Showing posts with label Open Doors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Open Doors. Show all posts

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Christians in China--an ominous trend

We hear liberals praising China repeatedly. Thomas Friedman, famous New York Times prize-winning columnist, gushed over China in several columns. But this country's dictatorial leaders are cracking down on Christians who consider God, not the Communist Party, the head of the church.

Take the example of Shouwang Church, one of Beijing's largest unsanctioned "house" churches. The Wall Street Journal reported recently that since early April, police have prevented church members from gathering for normal Sunday worship services. Hundreds have been detained for short periods, and the entire church leadership has been under house arrest since April. This church, whose 1,000-strong congregation is mostly upscale professionals, actually paid $4 million for meeting space in a Beijing office building. But under pressure from the authorities, the sellers refused to hand over the keys, leaving the church with no place to meet.

China tolerates Christian church services, but only within the narrow boundaries of theology and church life dictated by the State Administration for Religious Affairs. Estimates of the number of Christians in China vary widely, ranging from a government figure of about 20 million for its own churches to that of outside observers who say the total is as high as 130 million.

Most Chinese Christians belong to unofficial house churches like Shouwang, which reject Communist Party-controlled theology and consider God—not the Communist Party—the head of the church. The number of house-church Christians, while hard to estimate, is likely more than 60 million.

The recent crackdown on house-church Christians is the outgrowth of a Communist Party initiative launched last December, called "Operation Deterrence," to force all house-church Christians to be incorporated with the government. In light of the savage treatment of practitioners of Falun Gong, a meditation group brutally repressed since 1999, the implications of "Operation Deterrence" are alarming.

Why hasn't Shouwang Church agreed to join the government organization? It claims this government administration was an outdated product of the Cold War, and that the faith that the government allows is what church history calls liberal theology, while the faith of the house churches is evangelical theology.

Evangelical churches around the world, of course, have always stressed the need for Christians to share their faith. But the Chinese government forbids its churches to evangelize. Last autumn, the Lausanne Conference on World Evangelism was held , but authorities blocked some 200 invited Chinese house-church representatives from leaving China.

This crackdown on Christians is part of a rising tide of repression against dissent that's often accompanied by interrogations and torture. Recently, the wife of blind human rights activist Chen Guangcheng said that she and her husband were beaten and tortured for several hours by a gang of plainclothes thugs led by the village Communist Party secretary. Worryingly, some of the Shouwang church detainees found government church representatives taking part in the police interrogations, "educating" and "rebuking" the Shouwang Christians. Incredibly, a key government official denies that house churches even exist.

We need to join groups like Open Doors and Voice of the Martyrs to keep pressure on China and help to shed light on the ongoing repression of our fellow Christians in China.

Sunday, October 18, 2009

The Horrors of North Korea

I came across this story in World magazine. It's hard to read things like this, but we must in order to see the face of evil. We can't pretend that meetings, peace accords, treaties, or speeches at the U.N. will cause such evil to disappear. It's there, it's real, and we need to be vigilant.



Soon Ok Lee has recently published her memoir entitled Eyes of the Tailless Animals. It chronicles six years she spent in a North Korean labor camp. If there was any doubt about the horrors of a godless society, this book will dispel it quickly.

She was born into a life of privilege in North Korea. Only one god was allowed there, and it was Kim Il Sung, father of today's dictator. She was arrested for refusing to give a bureaucrat more clothing than he was allotted.

Life in prison was a horror story. She was greeted with the words, "you are not a human being anymore." This is where the title comes in -- she was a "tailless animal." Although not a Christian believer at the time, she met an increasing number of women sentenced for their Christian belief, or as the supervisors called them, "superstition believers." Every month these women were placed in the yard in front of all the prisoners and asked to deny their belief. When they refused, they were given the hardest work possible. One Christian slipped and fell into a large feces tank. The guard told everyone to let her die, but four others ignored the command and jumped in to save her. No official even tried to get the women out, so all five died. The author later found out that the four who jumped in to save the woman were also Christians.

Eventually she escaped with her son to China, thanks to people of faith. They ended up in South Korea, where an inspector debriefing them handed them the Bible and started singing "Amazing Grace." She remembered the song because her mother and some of her friends used to close the front door to her house and sing that same song.

It's hard for us living today in America to imagine such hellish circumstances. I would hope that you might consider joining groups such as Open Doors or Voice of the Martyrs because they will tell you similar stories from around the world and what you can do about these precious people who stand up to tyranny.