Watchman Nee, Ni Tuosheng, or Nee T'o-sheng (; November 4, 1903 – May 30, 1972), was a 20th century "Chinese evangelist, theologian, and founder of the Local Church movement." He was influenced in part by the Plymouth Brethren and the Wesleyan-holiness tradition.
In 1922, he initiated church meetings in Fuzhou, Fujian province, that may be considered the beginning of the local churches. During his 30 years of ministry, Nee published many books, including expositions of Scripture as well as works on the Christian life and spiritual experience. He established churches throughout China and held frequent conferences to train Bible students and church workers. Following the Communist Revolution, Nee was persecuted and imprisoned for his faith and spent the last 20 years of his life in prison. He was honored by Christopher H. Smith (R–NJ) in the US Congress on July 30, 2009. He is commemorated in the Presbyterian Church (USA) church calendar on May 30.
He was recognized by Christianity Today as one of the 100 most influential Christians of the century due to his prolific writings and role in founding the Local Church movement. He is considered by some scholars to be "the leading Chinese theologian of the twentieth century.” Despite spending the last two decades of his life in prison where he eventually died, his work continued to spread globally through translations. His most famous work is The Normal Christian Life.
Family and childhood
Watchman Nee was born on November 4, 1903, the third of nine children of Ni Weng-hsiu, a well-respected officer in the Imperial Customs Service, and Lin He-Ping (Peace Lin), who excelled as a child at an American-staffed Methodist mission school. His grandfather was a gifted Anglican preacher. During a stint at the Chinese Western Girls' School in Shanghai to improve her English, Lin He-Ping met Dora Yu, a young woman who gave up a potential career in medicine to serve as an evangelist and preacher.
Since Nee's parents were both Methodists, he was baptized by a bishop of the Methodist Church as an infant.
Early schooling
In 1916, at age 13, Nee entered the Church Missionary Society Vernacular Middle School in Fuzhou, Fujian province to begin his Western-style education. He then went on to the middle school at Trinity College in Fuzhou, where he demonstrated great intelligence and ambition. Among his classmates was Wilson Wang, brother of one of Watchman Nee's good friends, Leland Wang. The two boys completed college despite severe flooding which brought cholera and plague and hardship to their region. In the final examinations, the 2 boys scored almost the same marks with Wilson Wang topping the class, followed closely by Watchman Nee in second place.
Conversion and training
In the spring of 1920, when Nee was 17, Dora Yu was invited to hold ten days of revival meetings in the Church of Heavenly Peace in Fuzhou. After Nee's mother attended these meetings, she was moved to apologize to her son for a previous incident of unjust punishment. Her action impressed Nee so much that he determined to attend the next day's evangelistic meetings to see what was taking place there. After returning from the meeting, according to Nee's own account:
As a student at Trinity College, Nee began to speak to his classmates concerning his salvation experience. Later, he recounted:
After his conversion, Nee desired to be trained as a Christian worker. He first attended Dora Yu's Bible Institute in Shanghai, though he was still a high school student. However, he was dismissed due to his bad and lazy habits, such as sleeping in late. Eventually, Nee's seeking to improve his character brought him into close contact with a British missionary Margaret E. Barber who became his teacher and mentor. Nee would visit Barber on a weekly basis in order to receive spiritual help. Barber treated Nee as a young learner and frequently administered strict discipline. When she died in 1930, Barber left all of her belongings to Nee, who wrote:
The Plymouth Brethren connection
Through Barber, Watchman Nee was introduced to the writings of D. M. Panton, Robert Govett, G. H. Pember, Jessie Penn-Lewis, T. Austin-Sparks, and others. In addition, he acquired books from Plymouth Brethren teachers like John Nelson Darby, William Kelly, and C. H. Mackintosh.
Nee derived many of his ideas, including plural eldership, disavowal of a clergy-laity distinction, and worship centered around the Lord's Supper, from the Plymouth Brethren. From 1930 to 1935, his movement interacted internationally with the Raven-Taylor group of Exclusive Brethren led by James Taylor Sr. This group "recognized" the Local Church movement as a parallel work of God, albeit one that had developed independently. Nee refused, however, to follow their practice of isolating themselves from other Christians and rejected their ban on celebrating The Lord's Supper with other Christians. Matters came to a head when Exclusive Brethren leaders learned that during his 1933 visits to the United Kingdom and the United States Nee had broken bread with Honor Oak Christian Fellowship associated with the independent ministry of T. Austin-Sparks and with non-Brethren missionaries whom Nee had known in China. After a series of communications Nee received a letter dated August 31, 1935, signed by leading Brethren, severing fellowship with him and his movement.
Marriage
As a teenager, Nee fell in love with Charity Chang. Their two families had been friends for three generations. When Nee became a Christian, Charity ridiculed Jesus in Nee's presence. This bothered him. Eventually, after much struggling, Nee felt he needed to give up on their relationship. Ten years later, after finishing her university education, Charity became a Christian. She began attending church meetings in Shanghai in 1934.
In 1928, Nee published a three-volume book entitled The Spiritual Man. In February of the same year, Nee held his first "Overcomer Conference" in Shanghai. In January 1934, Nee called a special conference on the subjects of "Christ as the Centrality and Universality of God" and "The Overcomers". According to Nee, this was a turning point for him in his ministry. He said, "My Christian life took a big turn from doctrines and knowledge to a living person, Christ, who is God's centrality and universality."
In February 1934, Nee gave a series of talks in which he defined and expounded the practice of the local churches, stating that in the Bible, the church is never divided into regions and never denominated based on a teaching or doctrine. These talks were eventually published in the book The Assembly Life. In May of the same year, Nee encouraged Witness Lee to move to Shanghai from Yantai in order to join him and Ruth Lee in their work editing Nee's publications. False charges and arrests were also brought against many foreign missionaries. Through intensive propaganda campaigns and threats of imprisonment, believers were influenced to accuse one another.
On April 10, 1952, Watchman Nee was arrested in Shanghai by Public Security officers from Manzhouli, Manchuria and charged with bribery, theft of state property, tax evasion, cheating on government contracts, and stealing of government economic information. Nee was also "re-educated". On January 11, 1956, there was a nationwide sweep targeting the co-workers and elders in the local churches. Some died in labor camps, while others faced long prison sentences. On January 18, 1956, the Religious Affairs Bureau began twelve days of accusation meetings at the church assembly hall on Nanyang Road in Shanghai, in which many accusations were brought against Nee in large accusation meetings. On June 21, 1956, Nee appeared before the High Court in Shanghai, where it was announced that he had been excommunicated by the elders in the church in Shanghai and found guilty on all charges. He was sentenced to fifteen years imprisonment with reform by labor. Initially, he was detained at Tilanqiao Prison in Shanghai but was later moved to other locations. Only his wife, Charity, was allowed to visit him.
On January 29, 1956, Public Security took over the Nanyang Road building, and many of Nee's co-workers were arrested, put into isolation, and forced to repudiate Watchman Nee. Some co-workers joined in the accusation of Watchman Nee while others, such as Peace Wang, Ruth Lee, and Yu Chenghua remained silent and were punished with life imprisonment. Following this, mass accusation meetings were held across the country to condemn the "anti-revolutionary sect of Watchman Nee".
Later imprisonment and death
One year before Nee's death in 1972, his wife, Charity, died due to an accident and high blood pressure; Nee was not allowed to attend her funeral. Charity's eldest sister then took the responsibility to care for Nee in prison. Nee was scheduled for release in 1967 but was detained in prison until his death on May 30, 1972. There was no announcement of his death nor any funeral. His remains were cremated on June 1, 1972, before his family arrived at the prison. Nee held that assurance is not to be placed upon one's sanctification and put a heavy emphasis on eternal rewards. Nee held that the "outer darkness" mentioned in Matthew is a temporal place for saved Christians who do not live in obedience.
Publications
In addition to speaking frequently before many audiences, Watchman Nee authored various books, articles, newsletters, and hymns. Most of his books were based on notes taken down by students during his spoken messages. Some books were compiled from messages published previously in his periodicals.
Watchman Nee's best-known book in English is The Normal Christian Life, is based on talks he delivered in English during a trip to England and Europe in 1938 and 1939. There he expressed theological views on the New Testament book of Romans. The English messages of The Normal Christian Life were first published chapter by chapter in the magazine A Witness and A Testimony beginning in the November–December issue in 1940. It was later published as a book by Witness and Testimony Publishers in August 1945 and advertised in the September–October edition of the A Witness and A Testimony magazine.
Some of Watchman Nee's best-known books include:
- The Spiritual Man () (1928), translated in 1969
- Concerning Our Missions (1939), translated in 1942
- The Song of Songs (1945), translated in 1970
- The Breaking of the Outer Man and the Release of the Spirit (1950), translated in 1961
- The Normal Christian Life () (1938–1939), published in 1940 (messages given in English)
- The Normal Christian Church Life (1938), translated in 1965
- Sit, Walk, Stand () (1957), translated in 1971
- What Shall this Man Do? (1961), translated in 1975
- Love Not the World (1951), translated in 1968
- Let Us Pray (1942), translated in 1949
- A Living Sacrifice (1932), translated in 1950
- Authority & Submission (1941), translated in 1950
- The Spirit of the Gospel (1949), translated in 1971
- God's Work (1940), translated in 1967
- Back to the Cross (1931), translated in 1956
- Grace for Grace (1949), translated in 1968
- How to Study the Bible (1956), translated in 1968
- Practical Issues of this life (1938), translated in 1970
- The Mystery of Creation, translated in 1981
In addition to publishing his own books, other spiritual publications were translated from English and published under Watchman Nee's oversight. These included books by T. Austin-Sparks, Madame Guyon, Mary E. McDonough, Jessie Penn-Lewis, and others.
See also
- The Lord's Recovery
- Witness Lee
- The Local Churches
- The Normal Christian Life
- Margaret E. Barber
- Dora Yu
References
Further reading
- Chang, Paul H.B. The Spiritual Person: An Intellectual Biography of Watchman Nee. Oxford University Press (2026).
- Chen, James. Meet Brother Nee. Hong Kong: The Christian Publishers (1976).
- Kinnear, Angus. Against the Tide. Eastbourne: Kingsway Publications (2005).
- Laurent, Bob. Watchman Nee: Man of Suffering. Uhrichsville: Barbour Publishing (1998).
- Lee, Witness. Watchman Nee: A Seer of the Divine Revelation in the Present Age. Anaheim: Living Stream Ministry (1991).
- Lyall, Leslie. Three of China's Mighty Men. London: Overseas Missionary Fellowship (1973).
- Nee, Watchman. Watchman Nee's Testimony. Hong Kong: Hong Kong Church Book Room (1974).
- Roberts, Dana. Understanding Watchman Nee. Plainfield, NJ: Logos International (1980).
- Roberts, Dana. Secrets of Watchman Nee. Orlando, FL: Bridge-Logos, 2005.
- Sze, Newman. The Martyrdom of Watchman Nee. Culver City: Testimony Publications (1997).
- Wu, Dongsheng John. Understanding Watchman Nee: Spirituality, Knowledge, and Formation. Eugene: Wipf & Stock Publishers (2012).
External links
- Living Stream Ministry: Watchman Nee
- Watchman Nee's Biography
- Living Stream Ministry: The Collected Works of Watchman Nee
- Living Stream Ministry: Additional Titles by Watchman Nee
- ChristianWebsites.org: Watchman Nee
- Biographical Dictionary of CHINESE Christianity: Ni Tuosheng (Watchman Nee) 1903 ~ 1972
- Christian Fellowship Publishers: About Watchman Nee
