Secrets of Watchman Nee: His Life, His Teachings, His
Influence (2005)
by Dana Roberts
by Dana Roberts
At first when I saw this
book, I really thought it is about Watchman Nee’s life, teaching and influence,
his chronological biography and what are the secrets of his effective ministry
(I borrowed from our church’s library). But no… it is more about a “thoughtful, insightful analysis” of the
‘real’ Watchman Nee and his ‘secret’ life. In the beginning, the author
presents this book as pro-Watchman Nee. But after I read the first chapter, I realized
that what he said about “constructive
criticism” is actually a cultural and theological attack. This remind me of
a minister I know personally who always point that other churches is wrong, and
in the end, causes people to stumble over small issues. It is not about major
theological issue at all!
Dana Roberts is entitled
to his opinion and it is okay if he disagree with Watchman Nee's teachings (I think
he should retitled it as A Critic on
Watchman Nee’s Teachings). But I take issue with the extremely deceptive
presentation of his book. Anyone looking at the book will be tricked into
thinking the writer is fairly presenting Nee's teachings but it’s not. I love
books published by Bridge-Logos but this one is a disappointment.
First chapter, Roberts
deal with these questions: “What training
and life experiences prepared [Nee] to lead others on the way to spiritual
maturity? Is the Bible, inspired by the Holy Spirit, the sole compass of his
faith? Or has some less accurate device detoured him away from the Christian
‘walk in newness of life’ (Romans 6:4)? Are his ideas pragmatic? In other
words, do they really do what he says they will do?” Chapter two deal with
the content of Nee’s theology and the last three chapters are about the ideas
of Nee’s theology, namely, the Word of God, anthropology and ecclesiology. Here
is the contents of this book:
- Watchman Nee and the Work of the Little Flock
- Introduction to Nee’s Literature
- The Word and Its Ministry
- Nee’s Anthropology: The Spiritual Man and His Life
- The Church and Its Work
- Summary and Conclusions
I read this book rather
quickly and to me chapter 3 is worth reading and all of Nee’s quotations are
good. Even some of Roberts’s thoughts are fantastic. For example, his
observation about two categories of avid readers of Watchman Nee is accurate:
1) They love God and want to know more about the one they love; and 2) They
love God and want to be right at all times [These two categories can also be
apply to the so called young-and-reckless Calvinists today]. But overall, I
still think it is a disgraceful to Watchman Nee rather than “constructive criticism.” Roberts have
the tendency to make bad rumours about Nee equivalent to fact (that also of
Witness Lee). Of course he try to be fair and nonbiased but throughout this
book I can sense his ‘persuasive’ rejection to Nee’s theology.
Watchman Nee is a faithful
servant of God, but not without controversy and mistakes. All of God’s servants
are not perfect, except One. Abraham, Moses and David slipped up. Even Peter
had failings as a Christian leader. We all make errors. Martin Luther, John
Calvin, Spurgeon make mistakes. If you try hard, you can find a lot in me… This
“constructive criticism” is not
constructive at all. It is a destructive of Nee’s reputation. Until proven
unfaithful and theologically heretic, we should protect and back up one another
– brothers and sisters in Christ.
THINK BIG.
START SMALL. GO DEEP.
No comments:
Post a Comment