CHIN, Ken-pa2019-09-252019-09-252017-05-082014-11http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/164823Because he interpreted the teachings of Jesus as a manifesto of social transformation, WU Leichuan inevitably regarded Christianity as a vehicle of social, political, and economic reform, the ultimate end of which would be the establishment of the Kingdom of Heaven. Far from being works of localized theology, his two most representative books, Christianity and Chinese Culture (1936) and Mozi and Jesus (1940), elucidate his understanding of Christianity as a revolutionary institution, and explore in what sense Jesus could serve as a force of liberation in modern Chinese society.chiWith permission of the license/copyright holderChinaChristianityChristian ethicsreligionjusticesocial gospelrevolutionliberation theologyimperialismcapitalismReligious ethicsIntercultural and contextual theologiesAsian theologiesDogmaticsSalvation/liberation吳雷川與“革命的基督教” [WU Leichuan and "Revolutionary Christianity" ]Article