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Great-grandson of legendary missionary to China dies

by Jennifer Riley, Christian Post
Posted: Saturday, March 21, 2009, 17:47 (GMT)
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The great-grandson of British missionary James Hudson Taylor, the man foremost responsible for spreading Christianity in China, died in the early morning on Friday in Hong Kong.

Dr James Hudson Taylor III went to be with Christ at the age of 79, according to mission agency OMF International. He, like his great-grandfather, immersed himself in Chinese culture and shared the Gospel with the Chinese people. Taylor will be remembered as a mission statesman who was warm, a master storyteller, and someone won the respect of senior Chinese government officials and church leaders alike.

OMF International, formerly known as China Inland Mission and Overseas Missionary Fellowship, was founded by James Hudson Taylor in 1865. Taylor spent 51 years in China and the organisation he founded was responsible for bringing more than 800 missionaries to the country. The missionaries in turn began 125 schools, directly resulting in 18,000 Christian conversions.

James Hudson Taylor III was born on August 12, 1929, in China’s ancient city of Kaifeng, located in Henan province on the south bank of the Yellow River. His parents served as missionaries there for the Free Methodist Church.

Having been born and raised in China, Taylor “thought forms and literature like the Chinese themselves”, said OMF.

In 1935, his family briefly returned to the United States as tension flared between China and Japan. They went back to Kaifeng in 1936, and just a year later the Nanking massacre occurred as Japan began to invade more cities.

Under mounting danger, James Hudson Taylor II was able to secure a sea passage back to the United States in 1939. But Taylor one day asked the then nine-year-old James Hudson Taylor III if he would like to accompany him to the shipping office. It was not, as the younger Taylor expected, to pick up the tickets but to cancel them.

“His parents had resolved that this was no time for missionaries to leave China, instead they would move to the North West to train church leaders; the cost would be high as they would need to leave their four children as boarders at the China Inland Mission’s Chefoo School in eastern China,” said OMF in a statement, noting that this event left a deep impression on James Hudson Taylor III.

The parents and four children were separated for five years by 700 miles, during which time Japan bombed Pearl Harbour in December 1940. Taylor’s mother often recalled scenes from the Nanking massacre and questioned if they should return to the United States for the children’s safety.

But she read Matthew 6:33 and remembered her pastor in Virginia saying, “If you will take care of the things that are dear to God, He will take care of those that are dear to you.”



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