One of China's Scholars
Read by MaryAnn
The first of two volumes telling the life story of Pastor Hsi, a Confucian scholar from Shanxi province in Northern China who became a Christian in the 1870s. Pastor Hsi grew up in a China now long gone, when the scholarly class to which he belonged held a leading place in society. He lived through tumultuous times of change in China, when the opium that enriched the pockets of Western countries brought widespread addiction and poverty while a multi-year drought brought famine, decimating the already weakened population. Into this scene of tragedy, two western men stepped, bringing with them food to help the poor and starving, seeds for planting when the rains returned, and news that The Supreme Ruler was not hidden behind the gates of the Temple of Heaven, reachable only by the Emperor once a year, but instead was reaching out to the people in love, seeking to reconcile them with Himself.
Hsi's life had been one of searching. While trained as a Confucian, he found himself unable to reach the high ideals espoused by its maxims and regulations. He explored Taoism and Buddhism but found them filled with idols and superstitions which trapped the common people in darkness and uncertainty. Hsi knew his heart and bore his failings with inner shame, even while people honored him as a scholarly disciple of Confucius. Was there a power anywhere that could change Hsi from within? (Summary by MaryAnn)
Chapters
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| Preface and Introductory--A Page from a Traveler's Journal | 23:18 | Read by MaryAnn | |
| Advent of the Little Scholar | 10:54 | Read by MaryAnn | |
| As Schoolboy | 15:39 | Read by MaryAnn | |
| As Student | 16:01 | Read by MaryAnn | |
| As Man of Letters | 19:39 | Read by MaryAnn | |
| The Home of his Childhood | 10:00 | Read by MaryAnn | |
| Wedding an Unknown Bride | 8:52 | Read by MaryAnn | |
| Winning a Reputation | 9:07 | Read by MaryAnn | |
| Which of the Four Faiths? | 29:10 | Read by MaryAnn | |
| The Swift Descent | 13:53 | Read by MaryAnn | |
| The Story of a Crime | 20:45 | Read by MaryAnn | |
| His Native Province | 11:49 | Read by MaryAnn | |
| Dark Days in Shan-si | 12:04 | Read by MaryAnn | |
| Light at Last | 11:24 | Read by MaryAnn | |
| First-Fruits | 8:43 | Read by MaryAnn | |
| Fishers of Men | 11:17 | Read by MaryAnn | |
| Drawing in the Net | 17:23 | Read by MaryAnn | |
| The Living Christ | 12:30 | Read by MaryAnn | |
| Stronger thann all the Power of the Enemy | 10:37 | Read by MaryAnn | |
| Called to Life of Service | 18:27 | Read by MaryAnn | |
| Appendices | 10:19 | Read by MaryAnn |
Reviews
Neko chan
Very powerful historical account of a changed China and a changed life, resulting from the clash of two of the world’s biggest civilisations of the time. Though written from a Christian standpoint, this book has many insights valuable and eye-opening to anyone with an interest in history, whether Chinese or British or anything else! What really was the Opium War? Hear it here from the Chinese perspective, the horrors us mercenary Brits unleashed on a civilised nation, to bend and break it, all for the sake of profit, greed and power. Witness the awful hypocrisy of armed British emissaries arriving with “opium in one hand and the Bible in the other”, and why many Chinese understandably wanted nothing to do with the Jesus of these white “foreign devils” when the missionaries came with messages of peace and hope. Geraldine Taylor was the daughter-in-law of Hudson Taylor, founder of the vast China Inland Mission which reached (and still reaches!) innumerable numbers of people with help and the hope of Christ. Mrs Taylor writes beautifully, giving voice to this remarkable Chinese scholar to describe his beloved people and land, and fleshing out Hsi’s own words with other historical records, missionary accounts, and footnotes and appendices to explain key parts of Chinese culture referenced in the events described. She was clearly a meticulous scholar herself!
Thomas Ritter
very well written and very well read. a most worthy history to read about God's mercy and work in a Chinese scholar.