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Topic: Watchman Nee


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  Watchman Nee - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Watchman Nee (倪柝聲 pinyin: Ní Tuòshēng;, 1903-1972) became a Christian in 1920 at the age of 17 and began writing in the same year.
Nee’s father was Ni Weng-Sioe (W. Ni), born in 1877, and the fourth of nine boys.
In 1952, Watchman Nee was imprisoned by the Chinese government for his faith.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Watchman_Nee   (1202 words)

  
 God's Dynamic Salvation Work
Watchman Nee was thus able to glean all the profitable scriptural points and spiritual principles from throughout church history and synthesize them into his vision and practice of the Christian life and of the church life.
Watchman Nee went on to see that the church as the Body of Christ was simply the enlargement, expansion, and expression of the resurrected Christ.
Watchman Nee was arrested by the Communists in March, 1952 for his professed faith in Christ as well as his leadership among the local churches.
www.gloryofhiscross.org /apostle11.htm   (3525 words)

  
 The Watchman Nee Section - Shelf Three - Titles P - Z
Watchman Nee takes up the various problems of life, such as tears, the temper, our tongue, and others, showing how they can be transformed by the grace of God into values of eternal life.
Watchman Nee discusses the Bible's teachings on prayer that is capable of binding on earth what has been bound in heaven and releasing on earth what has been released in heaven.
Watchman Nee experienced such a close intimacy with the Lord that many remarkable insights into triumphant Christian living were revealed to him by the Holy Spirit.
www.gnte.org /scriptorium/watchman3.htm   (1012 words)

  
 Watchman Nee's Life and Ministry
Watchman Nee was arrested during the Communist Cultural Revolution in March 1952 and was judged, falsely condemned, and unjustly sentenced to fifteen years imprisonment in 1956.
Watchman Nee was led by the Lord to remain in Mainland China in spite of the threat of Communism, and to sacrifice everything for the Lord's work there.
In May, 1989, the ashes of Watchman Nee and his wife were transferred to and buried in "The Christian Cemetery" in Shiangshan in the city of Soochow of Kiangsu province.
www.watchmannee.org /life-ministry.html   (3697 words)

  
 Watchman Nee - A Brief Biography - www.livingstream.com
Shortly after Watchman Nee was saved, he began to love the Lord and was intensely burdened to preach the gospel to his schoolmates and countrymen in season and out of season.
Watchman Nee was not only an excellent student of the Bible; he was also a studious reader of spiritual books.
The kind of divine healing Watchman Nee experienced was not merely a miraculous act of God; it was the working out of the resurrection life through the procedure of grace by the exercise of living faith in the faithful Word of God for edification and growth of life.
www.livingstream.com /watchman_nee_bio.html   (888 words)

  
 The Watchman Nee Section - Shelf Two - Titles G - N
In this book, Watchman Nee unveils the four most meaningful portrayals of the church: Eve in Genesis 2, the wife in Ephesians 5, the woman in Revelation 12, and the bride in Revelation 21 and 22.
Watchman Nee lays before us the eternal plan of God, which is, to sum up all things in Christ that Christ might have the preeminence.
Although Watchman Nee's writings are famous for their deep spiritual insight, brother Nee also dealt with the practical side of the Christian life in a substantial fashion.
www.gnte.org /scriptorium/watchman2.htm   (969 words)

  
 Apologetics research resources on religious cults and sects - Watching Out For Watchman Nee
Nee was born Nee Shi-Tsu in November 1903.
Nee continued to read widely and when Barber exposed him to the writings of John Darby, he found the basis for his ecclesiology, or thoughts on the church.
Nee, a factory owner, was seen as an imperialist and eventually was jailed.
www.apologeticsindex.org /n01.html   (1264 words)

  
 Watchman Nee & Witness Lee
The late Watchman Nee was the Chinese founder and leader of the assembly-type movement named after the Brethren The Little Flock hymnal--although it had no connection with the Plymouth Brethren movement.
Nee sought to pattern the assemblies after the New Testament, and they turned out to be a combination of his extreme views, Darby's closed views, Muller's open views, and T. Austin-Sparks' moderate views.
WATCHMAN NEE BOOKS -- Since the principal mode of ministering the growth truths today is literature, it may be helpful for us to examine some of the contents of several books produced by one of the better known "deeper life" leaders.
withchrist.org /MJS/neelee.htm   (3542 words)

  
 Witness Lee & Watchman Nee: Entering into the Work
Watchman Nee also related to Witness Lee the history of the Lord’s move with him from the year he was saved up to that day.
Watchman Nee also helped Witness Lee grasp the living way to know the Bible.Witness Lee had been helped by the Brethren to know the Bible in the way of letters, but he helped Witness Lee know the Bible in the way of life.
Watchman Nee’s third overcomer conference was held in Shanghai in January 1934.
www.witness-lee-watchman-nee.org /relationship/work.html   (2403 words)

  
 Who was Watchman Nee? of the Little Flock
Watchman Nee (born Nov. 4, 1903) has done the most accurate, comprehensive work to date on partial rapture in 1) King and the Kingdom of Heaven, 2) "Come, Lord Jesus", and 3) Aids to Revelation.
I believe W. Nee had the highest IQ of any Christian that ever lived (there is no other that I know of who was higher, accurate and truer in the Word who was mere man; do you know any other?) and definitely the deepest working of the Holy Spirit according to his writings.
Others have come along and tried to build on what Nee wrote for their own purposes, having done so falsely, legalistically, and actually changed his words and meaning, by publishing books to that end said to be from Nee.
www3.telus.net /trbrooks/WNwho.htm   (1675 words)

  
 Watchman Nee and the House Church Movement in China
Watchman Nee was only one of many players in the drama of the struggle for the heart of the Chinese people, but he was one of the most interesting.
Watchman Nee was born Ni Shu-tsu or Henry Ni in Swatow, November 4, 1903.
Watchman Nee, probably exceeded Wesley in terms of the actual size of his ministry, even though the duration of his ministry was only a little over one-half as long, and was carried out under circumstances including an 11 year-long world war.
www.housechurch.org /miscellaneous/mccallum_nee.html   (10431 words)

  
 Books by author: Watchman Nee (www.gaychurch.org)
Nee shares that our problem is we try to keep the life of the Spirit protected inside us all the while God is trying to shatter the shell to let it escape.
Watchman Nee spent much of his life in prison for preaching Jesus Christ in China.
Watchman Nee's Normal Christian Life talked mainly about the fact of redemption and justification based on the book of Romans (especially Chapter 6, 7, and 8), and a little bit about Christ person.
gaychurch.org /Book_store/by_author/nee_watchman.htm   (1140 words)

  
 WATCHING OUT FOR WATCHMAN NEE An article about the influences upon Watchman Nee's teaching. Believersweb.org
Nee admitted that in his writings on the book of Revelation, he depended on a book from Barber's library by Robert Gonett that teaches a partial rapture.
The teachings that developed over Nee's lifetime and out of his encounters with these women and the teachings they directed him to are dangerous to Christians seeking clear guidelines to follow.
Nee's presuppositions are suspect in light of the Word of God.
www.believersweb.org /view.cfm?ID=722   (1171 words)

  
 Watchman Nee full line of books   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Watchman Nee believed that the cross of Christ is the sole light to enlighten the coming darkness and that the Church must return to the cross which is the firm foundation of God.
Watchman Nee presents, not as proof of the story of creation, but to attest to the fact that God is greater than science this Biblical interpretation of creation.
Watchman Nee presents the meaning, the means and the manifestation of the salvation of the soul: self denial, the cross and the kingdom.
watchman-nee.com /index.html   (4207 words)

  
 Amazon.ca: Normal Christian Church Life:: Books: Watchman Nee   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Watchman Nee, in his exhaustive study of the Bible and a lifetime of labor in the Lord, the last twenty years of which were spent in a Chinese Communist concentration camp, was very clear that there is but one Body of Christ in the universe.
Watchman Nee is also very clear that if a teaching causes division in the Body, it must be put out.
Nee teaches that so long as we hold to the fundamental essentials of our faith- those things which we were required to acknowledge in order to believe in Christ; namely the atonement work of Christ and His divinity.
www.amazon.ca /Normal-Christian-Church-Life-Watchman/dp/0870830279   (2056 words)

  
 Contending for the Faith: Watchman Nee, Witness Lee, Local Churches
Watchman Nee’s ministry of spiritual nourishment and his unique ability to expound the Scripture along with his firm testimony in the face of persecution has been recognized by most Christians as a significant contribution to the Christian faith in the twentieth century.
Watchman Nee’s ministry was not only nourishing, it was also prophetic in the sense that he, among others, was calling for Christians to come back to the roots of biblical Christianity.
Witness Lee was Watchman Nee’s closest co-worker in China and was sent by Nee to carry their vision and practice to the world outside of China.
www.contendingforthefaith.org   (1130 words)

  
 TheSchoolOfChrist.Org | Drowning In The Sea Of Self
Watchman Nee relates a story from one of his experiences as a Christian leader in Communist China.
Brother Nee knew that only one man was experienced enough at swimming to provide some assistance, and he turned to him for help.
Nee concluded, and we also conclude, that just as a drowning man cannot be saved until he stops struggling, so must all who would be saved by Christ.
www.watchman.net /articles/drowning.html   (926 words)

  
 Watchman Nee
Watchman Nee was born Ni Shu-tsu in Swatow, China, November 4, 1903.
During the 1920's Nee was based in Foochow and preached the gospel to surrounding villages.
In January of 1956 Nee was brought up on false charges and sentenced to 20 years in prison.
members.shaw.ca /homechristian/docs/nee.htm   (235 words)

  
 A Brief Biography of Watchman Nee
Watchman Nee was a native of a province in Southern China.
Because of his faith, Nee was imprisoned in 1952 and remained so for the last twenty years of his life.
Watchman Nee's experience of finding Christ happened when he was a successful, young man. He was intelligent.
www.voidspace.org.uk /spiritual/nee_testimony.shtml   (1645 words)

  
 Religious Movements Homepage: The Local Church, The Little Flock, Watchman Nee and Witness Lee
Brief History: Nee, who was raised in a Christian setting, became involved at a young age with a branch of the Plymouth Brethren Church founded by John Nelson Darby.
Nee was succeeded in the late forties by Chinese-born Witness Lee, who serves as the church's leader today.
Watchman Nee wrote several theological treatises, but none is considered sacred.
religiousmovements.lib.virginia.edu /nrms/loca.html   (1116 words)

  
 Watchman Nee
Nee admitted that in his writings on the book of Revelation, he depended on a book from Barber's library by Robert Gonett [Govett] that teaches a partial rapture.
Her literaure, considered "holiness literature," is the main source for Nee's Spiritual Man series, in which he developed a gnostic view of man, Roberts says.
During this time Nee also professed to be led by inner leadings.
www.bcbsr.com /topics/wnee.html   (1121 words)

  
 Watchman Nee - The Spiritual Man
Watchman Nee: "'He that receiveth a prophet in the name of a prophet shall receive a prophet's reward; and he that receiveth a righteous man in the name of a righteous man shall receive a righteous man's rewarded' (Matt.
Watchman Nee prophesied his own imprisonment in 1953 for life, though he may not have realized it, when he wrote in 1927, "He persecutes fiercely (Rev. 2.10).
It is better to never read Nee at all than to start reading from the false translations and false views.
www3.telus.net /trbrooks/Watchman_Nee.htm   (784 words)

  
 Watchman Nee selected writings- Dimensions of Truth
Watchman Nee became a Christian in 1920 at the age of 17 and began writing in the same year.
Watchman Nee's writings on matters of the individual Christian life have been a source of inspiration to Christians throughout the world, though his writings on the local churches--which he considered to be central to his ministry--have been largely ignored by mainstream Christianity.
Note: Please understand that many of Brother Nee's viewpoints do not reflect the Message of the Kingdom as it is presented today, and we are not in agreement with all he says; but no doubt were he alive today he would see many things quite differently.
www.dimensionsoftruth.org /watchman_nee/index.html   (553 words)

  
 Witness Lee's Local Church
He was sent by Watchman Nee to Taiwan in 1952 to continue their ministry; rather than both being imprisoned by the Communists.
Both Watchman Nee and Witness Lee, who are among the founders of what we call the `'Local Church'' here, were formerly members of one branch of the Plymouth Brethren, so the thought world is very much the same.
Nee's concept of salvation is not the Biblical concept of Salvation.
www.bcbsr.com /topics/lc.html   (11271 words)

  
 Watchman Nee and Witness Lee ministered Christ to build up local churches
Watchman Nee and Witness Lee ministered Christ to build up local churches
Watchman Nee became a Christian in mainland China in 1920 at the age of seventeen and began writing in the same year.
Throughout the nearly thirty years of his ministry, Watchman Nee was clearly manifested as a unique gift from the Lord to His Body for His move in this age.
www.watchmannee.org   (96 words)

  
 Watchman Nee
The great Chinese writer and preacher Watchman Nee was for many in the West a symbol of Christian steadfastness under the pressure of totalitarian government.
For another brief story on the life of Watchman Nee, see the Extract from Watchman Nee's Testimony.
Summaries of some of Nee`s books can also be found at www.indwelt.com.
www.voidspace.org.uk /spiritual/watchman_nee.shtml   (1511 words)

  
 Amazon.com: Spiritual Man: Books: Watchman Nee   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Watchman Nee - Full Line of Books — Watchman Nee richly wrote on a full range of Christian living topics.
Watchman Nee taught in the manner of the Apostle Paul--great wisdom and authority tempered by the heart of a lamb.
This is Nee's magnum opus, in spite of the fact that he wrote it when he was supposedly "young in the Lord." His "young in the Lord" was far more mature and wise that most of us are who consider ourselves knowledgeable.
www.amazon.com /Spiritual-Man-Watchman-Nee/dp/093500839X   (1703 words)

  
 Witness Lee & Watchman Nee Hymns
Witness Lee’s love for God, his revelation from God’s word, and his experience of God’s life are expressed in the hymns he wrote and translated with the help of other believers.
The local churches have been greatly edified through the hymns written by both Witness Lee and his co-worker, Watchman Nee.
Use the Catalog to search for lyrics of hymns written by Witness Lee and Watchman Nee by category, first line of the hymn or chorus, or by keyword(s).
www.witness-lee-hymns.org   (120 words)

  
 About Watchman Nee (1903 - 1972)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Witness Lee was a former co-worker of Watchman Nee.
Jim Moran puts Nee on the same level as Lee, and this is due to a complete misunderstanding of Nee.
After consulting with Dennis McCallum, who wrote a long article on Watchman Nee the House Church Movement in China, to whom Jim Moran also does not respond, I came to the conclusion that Jim Moran is only interested in spreading his own views, without actually trying to find out what is really true.
www.cephasministry.com /evangelists_watchman_nee.html   (638 words)

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