satisfy? Listen, listen to me, and eat what is good, and your soul will delight in the richest of fare” (verses 1-2).

Money buys food; money cannot buy true satisfaction in the heart. Food and water feed the body; God feeds the heart, not temporarily, but forever. Paul tells us that, while the Jews seek miracles, and Greeks seek philosophy, we preach Christ and Him crucified: to the Jews, a “anti-miracle” (stumbling-block), nothing to look at that we can think it is spectacular; to the Greek, an “anti-philosophy” (foolishness), nothing to compare with the latest intellectual fads in the university. But to those who put their trust in Jesus, Christ is the very power of God, satisfying the deepest longings of the human heart; and the very wisdom of God, answering the core questions of the human mind.

O Christian, follower of Jesus Christ, do you believe this? Do we truly believe that the Word of God alone truly satisfies?

GOD’S UNCHANGING PROMISE

Second, the Word of God offers the unchanging, faithful promise of God’s grace: “I will make an everlasting covenant with you, my faithful love promised to David. See, have made him a witness to the peoples, a leader and commander of the people. Surely you will summon nations you know not, and nations that do not know you will hasten to you, because of the Lord your God, the Holy One of Israel, for he has endowed you with splendor” (verses 3-5).

What is the gospel? It is that God makes a genuine offer that he will be our God. He makes a covenant with his people: when we put our trust in Him (the finished work of Christ’s death and resurrection), we belong to Him (as His covenant people). He will never desert His people!

Many Christians in the church, by their behavior, show that they are some of the most insecure people around. We are afraid that God will not love us if we do not perform according to standard, or if we do not serve Him like we should. We are afraid that our methods will not attract people, and that they will not stay in our church. We are afraid that our children will leave us. We are afraid that we will not have enough money … God promises to be with His people. Our responsibility is to trust and obey.

How do you know that Jesus loves you? On what basis do you know for sure that God answers your prayers? It is the very promises in the Word of God. O Christian, do you believe this? Do we believe it?

THE HEART OF THE GOSPEL

Third, the gospel of Jesus Christ includes the very crucial element of repentance (which is often left out in our presentation of the gospel). Listen: “Seek the Lord while he may be found; call on him while he is near. Let the wicked forsake his way and the evil man his thoughts. Let him turn to the lord, and he will have mercy on him, and to our God, for he will freely pardon” (verses 6-7). Jesus instructed His disciples after He rose from the dead, that repentance is part of the gospel: “This is what is written: The Christ will suffer and rise from the dead on the third day, and repentance and forgiveness of sins will be preached in his name to all nations, beginning at Jerusalem. You are witnesses of these things” (Luke 24:47-48).

Chinese churches are now employing a variety of methods to present the gospel, and this is wonderful. We are taking the initiative to reach the world, we are creative, we are energetic, we are mobilizing the lay Christian man/woman to reach the world outside the church. But we must remember that our presentation of the gospel must be faithful to the truth.

The world is full of hurting people who want to find someone to offer a sympathetic ear, a shoulder to lean on, and a friend to walk with in their hours of pain. But hurting people need something more: they need to know the truth, and the truth will set them free. In our effort to show our sympathy and concern (and we have often failed in this area in past decades), we have watered down the element of repentance as we present the gospel.

What is repentance? It is the conscious decision of men and women to: (a) acknowledge sins as violation of the standards of our holy God; (b) sincere grief and sorrow over sin; and most importantly, (c) a turning to God, turning to the cross, to ask for forgiveness.

God promises forgiveness to those who ask (I John 1:9). Jesus promises rivers of living water springing from our hearts, when we turn to Him. But when we offer a watered down gospel (God meets your needs; you will no longer walk alone) without presenting the blood of Jesus Christ as the foundation (the only way) of salvation, we are cheating men and women to find the thing they need most.

The Bible calls sin sin for a reason. God calls sin sin, so that forgiveness may be available!

CULTURE OR GOD’S WORD?

Fourth, we must guard ourselves, that we proclaim God’s truth, not our culture: “For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways, declares the Lord. As the heavens are higher than the earth, so are y ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts” (verses 8-9).

What are “thoughts and ways”? They are the ways we think and live: together, they form “culture.” The first-generation Chinese Christian immigrants tend to hold on to our traditional Chinese/Asian thoughts and ways; second-generation American-born Chinese Christians tend to absorb the contemporary, postmodern, western thoughts and ways. Both kinds of culture (thoughts and ways) need the Word of God to evaluate and judge according to its eternal light.

There are clear evidence that both the first generation and the second generation are substituting cultural ideas, values and lifestyles for the truth. It is time we come together and examine how we have strayed. (In the past 20 years I have tried to identify Chinese and American cultural values demonstrated in the Chinese church’s life and ministry; in the future we need to evaluate all of this more critically, using biblical norms.)

THE WORD OF GOD IS POWERFUL

Fifth and finally, the Word of God is powerful to change us: “As the rain and the snow come down from heaven, and do not return to it without watering the earth and making it bud and flourish, so that it yields seed for the sower and bread for the eater, so is my word that goes out from my mouth: it will not return to me empty, but will accomplish what I desire and achieve the purpose for which I sent it” (verses 10-11).

Because Scripture is God’s very own words, the Holy Spirit works with the Word He inspired, to accomplish God’s purpose: to instruct us, to open our minds and heart, to convict us of sin, and to lead us to Christ and a life in submission under Him. The Word of God is capable, and powerful, to do that.

In order for the Bible to accomplish these purposes in our lives – teaching, reproof, correction, training in righteousness – we need to believe in its power, submit under its authority, hear, study, and meditate on it, and proclaim it faithfully.

Ezra and Nehemiah experienced a true revival in their day – a revival which came because the law of the Lord was read, and made clear to the people of God. We are facing many challenges and temptations today; we need all the power, strength, and wisdom we can get hold of. For this, we need the Spirit of Christ. For this, we do have the Spirit of Christ! May God grant us the grace of hearing and doing His Word in our day.

Appendix II

Expanding Callings: Phases of My Ministry

1965: At age 14, dedicated my life to full time ministry, Hong Kong, August; came to the United States, September

1968-69: Befriended Jonathan Chao, Wilson Chow, Che Bin Tan, and Paul Szto, who grounded me in inductive Bible study, systematic theology, apologetics, and a love for the Chinese church and her need for sound theological education

1975-6: With M. Div. in hand, I candidated at the Chinese Baptist Church of New Haven, Connecticut; a good friend, Bob Chang, convinced me not to go, but to begin doctoral studies for the kingdom’s sake; I heeded his advice

1976-78: Did youth ministry among American-born Chinese, New York City, on the weekends as I took Ph.D. course work at Temple University

1976-77: Began to write, advocating for American born Chinese (2nd generation) ministries, first in Ambassadors For Christ and Chinese Christian Mission’s periodicals

1980: Finished doctorate; moved to New York City; started to plant an English-speaking Chinese church in Queens, New York City

1982: Began teaching at various Chinese studies programs of North America’s seminaries, calling Chinese seminary students to “church consciousness” and to develop a personal theological system

1985: Began to see the doctrinal shift and accommodation to Chinese philosophy among some of my most brilliant peers in the overseas Chinese theological community (attended the Gospel and Chinese Gospel seminar, sponsored by CCCOWE, Hong Kong)

1988: Began to write, advocating for mainland Chinese intellectuals (PRCs) ministry

1992: Began pastoral ministry in major Chinese church in Chicago

February 1993: Saw that my primary calling is to be an apologist for the Chinese church

1994-97: Convened China Consultation, began to call on the church in America to greater partnership in China service; also confronted racism in the American church

1996: Spoke at CCCOWE’s 6th congress, Hong Kong; after that, began broader ministry in Southeast Asia and the Pacific Rim

1997: Adjusted vision/goal of my organization to an apologetic / theological task; moved to California

1999: Persuaded Chinese church leaders to launch a Biblical Inerrancy movement in the Chinese church in the USA

2000: Preached to American church leaders about the need to restore confidence in the inerrant Bible, Washington, D.C.

La Mirada, California

April 29, 2000

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