Symposia
Watchman Nee as a Mediator: British Theological Legacies in Global Chinese Christianity
Convenors: Mr. Songzan Xu, Dr. Simeon Xu, and Prof. Jörg Haustein
Date: 7-8 May 2026
Venue: Faculty of Divinity
Watchman Nee (1903–1972), one of the most influential Chinese Christian leaders and Bible teachers across Greater China, the West, and the Global South, is widely recognised as having been shaped by various strands of British theology and Christian movements. Notable among these are the Plymouth Brethren, the Wesleyan-Holiness tradition, and the Keswick Movement.
However, what renders Nee’s theological genealogy more intricate is his critical yet appreciative appropriation and creative synthesis of these traditions. For instance, while he drew on the ecclesiological ideas of the Plymouth Brethren and T. Austin-Sparks, his theory of the “local church” marked a clear distinction from both. Although he adopted the premillennial eschatological framework of John Darby, on the questions of the “partial rapture” and the “New Jerusalem” he followed the views of Robert Govett and D. M. Panton, which set him apart in certain respects from both dispensationalism and Calvinism. In his teaching on sanctification, he drew on elements from both the Wesleyan Holiness and Keswick movements, as well as British mysticism and early Pentecostalism, such as that of William Law and Jessie Pen-Lewis.
This polygenetic, multi-sourced, and dynamic quality pervaded Nee’s theological development from his early years to his later ministry, making it impossible to confine him within a single tradition. It is therefore necessary to disentangle the British strands within Nee’s theological genealogy to describe a fuller context for understanding his theology. More importantly, these entangled legacies were not only appropriated but also transformed through Nee’s work and the “Local Church” movement, yielding a great bearing on the development of twentieth-century indigenous and diasporic Chinese theology and Christianities.
The hybrid symposium will bring together scholars to explore the British theological genealogy embedded in Watchman Nee’s work, thought, and networks, and to consider how these traditions have been transformed within modern Chinese theologies, both in Greater China and across Chinese Diaspora Christian communities. While primarily theological in focus, the symposium is designed to advance interdisciplinary dialogue, seeking for historical, anthropological, and empirical perspectives.
Please note attendance of this workshop is by invitation only.