Summary: The first Jesuits in
China
1338
[Death of Giovanni di
Monte Carvino, first archbishop of Mongol Beijing (Khanbalik)]
1534
Ignatius Loyola founds the Jesuit order with the objective
of
‘converting the
pagans’
1549
St. Francis Xavier, a Spanish Jesuit, lands in western Japan
In this
time, Macao serves as a trading
port to the Portuguese for their trade between China
and Japan
1583
Matteo Ricci (1552-1610) enters China
in Guangdong province, settles
first in Nanchang (1595; Jesuits dress as
Buddhist monks), then in
Nanjing, after 1601 in Beijing. (In the 19th century Ricci is revered as the deity
of Chinese clockmakers, Bodhisattva Ricci
(Li Matou
pusa). The Jesuits serve the emperors as mathematicians,
astronomers, cartographers, interpreters, painters, and musicians.
Missions
are established in Zhaoqing, Shaozhou, Nanxiong (Guangdong
province) in the south, in Ganzhou and Nanchang in Jiangxi province (SE), in Nanjing, Huai’an,
and Jinan.
By the end of the Ming Dynasty they had spread to almost all provinces, but
most of their missions concentrated in the lower Yangzi
area and in Fujian
province in Eastern China.
Though
the emperors were impressed by the scientific knowledge and the European inventions
introduced to them by the Jesuits, the Christian religion and the hierarchical
institution of the church did not appeal to them. Christian communities in
the cities seemed to be a threat to public order. On the philosophical level
the Chinese “were unfamiliar with the category of the transcendent because
of their basic concept of an immanent order that was at the same time cosmic
and human, natural and social.” (Jacques Gernet,
A History of Chinese Civilization. Cambridge:
Cambridge University
Press 1982, p. 454-455).
Major
points of confrontation between the Jesuits, the Chinese authorities, and
Chinese converts:
- The Jesuits initially (and the
Vatican
throughout their active period as missionaries) did not tolerate the ancestor
cult.
- Converts could not have concubines.
- The Jesuits did not tolerate
statues related to Chinese cults.
- The Jesuits were accused of creating
secret societies when they held secret meetings for mass with members of
the lay community.
- They were also accused of spying
for the Japanese and the pirates at the coast.
- The Christian belief focused
on a rebellious person who had been convicted as a criminal by the local
authorities.
- Matteo
Ricci in one of the theological disputes held
in Nanjing Ricci eloquently but in an arrogant
manner ridiculed the famous Buddhist teacher, Zhuhong
who shortly after the discussion died. It was believed by some that Zhuhong
died of a broken heart because Ricci had mocked the concepts of ‘releasing
life’ and vegetarianism and reincarnation.