Seeking The Master Of Mo Pai Adventures With John Chang -

McMillan's account is unique because it provides a first-person, Western practitioner's perspective. He does not just observe Chang; he becomes his student. The book is part travelogue (set primarily in Indonesia and later Korea), part training manual (albeit an incomplete one), and part philosophical treatise on the nature of chi (internal energy), morality, and spiritual power. The book is structured chronologically, tracing McMillan’s journey from skeptic to disciple.

A central and unusual claim: In Mo Pai, moral purity is not just a spiritual nicety; it is a technical requirement for energy generation. Anger, lust, greed, and lying disrupt the flow of chi . To generate the high-voltage energy needed for feats like fire ignition, the practitioner must have a clear conscience and altruistic intent. This is the book’s most unique contribution to the Western esoteric canon. Seeking The Master Of Mo Pai Adventures With John Chang

McMillan, a successful real estate investor and martial arts practitioner in the United States, sees the Ring of Fire documentary. Fascinated and deeply skeptical, he resolves to find Chang. After years of dead ends, he traces Chang to Surabaya, Indonesia. His initial meeting is anti-climactic: Chang is a quiet, unassuming middle-aged man who runs a small Chinese medicine shop. McMillan's account is unique because it provides a

The book serves as a sequel or companion to the earlier, more famous documentation of Chang: the 1996 documentary Ring of Fire (produced by Lawrence Blair and Lorne Blair) and the subsequent book Ring of Fire: An Indonesian Odyssey . In those works, John Chang (born Chang Il-Sung) demonstrated seemingly impossible feats: generating electrical energy from his fingers, lighting paper with his bare hands, stopping a machete with his abdomen, and influencing matter at a distance. To generate the high-voltage energy needed for feats