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Journey to the East: The Jesuit Mission to China, 1579-1724
 
 
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Journey to the East: The Jesuit Mission to China, 1579-1724 [Hardcover]

Liam Matthew Brockey (Author)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)


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Book Description

0674024486 978-0674024489 March 1, 2007

It was one of the great encounters of world history: highly educated European priests confronting Chinese culture for the first time in the modern era. This “journey to the East” is explored by Liam Brockey as he retraces the path of the Jesuit missionaries who sailed from Portugal to China, believing that, with little more than firm conviction and divine assistance, they could convert the Chinese to Christianity. Moving beyond the image of Jesuits as cultural emissaries, his book shows how these priests, in the first concerted European effort to engage with Chinese language and thought, translated Roman Catholicism into the Chinese cultural frame and eventually claimed two hundred thousand converts.

The first narrative history of the Jesuits’ mission from 1579 until the proscription of Christianity in China in 1724, this study is also the first to use extensive documentation of the enterprise found in Lisbon and Rome. The peril of travel in the premodern world, the danger of entering a foreign land alone and unarmed, and the challenge of understanding a radically different culture result in episodes of high drama set against such backdrops as the imperial court of Peking, the villages of Shanxi Province, and the bustling cities of the Yangzi Delta region. Further scenes show how the Jesuits claimed conversions and molded their Christian communities into outposts of Baroque Catholicism in the vastness of China. In the retelling, this story reaches across continents and centuries to reveal the deep political, cultural, scientific, linguistic, and religious complexities of a true early engagement between East and West.

(20071103)


Editorial Reviews

Review

This is an admirable piece of scholarly research into one of the most challenging missionary endeavours ever undertaken...Brockey has drawn on archives in the Biblioteca da Ajuda in Lisbon and the Archivum Romanum Societatis Jesu in Rome to paint an extraordinarily detailed picture of a mission which started in 1579 with the summoning of Michele Ruggieri to China, and was dealt a mortal blow by the proscription of Christianity 145 years later...In this masterly survey, Brockey strips the China mission of any pious fancy. We are shown the political manoeuvring between priests and the imperial court, between different nationalities within the Society [of Jesus] itself and between the Society and Rome...This is no hagiography but an elegantly clear exposition of a tremendous missionary undertaking. (Simon Scott Plummer The Tablet )

[An] absorbing and strongly researched book...The nature and durability of this seventeenth-century expansion of the Jesuit mission in China are explored in the first half of Brockey's book and he brings many less-known missionaries into his story, broadening the canvas dramatically, and also giving serious attention to the problems the missionaries faced from hostile Chinese literati and senior officials...There will be few who do not find important new materials in the second half of Journey to the East, which draws on a rich range of original sources to deepen our sense of Chinese society and the attempted Jesuit impact upon it...Liam Brockey has written a challenging book. Even those of us who would still like to cling to the fact that many of these Jesuit pioneers in China were truly remarkable men, with enormous mental resources, have to realize that he has changed the ground rules of the debate. It is clear that the Chinese Catholics themselves were much more in charge of their own destinies than we had suspected. And with that knowledge in place, we can no longer tell the same old stories in the same old way. (Jonathan Spence New York Review of Books )

By any standard Journey to the East: The Jesuit Missions to China, 1579-1724 is an impressive work...Brockey manfully succeeds in painting a picture of the glories and pitfalls of the European Christian encounter with the enigmatic Chinese empire. (Oliver Rafferty Irish Times )

Brockey‘s great success with this authoritative study is showing how important the “assistance” of Chinese catechists and other lay helpers was for the ability of European Jesuits to carry out their extraordinary cross-cultural mission. It is a model for using European sources to spotlight the indigenous character of new Christian movements. (Christian Century )

Liam Brockey examines the proselytization strategies of the Jesuits in China during the years 1579–1724. Aiming to provide a corrective to previous histories that present the Jesuits' strategy as ‘top-down’ and elite-centered, Brockey reconstructs the history of the China mission ‘from the ground up’...[adding] another important layer to our understanding of the Jesuit mission. (Melissa Dale International Bulletin of Missionary Research )

Historians lamented the absence of a serious history of the Jesuit mission beyond the imperial city. Their prayers have now been answered in Liam Matthew Brockey's Journey to the East...An impressive accomplishment. (Thomas M. McCoog, SJ Times Literary Supplement )

A masterful study...New scholarship using Roman and Chinese sources leads to a much more complex story of Roman Catholicism in China during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. With his deft analysis of a surprisingly underutilized source on the history of the Jesuit mission—Portuguese language letters and reports in ecclesiastical archives in Portugal and Rome&mdash Brockey has constructed a new chronology and trajectory for the Jesuit mission itself, placing it in what he calls “a proper European context.” Intentionally or not, he also brings the Jesuits back into the increasingly complex history of Chinese religious life. (Jerry Dennerline Journal of Interdisciplinary History )

Brockey’s field of research is Portuguese overseas expansion, not China. This book’s full and balanced account is thus an achievement even more impressive to those of us who are China historians. The study of the Jesuit mission still has much to learn from Chinese sources, and the field can be expected eventually to grow beyond Journey to the East, but until that happens—and it will take many years, I suspect—this book will be the authoritative work. (Timothy Brook Catholic Historical Review )

Review

Written with grace and clarity, Journey to the East will be greeted as one of the most important contributions to the field of Christianity in the last thirty years. (Ronnie Po-chia Hsia, Pennsylvania State University 20070628)

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 512 pages
  • Publisher: Belknap Press (March 1, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0674024486
  • ISBN-13: 978-0674024489
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.2 x 1.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,316,306 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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21 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Extremely well written history of an important period of Christian history, March 5, 2007
This review is from: Journey to the East: The Jesuit Mission to China, 1579-1724 (Hardcover)
Brockey does an very good job of mining important sources - the Portugese Jesuit archives, as well as the Jesuit archives in Rome - to bring forth a comprehensive overview of the evangelizing of the Middle Kingdom in the 17th century.

Not only does Brockey show erudition and scholarly handling of his subject, he has also written a work that is very accessible to the inquisitive lay reader.

Readers can easily use this book as an excellent springboard into other scholarly works on Chinese Christianity during the period. It would be interesting to see how the well documented sense of communal action, termed "hui", that Brockey describes in his book could or could not be traced through subsequent Chinese history and may have been co-opted by the Communists in the final overthrow of the Chinese monarchy.

The author has made history real through detailed examples of the how the Jesuits traveled, lived, learned Chinese, converted literti and peasants to Christianity, and eventually died on foreign shores far from the college halls of Evora, Portugal. Brockey has given academia a unique window into the lives of the men who made the mission to China a success for Rome - even if for only a short time.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating account of missionary journeys to the east, May 25, 2009
Well written, and in meticulous detail, "Journey to the East" tells the story of Jesuits, and others, who tried to convert the Chinese.

It was the time of the Protestant Reformation in Europe, a reformation which ripped Christian Europe into pieces. The Catholic church responded to the huge losses of people in Europe by converting millions in South America and starting conversions in the east.

Japan, originally, seemed fertile ground. Hundreds of thousands of Japanese converted readily...and then the persecutions began. Priests and converts were crucified, beheaded, and tortured.

The Jesuits turned their gaze upon the vast millions in China. The Jesuits who came to China "were very diverse in terms of national origin...some from Lombardy...and Croatia" (p 9). Jesuits stressed education, which would prove to be of immense value in China.

The Jesuits soon learned to wear the clothes of the literati. Wearing the clothing of the religious turned out to be a grave mistake. Buddhist clergy "had reached the nadir" (p 43) in popularity, but the Jesuits found crowds willing to listen to them explain maps, clocks, and geometry. Then, of course, they would discuss religion.

There would be many setbacks. At times, there were persecutions. Some were martyrs, some, "were to be shackled inside wooden cages" (p 68) to be shipped back to the west like captured wild animals.

Considering the tiny number of priests who went to China, the number of Chinese who converted is amazing. There were "only twenty-four European priests and three Chinese coadjutors" (p 123) at one time, but by 1662 "they could count twenty residences spread across ten provinces (p 123-4). Each residence station ministered to as many as 50,000 converts.

There was no lack of vocations among native Chinese, but teaching them Latin proved to be a huge stumbling block.

The book details the Jesuit mission to China, from 1579 to 1724. Full of absorbing stories and rich with information about Chinese culture, it should be of interest to both scholars and anyone curious about the era.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The early Jesuit approach to evangelistic success, December 1, 2010
By 
Eric Magnusson (Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This very interesting and readable book of Catholic missionary history was obviously a labor of love. The author was going through the archives of Jesuit missionaries in Lisbon and the Society of Jesus in Rome (and other Italian archives), building the grand narrative of the Jesuit mission in China and digging for hundreds of first-hand details from missionary letters. Then he was writing this book keeping his focus on the subject for years, looking out from his mother's-in-law patio over the rooftops of Lisbon.
The result of his considerable effort is a book that is well researched, systematic yet alive with all sorts of interesting detail from the life of Jesuit missionaries in China. The book is also beautifully printed with a very readable typeface on good paper.
The author has placed the history of the Jesuit mission in China in its wider context of the history of the Portuguese seaborne empire, the history of European-Chinese relations, and the history of Western missions in Asia. It was an ambitious research project, but the book is not too academic in its narrative style.
The explanation for the author's success is that he adopted an internal perspective, that is, he looked at the history of Jesuits in China from their own perspective, as recorded in their dispatches back to Europe. And yet, the author has been able to weave the details into a larger, systematic picture of the Jesuit missionary strategy and practice.
In the first part of the book, the author's central finding (he calls it "argument") is that the nature of the Jesuit mission in China was in the Jesuit Society's own image. This was reflected in the fact that the Jesuit Society exported its own organizational templates to build its mission church and lay activities in China.
The second part of the book analyzes various elements that combined to form the Jesuit mission and its communities of lay Chinese disciples. The author asks a very important question: How were the Jesuits able to imbue successive generations of their missionaries with the skills necessary for creating and sustaining a European-led mission church in a cultural context vastly different from Europe? He then describes the elements of Jesuit spirituality and pastoral techniques, a subject that has been analyzed by other historians as well.
But the author brings its most original intellectual effort to fruition in the last part of the book, in which he examines the interaction of Jesuit missionaries with their Chinese disciples. Of particular interest are his findings and conclusions about the intercultural transmission of early modern Catholic piety into the late imperial Chinese context.
He describes how Jesuits were actively proselytizing while moving about in urban and rural areas, using their rhetorical and theatrical skills to produce ritual gestures aimed to impress. Yes, Chinese did respond to this educational technique that were able to build Christian communities and foster group cohesion, regular devotions and regular sacraments. In other words, the missionaries clothed the Gospel and the Christian lifestyle in the Chinese cultural semantics - and succeeded.
The result were mixed European-Chinese confraternities of various types. It was this organizational solution and the spiritual demands on the confraternity members that made Jesuit devotional communities different from their Chinese counterparts of Confucian and Buddhist spirituality. The description of a Marian community in Peking, instituted in 1609, clearly reveals its twin European-Chinese sources of inspiration.
The book reads as a fascinating string of Jesuit first-hand reports about the difficulties of travel to and in China, cultural adaptation, proselytizing, devotional training, and community building. For example, Jesuit Michele Ruggieri complained that the Chinese had no alphabet "but as many letters as there are words." When he inquired how the Chinese themselves learned to read, he learned that, as he wrote, "even the natives spent fifteen years of their lives" in order to understand written texts.
At the end of his book, the author says that Jesuits were virtually the only Christian missionaries in China for almost a century and a half covered by this book. And after the Jesuits were forced to leave China, they left behind their churches, bones of Martino Martini and other Jesuit brothers who died in the mission field for Christ, and perhaps a spiritual legacy.
This book reminds me of the following Bible passage: "You will do well to send them on their way in a manner worthy of God. It was for the sake of the Name that they went out, receiving no help from the pagans." (The Bible, 3 John 1:6-7 NIV)
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