
Sun Yat-sen
Revolutionary leader, physician, and first provisional president of the Republic of China
of 100 · stable trend · Visibly decent and improving
Standing
53/100
Raw Score
47/85
Confidence
71%
Evidence
Medium high
About
Sun Yat-sen built and symbolized the anti-Qing republican movement, surrendering office in 1912 to secure imperial abdication and spending decades under exile, intrigue, and pressure.
The public record shows high resilience and real concern for national liberation, but only mixed evidence of sustained adult worship discipline and a meaningful integrity hit around his 1915 marriage controversy and political opportunism.
Five Pillars
Pillar scores (0–100%)
Historic liberator with strong endurance and public sacrifice, but mixed adult faith practice and integrity concerns keep the record from a higher tier.
Goodness over time
Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.
17 Criteria Scores
Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes
Core Worldview
Baptized Christian who publicly identified with Christ throughout life, even if adult practice later became contested.
Moral language and prayer appear in the record, but public evidence of sustained theological reflection is limited.
His Christian formation and repeated prayer under pressure support a real but not fully consistent spiritual orientation.
He drew on biblical themes and defended religious freedom, though later politics often overtook explicit scriptural guidance.
Christ remained part of his public language, but his adult pattern does not strongly evidence prophetic imitation.
Contribution to Others
The public record centers on national politics rather than repeated family care.
No strong public pattern of direct support for orphans or unsupported youth is documented.
His people's livelihood doctrine aimed at material relief and national renewal, but direct service evidence is thinner than political rhetoric.
His overseas organizing mobilized and represented diaspora Chinese beyond kin networks.
Little clear evidence shows a repeated habit of answering individual requests with direct aid.
Freeing China from dynastic rule and foreign domination was the core public mission of his life.
Personal Discipline
He prayed during the London detention and kept Christian identification, but later church attendance seems to have lapsed.
There is not enough reliable evidence of disciplined personal giving to score this higher.
Reliability
He was often praised for sincerity, but tactical compromises, exaggerated expedition claims, and the 1915 marriage controversy reduce trust in this dimension.
Stability Under Pressure
Years of exile and movement fundraising show sustained endurance under scarcity and uncertainty.
Detention, exile, illness, and repeated failure did not end his public mission.
He repeatedly returned to revolutionary struggle and national negotiation under threat and political defeat.
Timeline
Key events and documented turning points
Was baptized in Hong Kong after missionary schooling and active church involvement
After exposure to missionary schooling in Hawaii and Hong Kong, Sun accepted Christian baptism and participated actively in church life, establishing a public religious identity that stayed part of his image even as later practice became contested.
→ Created a durable belief signal, though later observers disputed how central adult faith remained.
mediumLeft medicine and founded the Revive China Society in Hawaii
Disillusioned by Qing weakness, Sun abandoned a promising medical career and founded the Revive China Society to organize anti-dynastic revolution among overseas Chinese.
→ Turned personal conviction into a long-term political commitment rather than a private career.
highSurvived detention in the Chinese legation in London and emerged with greater international visibility
Sun was seized at the Chinese legation in London, feared forced return to China, appealed through allies, and later published his own account of the episode after release.
→ The crisis strengthened his reputation for endurance and expanded international awareness of his cause.
highUnited revolutionary factions under the Tongmenghui in Tokyo
Sun returned to Japan and became director of a broader revolutionary coalition, helping shift the movement from scattered plots toward a more coherent national program.
→ Gave the republican movement a clearer center of gravity and a sharper ideological program.
highRelinquished the provisional presidency to Yuan Shikai to secure Qing abdication
After the 1911 Revolution, Sun accepted election as provisional president but soon stepped aside for Yuan Shikai in hopes of securing imperial abdication and preserving the new republic.
→ Showed willingness to sacrifice personal office for a larger institutional outcome, even though Yuan later betrayed republican hopes.
highMarriage to Song Qingling after divorce created a public Christian and integrity controversy
While still carrying a Christian public identity, Sun divorced his first wife and married Song Qingling after a relationship that critics linked to donor-funded travel and personal impropriety.
→ Damaged his standing with many Christian backers and became the clearest public integrity blemish in his personal life.
mediumReorganized the Kuomintang and formalized the Three Principles of the People
With Western support failing, Sun accepted Soviet help, reorganized the Kuomintang, and developed the Three Principles of the People into the core doctrine of his movement: nationalism, democracy, and people's livelihood.
→ Deepened the movement's ideological shape while also tying it to uneasy alliances and internal friction.
highDied in Beijing while still negotiating for national unity
Sun died of liver cancer in Beijing while trying to negotiate with northern leaders, and he received a private Christian funeral before later state memorialization.
→ His final stage reinforced the image of a leader who kept pressing for national consolidation despite illness and unfinished work.
highPressure Tests
Behavior under crisis or scrutiny
Detention in London
1896Sun was detained in the Chinese legation in London and faced possible forced return to Qing custody.
Response: He used allies, prayer, and public attention to survive the crisis and continue organizing.
positiveCollapse of early republican hopes
1913Yuan Shikai moved against the new republic, pushing Sun back into exile and failed resistance.
Response: Sun reorganized, fundraised abroad, and resumed long-horizon movement building rather than withdrawing.
positiveTerminal illness during unity negotiations
1925Sun kept negotiating with northern leaders even while dying of liver cancer in Beijing.
Response: His final public posture stayed fixed on national consolidation rather than private retreat.
positiveProgression
crisis years
Failed uprisings, Yuan's betrayal, and personal scandal exposed weaker spots in discipline and reliability without ending the mission.
mixedcurrent stage
Closed historical record: his final years show unfinished nation-building, strong endurance, and a legacy carried by others.
stableearly years
Missionary schooling, baptism, and medical training turned village dissent into a public moral and political identity.
risinggrowth years
Exile, fundraising, coalition-building, and ideological development scaled his movement from a regional conspiracy into a national cause.
acceleratingBehavioral Patterns
Positive
- • Repeated return to public risk and exile for the same anti-dynastic cause.
- • National liberation remained tied to a consistent language of people's rights and livelihood.
- • Personal ambition was often secondary to symbolic and organizational goals.
Concerns
- • Faith identity stayed public, but adult worship discipline appears uneven.
- • Opportunistic alliances and violent methods complicate moral clarity.
- • The 1915 marriage controversy is a real personal-integrity blemish.
Evidence Quality
6
Strong
3
Medium
0
Weak
Overall: medium_high
This profile judges observable public behavior from historical sources. It does not judge hidden intention, private repentance, or salvation.