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Stella Girard VeenschotenAmoy Hill's Photos  Stella Girard VeenschotenAmoy Mission in 1877   Fifty Years in Amoy Story of Amoy Mission by Philip Wilson Pitcher Reformed Church of ChinaAmoyMission-1893

NARRATIVE OF EXPLORATORY VISIT TO CONSULAR CITIES OF CHINA
(1844, 1845, 1846)
BY REV. GEORGE SMITH, 1857 Scanned by Dr. Bill Brown

The Reformed Church of China (Amoy Mission, started by the Reformed Church of America (Dutch)  in Amoy Hea-mun (aka Ameouy )Chap 25 Departure to Amoy  The Reformed Church of China (Amoy Mission, started by the Reformed Church of America (Dutch)  in Amoy Hea-mun (aka Ameouy )Chap 26  Daily Occurrences at Amoy 
The Reformed Church of China (Amoy Mission, started by the Reformed Church of America (Dutch)  in Amoy Hea-mun (aka Ameouy )Chap 27 New Year Festivities  The Reformed Church of China (Amoy Mission, started by the Reformed Church of America (Dutch)  in Amoy Hea-mun (aka Ameouy )Chap 28  Visit Amoy High Mandarins  
The Reformed Church of China (Amoy Mission, started by the Reformed Church of America (Dutch)  in Amoy Hea-mun (aka Ameouy )Chap 29 Prevalance of Opium Smoking  The Reformed Church of China (Amoy Mission, started by the Reformed Church of America (Dutch)  in Amoy Hea-mun (aka Ameouy )Chap 30  Female Infanticide  
The Reformed Church of China (Amoy Mission, started by the Reformed Church of America (Dutch)  in Amoy Hea-mun (aka Ameouy )Chap 31 Daily Incidents at Amoy Cont'd  The Reformed Church of China (Amoy Mission, started by the Reformed Church of America (Dutch)  in Amoy Hea-mun (aka Ameouy )Chap 32  Mandarins Entertain Missionaries 
The Reformed Church of China (Amoy Mission, started by the Reformed Church of America (Dutch)  in Amoy Hea-mun (aka Ameouy )Chap 33 General Description of Amoy The Reformed Church of China (Amoy Mission, started by the Reformed Church of America (Dutch)  in Amoy Hea-mun (aka Ameouy )Chap 34 Depart Amoy for Canton; Opium Problem



CHAPTER XXXI. DAILY INCIDENTS AT AMOY, CONTINUED.
Chinese Missionary Meeting-Celebration of the Feast of Lantenrs-A Giant Specimen of Pyrotechnic Skill-Cessation of Holydays, and general Resumption of Business-The Question of the Ancestral Tablet Discussed-Chinese Bible-Class-Topics of Missionary Sermons-Original Illustrations of Chinese Hearers-Indirect Persecution of a Religious Inquirer.

Feb. 2d.-THIS being the first Monday in the month, the monthly missionary meeting, which had been established in the previous month, was held for the benefit of the Chinese catechumens. The six missionaries, their native teachers and domestics, with a few neighbors, amounting altogether to about thirty persons, assembled in the house of one of the missionaries. The missionary who presided commenced the proceedings with a prayer in Chinese, and then made a few remarks, intended as a comment on a portion of Scripture, Acts xiii. 42, to end. Tan seen-sang then read from a MS., which had been carefully prepared, with the previous help of one of the missionaries, a statement of the character and objects of their assembling together. Some maps, and representations of the sun, moon, and planets, were hung upon the wall, or lay on the table, to which continual reference was made. His range of topics embraced, 1. The object of this missionary meeting; 2. The time and circumstances of its institution; 3. A brief historical sketch of Protestant missions in China. The object of the meeting he stated to be the offering up of prayer for their own conversion, and that of the whole world. In reference to the time of its institution, he said, that about sixty years ago, some Christians in England, deeply impressed with the importance of propagating the Gospel of Jesus Christ, met together, and agreed to set apart the first Monday in every month for prayer for the Divine blessing on the missionary work. This monthly meeting had since been generally adopted among Christians in England and America. Till the present time the Chinese had been without the privilege of this missionary meeting. But the Gospel every where possessed the same value and importance. The Chinese could only obtain salvation in the same way as the people of other nations. On this account the missionary meeting was now established also at Amoy. In reference to past missionary efforts among the Chinese, he asserted that it was not because the doctrines of Jesus were not equally necessary for the Chinese that they had not been diffused abroad throughout China, but because the missionaries had been so few in number. Formerly, the emperor and the mandarins forbade missionaries from entering the Central Kingdom. In 1807, A. D. Morrison came to Canton, and was obliged to live in privacy to avoid observation, while Amoy, Foo-chow, Ningpo, Chusan, and Shanghai, were shut out from the light. But now, relying upon the aid of the Almighty and the Spirit of Jesus, the missionaries had been, during four years, promulgating the truths of Christianity; and they cherished the hope that the doctrines of the Gospel would continue to be more widely diffused, till all mankind should hear, repent, believe, and be saved.

A prayer was then offered by another missionary, in Chinese, after which Lin seen-sang read a paper previously composed, on the spread of the Gospel by missionary operations in the islands of the South Sea. He described the former condition of the inhabitants, who were idolaters, infanticides, murderers, and licentious, and contrasted with their former state their present altered character as a Christian people, their holy indignation at idol-worship, and their rapid growth in civilization. Many anecdotes and facts, illustrative of their former and present state, were extracted and translated for the occasion, from the published account of the lamented Williams.

Tan seen-sang again read a paper, containing a lecture on the missionary map of the world, which was exposed to their view, and frequently offered some comments of his own in the colloquial style. He first drew attention to the spherical form of the earth, of which the mechanical representation of the solar system, lying on a table, enabled them to form a tolerably correct idea. Then followed a description of the four great divisions of the earth, and of the principal nations in each, in reference to their size, population, and religion. Then followed more minute details of the religious systems professed by each. He then proceeded to state that the Bible declared that all these false religions were to be abolished, and that every knee would bow and confess Jesus to be the true Saviour, the Lord of all. For the consummation of this great end, Christ had commanded His disciples to go into the whole world, and preach the Gospel to every creature. In accordance with this command, missionaries had gone out from Christian land into almost every part of the world, and for four years past had been laboring in Amoy. But the labors of missionaries were confined to the five free ports of China, and they were prevented from going into the interior of the country. He then dwelt on his own obligation, and that of his countrymen who were present, to receive the Gospel and to carry it into every part of the interior, until the 400 millions who use the Chinese written character (i. e., China and its dependencies, Corea, Japan, Cochin China, &c.), should all be converted to Christianity. The meeting was closed with a prayer, in Chinese, by another of the missionary brethren.

Feb. 10th.-On this day the feast of lanterns was celebrated, which is the termination of the new-year holydays. Previously to our going into the streets to view the long row of illuminated shops and dwellings, a rustic from the opposite mainland of Lam-tai-boo paid Mr. Pohlman a visit, having received an invitation some weeks before in his native village. Some idols, and among them those of the three precious Budhs, which I had collected as specimens, were lying in that part of the room in which he was seated. Fearing that he would throw them down, I requested him to take care not to break them. He mistook my meaning, and immediately proceeded to worship them most reverently, bowing his head and folding hands to each of the idols, till roused to a sense of his folly by the laughter of the Chinese who were present. The poor man appeared somewhat surprised and astonished at the levity of his countrymen; but his enthusiasm for idolatry had evidently received an unexpected shock, for he soon joined in the laughter himself.

Toward sunset we explored the various streets and places of public resort, amid a continual discharge of fireworks, the frequent assemblage of play-actors, the noise of gambling-tables, the universal signs of feasting in the families, and a profuse display of lanterns of every imaginable pattern and design. Some were made of glass, others of glue, and some of paper, in the shape of birds, beasts, fishes, and dragons; or so arranged as to be carried round by a constant current of rarefied air, and representing different kinds of animals and junks in motion. In all the principal temples and in the houses of rich men huge candles were to be seen, some of which were two feet in circumference.

Bands of pipers, with sounds of gongs and cymbals, were to be heard in all directions. The principal table in each temple was covered with large cakes, made in the form of a tortoise, the sacred symbol of Budhist mythology. The burghers of each of the eighteen wards of the city levied a contribution of money to defray the expenses of fireworks in their respective districts, and vied with each other in imparting a grandeur of scale and an imposing effect to the occasion. Rich men also defrayed, from their personal resources, the expense of some pyrotechnic design, which was exhibited in the vicinity of their own dwellings. We entered the south gate of the citadel too late to see a large firework, representing a lion, which had just been discharged before the admiral's palace, and were only in time to meet the crowds moving off to the scene of the next similar display. After retracing our steps from the military parade-ground, abutting on the eastern wall, we passed through the western gate into the outer city. On our way we came to several immense bonfires, the flames of which rose several feet in height. The crowd were eagerly engaged in leaping across the fire, in order to obtain the benefit of good luck, amid the sound of gongs and the plaudits of the people. We were attracted, by sounds of music, to an open space in front of a neighboring temple, where there were several other such heaps of wood, coal, and other materials, ready to be lighted. Here the crowd rapidly increased, being from time to time joined by a procession of additional pipers, with lofty poles hung around with flaming crackers. Here the usual signs of feasting and merriment were to be seen. In a gallery erected near the temple some Chinese ladies were sitting to view the pageantry and fireworks below. Some idols, and the usual apparatus of incense and offerings, lay on a table in the open space of ground. We sat for several minutes on this table, till at length two chairs were brought to us through the crowd from some adjoining houses, and we were politely invited to sit on them. We were about to decline the civility, and to keep our former seat, till a Chinese acquaintance whispered to us that we had better accept the offer, as perhaps the feelings of his countrymen would be shocked at our sitting on the idol-table. The crowd then formed a little circle around us, and listened to my companion as he explained to them the object of missionaries in coming to China, and the nature of their message to the souls of the Chinese. A few of the more ignorant, finding that we were professedly devout men, wanted us to salute and worship the idols. This of course drew on them the remonstrance of the missionary, and the laughter of some of their own countrymen, who had previously become acquainted with the objections of Christians to idol-worship. Soon afterward we were joined by another missionary and his wife, the former of whom delivered an address to a few tens of people who were collected around us. The missionary's wife made her way to a part of the temple where the women were separated off within an inclosure. As soon as they discovered her they at first affected to be afraid; but afterward, on her addressing them in the local dialect of Amoy, they became very friendly, and she remained for some time among them.

We proceeded from this spot, about half a mile, to another open space before a temple. A number of persons conducted us on our way, and continued to ask many questions during the time. Here the same array of lanterns and crowds of people were again to be seen. Prepara-tions were Boon observed for discharging a large firework, which formed a giant specimen of pyrotechnic skill. A long pole was erected, fifty feet in height, hung round with cases of rockets and other combustibles. On its being lighted at the bottom there was a rapid succession of squibs, roman-candles, guns, and rockets, which illuminated the sky to a great distance with their igneous masses. After this minor display a house suddenly dropped, with its inmates, from one of the arms of the pole. The surrounding fireworks, far and near, were so arranged as to pour in their shot and completely riddle the house. A volley of lesser combustibles suddenly terminated in a beautiful cluster of grapes, which lasted for some time, and shed a deep blue light on the houses and walls for some distance around. A shower of golden rain was shortly after followed by an umbrella of fire, which suddenly flew open, amid the loud cheers of the spectators. Soon after, a human figure was impetuously carried round in a circular motion, and received the discharge of the surrounding crackers. An oblique shower of gold and silver rain followed, after which some rockets pursued their flaming track along the air, in a horizontal direction. These were succeeded by rockets, shot perpendicularly to a great height. The display occupied a quarter of an hour, and was concluded amid the boisterous plaudits of old and young.

A general movement now took place among the crowd to the temple which we had first visited, and we moved thither ourselves, in the hope of seeing a celebrated lion firework, of an expensive kind. But as we afterward discovered that it was not to be discharged till after midnight in the third watch, and the crowd was also gradually re-enforced in large numbers from the other wards, we deemed it advisable to retrace our steps, and arrived at our residence at eleven P.M. In the streets through which we passed, every temple was gaudily illuminated, and the services of the priests, both of the Taou and the Budhist sects, appeared to be in high request. In some parts a phantasmagoria was exhibited, in which acting figures were represented by means of a magic lantern, on a transparent substance resembling tissue paper. The actions of the figures, even to the motion of the hand and the nod of the head, were accommodated to the speeches delivered by a concealed spokesman, who directed the whole apparatus behind the scene. In one street a theatrical stage, with its players acting some scene of imperial grandeur, crossed our way; and we had no alternative but that of creeping on our hands and knees, for a distance of twenty yards, on the pavement under the stage to the other end. Here several friendly hands were held out to assist us in regaining our erect position.

After this national feast of lanterns, the ordinalry business of the people, which, since the first day of the new year had only been partially resumed, now recommenced in earnest. The penalties against gambling thus far relaxed, either by law or by that which in China is equivalent, the prescriptive right of custom, were now supposed to regain their force; and the idle crowds of pleasure-hunters heartily re-engaged in the bustle and toil of daily business with renewed energy and industry. From this time the idle show of pageantry terminated, and every thing wore the absorbing appearance of gain and commerce.

Idols and Baptism
Feb. llth.-At the close of a religious service, held by the missionaries, two questions were submitted for discussion, in reference to the putting away of idols and ancestral tablets from the house of every candidate for Christian baptism, viz.,

1. Could an open renunciation of idol-worship, although the idols remained in the house out of compliance with the superstitious fears of relatives, be deemed a sufficient test of Christian sincerity?

2. How far was retaining the ancestral tablets permissible, as mere tokens of respect for the departed dead, without any worship being offered?

In regard to the first question, it was the unanimous opinion of the missionaries, that wherever the convert had authority in a household, it must be made a sine qua non that idol-worship not only be renounced, but that the emblems of idolatry be destroyed or expelled from the house.
One of the two old men who were about to receive baptism, although the head of a family, was virtually destitute of his proper authority, from the wickedness of his adopted son, and the assumption of his sister-in-law and other relatives. He had, therefore, decided on leaving the house which they occupied in common, and removing, with his wife and children, to another house, where he would have the power of abolishing idols. This was deemed sufficient.

In regard to the second question there was more difficulty, although on this, also, there was unanimity of opinion, in making it incumbent on every candidate for baptism, not only to renounce the worship of the ancestral tablet, but also to remove it out of sight, and away from its usual place of juxtaposition with the idol.

The following facts will afford help to the leader in understanding this subject. Popular superstition assigns three souls to each person; one of which, at death, passes into the world of spirits. The second dwells at the tomb of the deceased, into which, as its new abode, it is formally inducted at the funeral, by the ceremony of drawing some little ribbons, or a flag, at the end of a stick. The third is supposed to occupy the ancestral tablet. This consists of an erect wooden plane, about twelve inches in height, fixed on a stand, and ornamentally inscribed with the names and date of the deceased. It is carefully treasured in some common temple of ancestors, in those cases in which a family possesses sufficient wealth to have such a temple, or in the family-dwelling, in the case of poorer families. In the latter case it is placed in juxtaposition with the house-hold gods, and receives the offerings of incense, eatables, gilt-paper money, and miniature garments, in common with the idols. One of the first acts of promoted scholars is to revisit these symbols of ancestral worth, and to adore the spirits of the departed dead. The worship of the ancestral tablet is the only custom of a strictly religious kind universally observed by the literary as well as by the uneducated portion of the community. It forms, also, one of the most formidable barriers to the progress of the missionary work. The Jesuits foresaw this difficulty in former times, and endeavored to render the transition from Confucianism to Christianity as easy as possible, by tolerating the adoration of these tablets as a purely civil rite, destitute of religious meaning. The Dominican and Franciscan missionaries,

[May not this pagan superstition throw some light, in Isaiah iii., 20, on the expression ¡°tablets;" or, as it stands literally in the marginal rendering, ¡°houses of the soul?"]

who subsequently arrived from Rome, exposed the flagrant inconsistency of amalgamating Paganism with Christianity. The flame of discord raged so fiercely for nearly a century, between the rival sects of Popish missionaries in China, that successive legates were sent from Rome to allay their feuds, and mediate between the conflicting parties. One Pope reversed the decrees of his predecessor, and his bulls were again, in turn, stultified by his successor. At last the influence of the Jesuits at the Papal court failed to avert the unfavorable decision of the Pontiff. They now excited the emperor Kang-he to resent the supposed interference of the Pope with his own imperial authority in the government of China. The Papal legate was insulted and imprisoned. The Jesuits were his appointed keepers at Macao; and as long as the name of Cardinal de Tournon stands on the page of history, so long will the unparalleled dissensions of the Romish missionales in China belie the pretensions and expose the theory of a visible unity of the universal church centering in a sovereign Pontiff enthroned on the Seven Hills. Kang-he's successor, Yung-ching, deemed it expedient to terminate these dissensions by banishing all the sects of Romanist missionaries alike. Thus, after nearly a century of religious feuds, they were expelled froom the scenes of their former influence and power; and the native flocks of Roman Catholic converts have since been sustained by European missionaries entering the country in disguise.
The propriety of permitting the retention of ancestral tablets, as mere memorials of the dead, was, on this occasion, decided against, for the following reasons:

1. Even among the old Romish missionaries only the Jesuits would allow the worship of the tablets to be retained as a mere civil rite.

2. The Chinese pay to the tablet more reverence and worship than to the idol.

3. Its retention would open a door for the too easy admission of converts, and the admixture of pagan superstitions with Christian doctrines.

4. Its retention would also afford an occasion to the heathen Chinese of taunting the converts with insincerity, their usual weapon of offense.

5. The Chinese, after hearing the declarations of missionaries on the sin of idolatry, frequently ask questions respecting the lawfulness of worshiping ancestral tablets, as if a close connection bound the two acts together in their mind.

6. The unsparing denunciations of the Old Testament against every species of idolatry-the breaking of idolatrous relics in pieces-the destruction of the very trees of the groves-the beating to powder of the materials desecrated by idol-worship-allow no compromise with this superstition, which of all others is most firmly enthroned in the national mind-the demonolatry of ancestors.

Neither of the two old men adverted to are placed in any difficulty in the matter of the tablets, as Amoy is not their native place, and the ancestral tablets are, therefore, in the keeping of other relatives at a distance.

Sunday, Feb. 15th.-One of my missionary friends held his usual Sabbath-evening meeting, for family worship and examination of his Chinese neighbors and domestics in the subjects of instruction, which they had heard at the mission chapels and hospital during the day. Only four persons attended, which was about half the number usually present. The object of the meeting was to exercise their minds, by friendly conversation, on the religious topics brought before them in the different missionary sermons, and to invite them freely to state their difficulties and objections. In order to give an idea of the character of the missionary addresses-of the nature of the scriptural subjects discussed-of the capacity of the Chinese for religious instruction-and of the beneficial influence likely to be exerted over them by such friendly and familiar intercourse-a short sketch is given of the proceedings on the occasion of this evening's family service. After a short address, the missionary who conducted the meeting requested a youth, named Ek-ha, a servant in his house, to explain the subjects which he had heard in a sermon at nine A.M. In reply, he proceeded to give an analysis of the discourse, which was in form, and often in words, strictly accurate. The text was, ¡°Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sins of the world." He said that the preacher's address referred-I. To the reasons why our Savior is called a lamb: 1. On account of his meekness and submission; 2. On account of his purity; and, 3. On account of his becoming a ransom for sin, more particularly stating the method of the Old Testament sacrifices for sin, all of which had reference to the one great sacrifice of Jesus on the cross. He said that the preacher adverted-II. To the duty of mankind in beholding the Lamb of God. This was illustrated by the figure of a feast, with a table spread out and bountifully provided with food. The guests are invited to come; they look, but this does not satisfy, they must partake. So Christ must be received by faith; He must not only be looked upon, but be received into the heart, and believed on to the salvation of the soul. This was stated with much readiness and ease of manner.

The others afterward volunteered their simple explanation of what they had heard, evidently interested in the subject, and sometimes correcting each other without the slightest embarrassment. Chan-ba, an adult servant, gave an account of a sermon which he had heard at 10 A.M., on the subject of regeneration, founded on the coming of Nicodemus to Jesus by night. Ching-han, also, a medical student, explained his recollections of the same sermon; each of them alternating their description of the doctrines which they had heard. They stated that the condition of the soul before conversion was that of death; and that the change of the soul on its conversion resembled that of a new birth. They then referred to the illustrations of the preacher taken from the birth of an infant; its new sensations, breathing, pulse, and the great care of the parent. They then dwelled on the more marked character of those evidences of life in a new-born soul, which undergoes so radical a change in its affections and desires. One of them said, in reply to the questions of the missionary, that conversion of the soul was a gradual change. His views were corrected, and the distinction was explained to him between the terms justification and sanctification; the former being the forgiveness of sin by God, as the immediate consequence of a living faith in Christ; the latter being a gradual and progressive renewal of the heart by divine grace.

They afterward gave an account of a sermon which they had heard at 3 P.M., from Luke, xii., 15-21, on the parable of the rich fool. Particular allusion was made to that portion of it which stated a man's life not to "consist in the abundance of the things which he possesseth." Life denoted happiness, and true happiness was not to be found in wealth. They were asked if perfect happiness were to be found in this world. Chan-ha said that happiness was progressive, and that a Christian's happiness would be complete in heaven, volunteering an illustration of his own from the literary degrees, and comparing earthly happiness to the degrees of sew-tsai and keu-jin, and the happiness of heaven to the higher degree of tsin-sze.

Hok-ha, the ropemaker, on being questioned, replied, with a sorrowful look, that he had not attended any religious service during the day. He feelingly alluded to his uncle's persecution, and the taunts of his neighbors concerning his connection with foreigners. His uncle threatened him with discharge from his employment unless he worked during the whole Sabbath, and desisted from attending the missionary services. The neighbors said that he preferred the foreigners to the Chinese, and that he was a secret informer to the strangers. He was exhorted by the ministers to lay his troubles before his Heavenly Father; but he continued to dwell on the consequences to himself, as well as to his mother and his wife, of disobedience to his uncle's commands. He was much excited, but gradually grew calm under the kind advice and solace which he received. He said that he had hoped sometimes that be loved Jesus: he often prayed to Him; but he felt that he was not prepared for heaven, because he had not received the "new heart."

A suitable prayer closed the meeting, the Chinese all kneeling.

The initials
L. M. S. = London Missionary Society.
A. B. C. F. M. = American Board for Conduction Foreign Missions
A. B. B. F. M. = American Baptist Board for Conducting Foreign Missions.
Am. Ep. Ch. = American Episcopal Church
A. G. A. B. = American General Assembly¡¯s Board
C. M. S. = Church (of England) Missionary Society
E. B. M. S. = English Baptist Missionary Society.


A Narrative of an Exploratory Visit to each of the Consular Cities of China, and to the Islands of Hong Kong and Chusan, in Behalf of the Church Missionary Society, in the years 1844, 1845, 1846, by the Rev. George Smith, M.A., of Magdalen Hall, Oxford, and Late Missionary in China

New York, Harper and Brothers Publishers, 52 Cliff Street, 1847

Scanned by Dr. Bill Brown Xiamen University MBA Center

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List of Amoy Mission Reformed Church of America (Dutch) Missionaries in ChinaRCA Miss'ry List
Reformed Church of China's Amoy Mission 1877 Report by DuryeaAmoyMission-1877
Fifty Years in Amoy Story of Amoy Mission by Philip Wilson Pitcher Reformed Church of ChinaAmoyMission-1893
David Abeel Father of the Amoy Mission, and China's first education for girls and women
Abeel, David
Henry and Sarah Beltman, Amoy Mission  1902-1928?Beltman
Boot Family of the Amoy Mission,South Fujian ChinaBoot Family
Ruth Broekema Amoy Mission 1921 1951Broekema, Ruth
Henry and Sarah Beltman, Amoy Mission  1902-1928?Bruce, Elizabeth
William Burns, Scottish Missionary to China, visited Amoy Burns, Wm.
John Caldwell China Coast Family Caldwells
Henry and Kate Depree Amoy Mission  1907 to 1948DePree
Dr. John Otte and Hope Hospital Develder, Wally
   Dr. John Otte and Hope Hospital Wally's Memoirs!
Douglas CarstairsDouglas, Carstairs
Elihu Doty RCA Missionary to Amoy ChinaDoty, Elihu
Rev William Rankin Duryea, D.D. The Amoy Mission 1877Duryea, Wm. Rankin
Joseph and Marion Esther
Esther,Joe & Marion
Katherine Green Amoy Mission  1907 to 1950Green, Katherine
Karl Gutzlaff Missionary to ChinaGutzlaff, Karl
Stella Girard Veenschoten
Hills,Jack & Joann
. Stella Girard Veenschoten
Hill's Photos.80+
..Stella Girard VeenschotenKeith H.
Dr. John Otte and Hope Hospital Homeschool
Richard and Johanna Hofstra of the Amoy MIssion ChinaHofstras
Tena Holkeboer Amoy Mission, Hope HospitalHolkeboer, Tena
Dr. Clarence Holleman and his wife Ruth Eleanor Vanden Berg Holleman were RCA missionaries on AmoyHolleman, M.D.
Hope Hospital Amoy  on Gulangyu (Kulangsu, Koolongsoo, etc.)Hope Hospital
Stella Girard Veenschoten
Johnston Bio
Rev. and Mrs. Joralman of the Amoy MissionJoralmans
Wendell and Renske Karsen
Karsen, W&R
Edwin and Elizabeth Koeppe Family, Amoy Mission ChinaKoeppes, Edwin&Eliz.
Dr. Clarence Holleman and his wife Ruth Eleanor Vanden Berg Holleman were RCA missionaries on AmoyKip, Leonard W.
William Vander Meer  Talmage College Fukien Christian UniversityMeer Wm. Vander
Margaret Morrison, Amoy Mission  1892-1931Morrison, Margaret
John Muilenberg Amoy MissionMuilenbergs
Jean Neinhuis, Amoy Mission Hope Hospital Gulangyu or Ku-long-sooNeinhuis, Jean
Theodore Oltman M.D. Amoy Missionary DoctorOltman, M.D.
Reverend Alvin Ostrum, of the Amoy Mission, Fujian ChinaOstrum, Alvin
Dr. John Otte and Hope Hospital Otte,M.D.Stella Girard VeenschotenLast Days
Henry and Mary Voskuil Amoy MissionPlatz, Jessie
Reverend W. J. Pohlman, Amoy MIssion, Fujian ChinaPohlman, W. J.
Henry and Dorothy Poppen, RCA Missionaries to Amoy China Amoy Mission Project 1841-1951Poppen, H.& D.
Reverend Daniel Rapalje, Amoy Mission, Fujian ChinaRapalje, Daniel
Herman and Bessie Renskers Amoy Mission  1910-1933Renskers
Dr. John Otte and Hope Hospital Talmage, J.V.N.

Lyman and Rose Talman Amoy Mission  1916 to 1931Talman, Dr.
Stella Girard VeenschotenVeenschotens
. Nelson VeenschotenHenry V.Stella Girard VeenschotenStella V.
. Dr. John Otte and Hope Hospital Girard V.
Jeanette Veldman, Amoy Mission ChinaVeldman, J.
Henry and Mary Voskuil Amoy MissionVoskuil, H & M
Jean Walvoord Amoy Mission  1931-1951Walvoord
A. Livingston WarnshuisWarnshuis, A.L.
Nellie Zwemer Amoy Mission  1891-1930Zwemer, Nellie
"The MIssion Cemetery of Fuh-Chau" / Foochow by Rev.J.W. Wiley , M.D. (also mispelled Wylie )Fuh-chau Cemetery
Dr. John Otte and Hope Hospital City of Springs
   (Quanzhou, 1902!!)
Xiamen Churches Protestant Catholic Seventh Day Adventist Amoy Mission Missionaries Abeel
XM Churches
Xiamen Churches Protestant Catholic Seventh Day Adventist Amoy Mission Missionaries AbeelChurch History Xiamen International Christian Fellowship Expat Nondenominational interdenominational
Opium wars in Xiamen, Fujian China.  Opium Wars
Amoy Mission Bibliography A.M. Bibliography
Xiamen YMCA and YWCAYMCA Volunteer!
Xiamen International Christian FellowshipXICF FellowshipIslamic Muslim Mosques Ashab Quanzhou Damascus Fuzhou Xiamen
Xiamen and Fujian Buddhist Taoist Confucian Temples Mazu Manichean Hindu IslamicTemplesXiamen and Fujian Temples and Mosques  Buddhism Confucian Taoism Taoist Buddhism Mazu Matsu Meizhou IslandXiamen and Fujian  Mosques Islamic Muslim Ashab Mosque Quanzhou Fuzhou  Mohammed Disciples DamascusMosques
Xiamen and Fujian Buddhist Taoist Confucian Temples Mazu Manichean Hindu IslamicChrist in Chinese 
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