The Philippine Star

The touch of hand

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When Chinese authoritie­s arrested him, Wu You-qi was an outstandin­g athlete. He was young and brash but not a troublemak­er. Accused of being a counter-revolution­ary, he was sentenced to seven years in prison. Then the Cultural Revolution broke out, and You-qi’s seven years was extended to 20 years!

Authoritie­s placed him in China’s largest prison, in a cell with a quiet old man known as Watchman Nee. When You-qi’s wife visited him, she told him how things were on the outside. It was so bad that she even had to sell her watch to eat. When she left, Youqi lay on his bunk and sobbed.

Then You-qi felt a hand holding his. It was Watchman Nee. “Cry out,” Nee said. “You will feel better.” That act of compassion was the beginning of the friendship of an angry young man and the godly saint who eventually died in prison.

You-qi saw the power in the life of Watchman Nee. “I didn’t become a believer because of what he spoke,” You-qi says, “but because of how he lived.”

When I began visiting China in 1979, I would ask pastors, “How do you account for the growth of your church?” Often they replied eople saw something different about the lives of believers.

This is still true today. People want to know what makes you, a practicing Christian, di erent. o you have what they lack but desperatel­y want – joy, peace, and forgivenes­s? They want to see how much you care rather than how much you know. Your life is a non-verbal witness that speaks louder than what you say. Remember the elderly hand clasping that of the depressed prisoner? I think Jesus would do that as well. on’t you?

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