God Worshipping Society


God Worshipping Society
拜上帝會
ClassificationNontrinitarian Christianity
OrientationProtestant
ScriptureTaiping Bible
TheologyNontrinitarian
RegionChina
LanguageChinese
FounderHong Xiuquan
Origin1843
Guangdong, Qing dynasty
Defunct1864
Bai Shangdi Hui
Traditional Chinese拜上帝會
Simplified Chinese拜上帝会
Literal meaningBow upper emperor group
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinBài Shàngdì Huì
Bopomofoㄅㄞˋ ㄕㄤˋ ㄉㄧˋ ㄏㄨㄟˋ
Wade–GilesPai4 Shang4-ti4 Hui4
Tongyong PinyinBài Shàng-dì Huèi
IPA[pâɪ ʂâŋ.tî xwêɪ]

The God Worshipping Society (simplified Chinese: 拜上帝会; traditional Chinese: 拜上帝會; pinyin: Bài Shàngdì Huì) was a nontrinitarian form of Protestant Christianity, originating in the 19th century and incorporating elements of Chinese folk religion and Buddhism. It held God as the supreme deity, with Jesus as his eldest son and Hong Xiuquan, the movement's founder, as his second eldest son. Hong's first contact with Christian pamphlets occurred in 1836 when he directly received American Congregationalist missionary Edwin Stevens' personal copy of the Good Words to Admonish the Age (by Liang Fa, 1832). He only briefly looked over and did not carefully examine it.

Subsequently, Hong claimed to have experienced mystical visions in the wake of his third failure of the imperial examinations in 1837 and after failing for a fourth time in 1843, he sat down to carefully examine the tracts with his distant cousin Feng Yunshan, believing that they were "the key to interpreting his visions" coming to the conclusion that he was "the son of God the Father, Shangdi, and was the younger brother of Jesus Christ who had been directed to rid the world of demon worship (Qing dynasty)."