K. H. Ting
Bishop K. H. Ting | |
---|---|
Native name | 丁光訓 |
Church | Chung Hua Sheng Kung Hui, China Christian Council |
Other post(s) | Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, National People's Congress |
Personal details | |
Born | Shanghai, China | 20 September 1915
Died | 22 November 2012 Nanjing, China | (aged 97)
Denomination | Protestantism |
Spouse | Siu-May Kuo |
Children | Stephen Yenren Ting, Heping Ting |
Alma mater | St. John's University, Columbia University, Union Theological Seminary |
K. H. Ting | |
---|---|
Hanyu Pinyin | Dīng Guāngxùn |
Wade–Giles | Ting1 Kuang1-hsun4 |
K. H. Ting, Ting Kuang-hsun or Ding Guangxun (
Ting was trained in the Anglican tradition and, in 1955, was consecrated as Anglican Bishop of Chekiang. As he never renounced his ordination, he remained a bishop until his death. However, in 1958 the Anglican Church in China came to an end as an independent institution in mainland China, leaving Ting with no episcopal functions to perform.
Ting had also held a number of political posts. He was a vice-chairman of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (1989–2008), and a member of the National People's Congress, China's legislature.
Biography
Ting was educated at Shanghai's
From 1942 to 1945, Ting worked in the administration of the YMCA. In 1946, he and his wife moved to Canada, where he became missions secretary of the Canadian Student Christian Movement. Ting studied at Columbia University and at Union Theological Seminary, both in New York City, from 1947 to 1948, gaining a master's degree in arts and theology. From 1948 to 1951, he worked in the administration of the World Student Christian Federation in Geneva, Switzerland.
In 1951 the Tings returned to China with their young son Stephen Yenren Ting, born in November 1948. Their second son Heping Ting was born in July 1952. Ting went on to serve as general manager of the Shanghai-based Chinese Christian Literature Society from 1951 to 1953, when he became principal of Nanjing Union Theological Seminary.[1]
In 1954, shortly after the establishment of the
In 1958, the Anglican Church in China was merged into the Chinese Christian Church and Ting lost his positions in the Anglican Church, but he remained a bishop in the eyes of many Chinese Christians and the wider Anglican Church. He returned to prominence in the 1970s. In 1980, he became President of the
Ting died on 22 November 2012, and his body was cremated on 27 November. Yu Zhengsheng attended his funeral on behalf of the central government.[5] Several Chinese Anglican leaders, such as Peter Kwong and Paul Kwong, led Ting's funeral service on 8 December at Christianity Mochou Road Church.[6]
Theology
Before the 1950s, influenced by his predecessor Y. T. Wu, Ting joined the Young Men's Christian Association (YMCA), attempting to devote himself to the national salvation and advocating that Christianity focuses not just individual salvation, but also social salvation. At that time, he also appreciated communism, although cautiously. In 1948 when he commented on the civil war in China, he wrote:
With the fall of Chiang and the Kuomintang government, and after the defeat of contemporary Chinese reactionaries who now rally around Chiang, a democratic coalition government will be formed in which Communists, Democratic Leaguers, progressive Nationalists and members of other anti-reactionary parties will all participate. What Americans think of as a Communist dictatorship is not in the wind for China's future.[7]
After he returned the new China in 1951, he joined the Three-self movement which was led by Y. T. Wu and chose to cooperate with the CCP regime. Ting became one of the most influential Christian leaders in the national Three-self Patriotic Movement and the China Christian Council since the 1980s.
Theological reconstruction
Ting's writings were mainly published after the 1980s. Ting formally started to construct his theological discourse aiming to deal with the relation of Christian faith with communism and other religions; meanwhile, he promoted "theological reconstruction" (simplified Chinese: 神学思想建设; traditional Chinese: 神學思想建設; pinyin: shénxué sīxiǎng jiànshè) in an attempt to construct indigenous theology on the basis of Chinese socio-political and religio-cultural context. It was also seen by some as an attempt to remove fundamentalist and evangelical forms of Christianity from the Chinese church.[8][9]
Ecclesiology
The TSPM was regarded as the application of the three principles of self-governance, self-support, and self-propagation. Ting claimed that "it is work of God."[10] Ting avidly accused Wang Mingdao of distorting the meaning of three principles and refusing to cooperate with TSPM. Besides, he believed that the church should play an active role in the society for serving the people, rather than cling to the church just paying attention to individual salvation.
Christology
Ting summarizes that a Cosmic Christ encompasses two aspects:[11]
(1) the universal extent of Christ's domain, concern and care, and (2) the kind of love which we get a taste of in Jesus Christ as we read the Gospels being the first and supreme attribute of God and the basic to the structure and dynamic of the universe, in the light of which we get an insight as to how things go in the world.
Influenced greatly by the thinking of Pierre Teilhard de Chardin and process theology based on the writings of Alfred North Whitehead, Ting argues that creation is a long process in which Christ not just participated in creation in the beginning, but continues to sustain the incomplete creation.[12][13] Redemption is in the process of creation. Following this, he contends that not Christians but humankind are involved in Christ's redemptive work. In this way, he appeals to Christians to appreciate the values in communism and other religio-cultural resources.[14]
The sinned against
With regards to the
Justification by faith
Ting has argued that the doctrine of
Relation between Christians and atheists
Ting considered that Christians should get along well with non-Christians and atheists of all sorts. Besides, he further stresses that "Provisional unities of truths we can observe with joy and thanksgiving because they illuminate us and point toward the ultimate unity in Christ which is the promise of his revelation."[22]
Works
- God is Love: Collected Writings of Bishop K. H. Ting, Cook Communications Ministries International, 2004. ISBN 0-7814-4233-8
- No Longer Strangers: Selected Writings of K. H. Ting, edited by Raymond L. Whitehead, Orbis Books, 1989. ISBN 0-88344-653-7
- Love Never Ends: Papers by K. H. Ting, edited by Janice Wickeri, Yilin Press, 2000. ISBN 7-80657-067-5
- A Chinese Contribution to Ecumenical Theology: Selected Writings of Bishop K. H. Ting, edited by Janice and Philip Wickeri, WCC Publications, 2002. ISBN 2-8254-1358-5
See also
Notes
- ^ The term "three-self" refers to the missiological principles of building an indigenous church that is self-governing, self-supporting, and self-propagating.
References
- ^ ISBN 9780883446539.
- OCLC 1066226424.)
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link - ^ a b Lewis, Donald M. (2004). Christianity Reborn: The Global Expansion of Evangelicalism in the Twentieth Century. William B. Eerdmans. p. 90.
- ^ Zhou, Jinghao; Santos, Michael (2003). Remaking China's Public Philosophy for the Twenty-First Century. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 138.
- ^ Yan (27 November 2012). "Body of late Chinese Christian leader cremated". Nanjing. Xinhua. Archived from the original on 4 December 2012. Retrieved 27 November 2012.
- ^ "參加丁光訓主教追思禮拜紀聞". www.christianweekly.net. Retrieved 9 February 2019.
- OCLC 19971381.
- ISBN 9781608333660.
- S2CID 220780318.
- OCLC 19971381.
- ^ Ting, K. H. (2004). God is Love. Cook Communications. p. 111.
- ^ Ting, K. H. (2000) [1991]. "The Cosmic Christ". In Wickeri, Janice (ed.). Love Never Ends: Papers. Nanjing: Yilin Press. pp. 408–418.
- ^ ISBN 9781137312624.
- ISSN 1354-9901.
- ^ Ting, K. H. (2000) [1979]. "Human Collectives as Vehicles of God's Grace". In Wickeri, Janice (ed.). Love Never Ends: Papers. Nanjing: Yilin Press. pp. 43–48.
- ^ Aikman, David (2006). Jesus in Beijing: How Christianity is Transforming China and Changing the Global Balance of Power. Regnery Publishing. p. 329.
- OCLC 44801525.
- OCLC 19971381.
- ^ Ting, K. H. (2000) [1996]. "On a Profound Christian Question". In Wickeri, Janice (ed.). Love Never Ends: Papers. Nanjing: Yilin Press. pp. 506–510.
- ISBN 9780971901612.
- ISBN 9780781442329.
- ^ Ting, K. H. (2004). God is Love. Colorado Springs, CO: Cook Communications. pp. 171–177.
Further reading
- Tze Ming Ng, Peter (2011). "Global Christianity and Local Contexts: the Case of K.H. Ting and the Three-Self Church in China". Exchange. 40 (1): 57–70. ISSN 0166-2740.
- Wickeri, Philip. Seeking the Common Ground: Protestant Christianity, the Three-Self Movement, and China's United Front, Orbis Books, 1988. ISBN 0-88344-441-0
External links
- Xinhua biography of KH Ting (in Chinese)