From periphery to partnership: a critical analysis of the relationship of baptists in Hong Kong with the colonial government in the post-World War II era
dc.contributor.author
Lau, Chun-pang Vincent
en
dc.date.accessioned
2018-05-22T12:43:53Z
dc.date.available
2018-05-22T12:43:53Z
dc.date.issued
2005
dc.description.abstract
en
dc.description.abstract
Baptists in Hong Kong, originally a peripheral denomination before the World
War II, had become the largest Protestant community by the time of the handover of
the colony to China in July 1997. This study aims to narrate and explicate the
formation of the church-state practice of Baptists in Hong Kong in the period of 1949
to 1984. The thesis is focused on the question of the extent to which the British
colonial policy contributed to the rise of the Baptist community in Hong Kong. The
thesis will uncover the roots of the British colonial strategy in the post-World War II
era and how the Baptist denomination happened to be part of the scheme. The thesis
will also attempt to account for the formation of the Baptist church-state practice.
The thesis finally will employ John Howard Yoder's criticism of Constantinianism to
critique the Baptist church-state practice in the post-World War II period, and the core
concepts of Yoder's Jeremianic model will serve as an alternative of the Baptist
church-state practice in the post-colonial era.
en
dc.description.abstract
The study will be based upon a theological and empirical research. The
socio-political- ecclesiological context of Hong Kong in the post-World War II period
and the British colonial policy in the territory will be scrutinised. The uniqueness of
Baptist polity that has led to the emergence of the Baptist lay-leaders and the
interactions between the laity and the pastors on the issue of Baptist educational
institutions accepting the government subsidy, embodying the formalisation of the
church-state practice, will be examined. The rationale behind the Baptist leaders'
willingness to become a partner with the government will be explored, by
investigating the patron-client relationship between the colonial government and
Baptists and kuan-hsi (network), a prominent feature of the Chinese cultural heritage.
en
dc.description.abstract
The practice of Baptist worship service will be investigated as it is regarded as
the principal factor of the formation of spirituality. I will suggest that pietistic
individualism focusing on personal religious and spiritual experience contributes to a
problematic church-world dichotomy in the minds of Chinese Christians. A review
of Chinese theology in the first half of the twentieth century will disclose a solid
heritage of pietism among Chinese Christians. The factor of "state control of
religion" in Chinese culture fosters and enhances their uncritical attitude toward
government. Additionally, order and contents of Baptist worship service have also
been shaped by the pietistic tradition so that sermons in worship mainly focus on such
topics as personal relationship with God as deepened through Bible reading, prayers,
fellowship, sin, etc
en
dc.description.abstract
The existing models explicating Hong Kong's church-state situation offered by
Hong Kong local scholars will be analysed. A literature review of the discourse on
church-world relations by the post-World War II theologians in the West, including
Oliver O'Donovan, Stanley Hauerwas, and John Howard Yoder, will be introduced.
Yoder's model will be considered as a better one among them, and its strengths as
well as its applicability will be examined. "Effectiveness" and "faithfulness," two
key features of Yoder's Jeremianic model, will be singled out as the main criteria to
expound the church-state practice of Baptists in Hong Kong. The thesis will also
explore the question of the extent to which the church-state model adopted by
Baptists in Hong Kong relied on a Constantinian model which in the post-colonial era
is now shown to be problematic, and the suggested solutions to the dilemma of
Baptists will be offered. The practice of "the church as a worshipping community"
will lead Baptists to a faithful church-state practice in the post-colonial era. The
thesis will conclude with an examination of the Jeremianic model of church-state
relations in dialogue with Yoder's political theology. At the end of the thesis, it will
be pointed out that the Home Church in China after 1949 has been the most
rapid-growing group within the Christian community despite acute persecutions by
the Communist government. This example will serve as a model of church-state
practice for Baptists in the present day Hong Kong -the city that has taken on a new
configuration with increasing strong presence of Mainland China's political and
ideological influence.
en
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/30380
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
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dc.relation.ispartof
Annexe Thesis Digitisation Project 2018 Block 19
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dc.relation.isreferencedby
Already catalogued
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dc.title
From periphery to partnership: a critical analysis of the relationship of baptists in Hong Kong with the colonial government in the post-World War II era
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
en
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