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Journal of Classical Sociology
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Protestant Ethics among Chinese Missionaries, Problems of Indigenization, and the Spirit of Academic Professionalization

Lauren Pfister

Hong Kong Baptist University, China

Some of Weber’s descriptions and evaluations of Protestant groups and their ethos are employed to reveal dimensions of Protestant missionary activities and their contributions in early 20th-century China and Europe. The main focus is on the German missionary Richard Wilhelm (1873–1930). Wilhelm distinguished himself while living in the German colony of Jiaozhou as an educator and missionary-scholar, specializing in translating ancient Ruist (‘Confucian’) and Daoist scriptures. After the outbreak of World War I, he began to study the Book of Changes, a major factor in his later spiritual pilgrimage. Leaving missionary work in 1920, he was later offered a position as a cultural attaché to the German ambassador, serving two years in Beijing. In 1924 he was made the first lecturer in Chinese at Frankfurt University. During the 1920s Wilhelm passed through a radical spiritual transformation, ultimately adopting a Ruified form of Christianity influenced by Quaker sectarian spirituality. All of these factors are considered in the light of Weber’s thesis about the development and modern demise of the Protestant ethos.

Key Words: missionary-scholar • rationalization • sects • sinology • voluntary associations • Wilhelm

Journal of Classical Sociology, Vol. 5, No. 1, 93-114 (2005)
DOI: 10.1177/1468795X05050040


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