Posted by: Particular Kev | December 20, 2008
CHINA: OFFICIALS REACH OUT TO HOUSE CHURCHES; RAIDS, ARRESTS CONTINUE
Categories
- 1 Corinthians
- 1689 London Baptist Confession of Faith
- A Memoir of the Life and Writings of Andrew Fuller – Thomas Ekins Fuller
- Abkhazia
- abortion
- Aby Sayyaf
- activism
- acts
- Aden
- adoption
- Afghanistan
- Africa
- African Inland Church
- AGL
- AIDS/HIV
- Al Qaeda
- al Shabab
- Alaska
- Albert N. Martin
- Algeria
- Alice Springs
- ALP
- American Civil War
- American Samoa
- Amnesty International
- Anabaptists
- Andrew Fuller
- Anglesea
- Anglicans
- Anna Bligh
- Antarctica
- Antelopes
- Archaeology
- Argentina
- Arianism
- Armenia
- Arminianism
- Art
- Arthurs Creek
- Arts
- Asia
- Assemblies of God
- At the BookShelf
- atheism
- Atherton
- Australia
- Australian Capital Territory (ACT)
- Australian Dollar (The Aussie Battler)
- Austria
- Azerbaijan
- Bahai
- Ballarat
- Balls of Steel
- Bangladesh
- Baptist
- Barack Obama
- Barrack Obama
- Barrington Tops National Park
- Beatitudes
- Beechworth
- Belarus
- Belgium
- Belgrave
- Belgrave Heights
- Belgrave South
- Bellingen
- Better Place
- Bhutan
- Bible
- Bible Society
- Bible Studies
- Biblical Baptist Church
- Billy Graham Evangelistic Association
- Blanch
- Blogging
- Bolivia
- Books
- Bourke
- Brethren (Church)
- Brisbane
- Broken Hill
- Buddhism
- Bulahdelah
- Bullarto
- Bullarto South
- Bundaberg
- Bunyip
- Bush Heritage Australia
- bushfires
- Bushwalking
- Buxton
- Cairns
- California
- Callignee
- Callignee Upper
- Cambodia
- Canada
- Car and vehicle accidents (other)
- Car Crash – 22 February 2008
- celebs
- Central African Republic
- Chaldean Church
- Charismatic
- Charles Haddon Spurgeon
- Chestnut-breasted Mannikin
- China
- Christian Liberty
- Christian Science
- Christianity
- Christmas
- Church Growth Movement
- Church History
- Church of Christ
- Church of England
- Churchill
- Clonbinane
- Coffs Harbour
- Coldplay
- Colo Heights
- Colombia
- Communism
- Computers
- Confessions and Catechisms
- Confucianism
- Cooktown
- Corindhap
- Creeds
- cricket
- Crighton Lifestyle Resorts
- crime
- Cuba
- Cults
- Cyprus
- Dandenong Ranges National Park
- Darwin
- Democratic Republic of Congo
- Denmark
- Dereel
- disaster
- Djibouti
- Dorrigo
- Eaglehawk
- earthquake
- East Africa Pentecostal Church
- Easter
- eBay
- economy
- Ecuador
- Edgbaston Station
- Egypt
- electric cars
- England
- Enoch Point
- Environment
- Episcopal Church of the U. S.
- Eritrea
- Eschatology
- Estonia
- Ethiopia
- European Union
- Euthanasia
- evangelism
- Evolution
- Falun Gong
- FARC
- Finland
- Florida
- Flowerdale
- Focus on the Family
- France
- Fraser Island
- friends
- Full Gospel Church
- Full Gospel Churches of Kenya
- Fun
- Genealogy
- George W. Bush
- George Whitefield
- Georgia
- German Protestant Church
- Germany
- Ghana
- Gloucester
- Gloucester Tops
- God
- Golden Orb Weaver Spider
- gospel
- Grace Baptist Mission
- Greece
- Greenhouse gases
- Guantanamo Bay
- Hamas
- Hamish and Andy
- Hawkins Masonic Village
- Hay
- Hazeldene
- Hazelwood
- Healesville
- Health and Fitness
- Heathcote Junction
- hell
- Heresy
- Hervey Bay
- Hezbollah
- Hinduism
- History
- Hobart
- Holy Spirit
- Homosexuality
- Hong Kong
- Hugh Latimer
- Humevale
- Hyper-Calvinism
- Iceland
- Illinois
- India
- Indonesia
- Internet
- Iran
- Iraq
- Ireland
- Islam
- Islamic Defender' Front
- Israel
- Italy
- Ivanhoe
- J. C. Ryle
- Jamaat-e-Islami
- James I. Packer
- James Stalker
- Jan Fabre
- Japan
- Jeeralang
- Jehovah's Witnesses
- Jemaah Islamiyah
- Jesus Christ
- Jews
- Jews for Jesus
- John
- John Brumby
- John Bunyan
- John Calvin
- John Carlile
- John Foxe
- John Howard
- John L. Dagg
- John Macarthur
- John McCain
- John Piper
- joke
- Jordan
- Judaism
- Kaballah
- Karuah
- Kazakhstan
- Kenya
- Kevin Matthews
- Kevin Rudd
- Kevin's Walk on the Wild Side
- Kevin's Wilderness Journeys
- Kilmore
- Kimberley region
- Kinglake
- Kinglake West
- Koornalla
- Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK)
- Kyrgyzstan
- Labertouche
- Lachlan Matthews
- Lane Cove
- Laos
- Lashkar-e-Jhangvi
- Latvia
- Law and Legislation
- Lebanon
- Leonards Hill
- liberalism
- Libya
- Lincoln
- Litchfield National Park
- Lithuania
- Little Becky
- Little Britain
- Local Government
- Lord Howe Island
- Lord's Resistance Army
- Lord's Supper
- Lowland Bongo
- Loyalty Islands
- Lucinda
- Lutheran
- Mackay
- Macquarie Capital
- Madagascar
- Malaysia
- Maldives
- marriage
- Mars Hill Church
- Martin Luther
- Marysville
- Matthew
- Mauritania
- McCain-Palin Campaign
- Melbourne
- Mennonite
- mental illness
- Methodist
- Mexico
- Michigan
- Middle East
- Missouri
- Moonie Faith
- Moreton Island
- Mormans
- Morocco
- Morris Iemma
- Movie
- Mudgegonga
- Murrindindi
- music
- Musk
- Myanmar
- Narbethong
- Nathan Rees
- National Liberation Army
- National Parks
- NATO
- Nepal
- Nepal Defense Army
- Netherlands/Holland
- Nevada
- New Caledonia
- New Jersey
- New Mexico
- New South Wales
- New York
- New Zealand
- Newbury
- Newcastle
- news
- Nicaragua
- Niger
- Nigeria
- Norfolk Island
- North Korea
- Northern Ireland
- Northern Territory
- Northlake's Reformed Baptist Church
- Norway
- Oman
- Omar al-Beshir
- Ontario
- Open Doors
- Orthodox
- Pacific Highway
- Paganism
- Pakistan
- Palestine
- Particular and Reformed Baptist Home Fellowship Network
- Particular and/or Reformed Baptist
- Particular Baptist Studies
- Particular Kev's Random Thoughts
- particularbaptist.com
- Pastoral Ministry
- Peats Ridge
- Pentecostalism
- Perth
- Peter Garrett
- Petrol
- Pets
- Philippines
- Piracy
- plants
- PLO
- Poland
- Politics
- Pornography
- Port Macquarie
- prank
- Prank Calls
- preaching
- Presbyterian
- Queensland
- rambling
- Random Ramble
- Rebecca Morris
- Redfin Blue-Eye Fish
- reformation
- Reformed
- Reformed Particular Baptist Fellowship
- Regeneration
- renewable energy
- Richard Dawkins
- Robert Murray McCheyne
- Robert Traill
- Rokewood
- Roman Catholicism
- Romania
- Romans
- Rugby League
- Russia
- Rwanda
- Salespeople
- salvation
- Salvation Army
- Samoa
- Sandemanianism
- Sarah Palin
- satire
- Saudi Arabia
- sausages
- Sawtell
- science and research
- Scientology
- Scotland
- sermon
- Seventh-Day Adventistism
- sex
- Shabab-e-Milli
- Sikkim
- Singapore
- Singleton
- Sipah-e-Sahaba
- Slovenia
- social networking
- Society
- Somalia
- South Africa
- South Australia
- South Carolina
- South Korea
- South Ossetia
- South Sudan
- Southern Baptist
- Space
- Spain
- Special Days
- sport
- Sri Lanka
- St. Andrews
- Stargate
- Steels Creek
- Stephen Harper
- Steve Fossett
- Stonewall Jackson
- Strathewen
- Sudan
- Sweden
- Switzerland
- Sydney
- Syria
- Taggerty
- Tajikistan
- Taliban
- Tamil Tigers
- Tanzania
- Taoism
- Tasmania
- Tea Gardens
- Tea Gardens Grange
- Tecoma
- television
- Tennessee
- Tennis
- Texas
- Thailand
- Thank God You're Here
- The Chaser's War on Everything
- The Church
- The Corrs
- The Hermitage
- The Preacher and His Models – James Stalker
- Theology
- Thomas Muthee
- Thora
- Tibet
- Tonga
- tourism
- Townsville
- travel
- Turkey
- Turkmenistan
- Tweed Heads
- Uganda
- Ukraine
- Uncategorized
- Union of the Comoros
- United Arab Emirates
- United Kingdom
- United Methodist
- United Nations
- Uniting Church
- Upwey
- USA
- Utah
- Uzbekistan
- Venezuela
- Victoria
- video
- Vietnam
- Voice of the Martyrs
- volcano
- Walter Kasper
- Wandong
- War
- War on Terror
- Warburton
- Warrumbungle National Park
- Washington
- Washington DC
- Wauchope
- Weather
- Weird Al Yankovic
- West Indies
- Western Australia
- Western Plains Zoo
- Whitsunday Islands
- Whittlesea
- Wierd
- wildlife
- Wilsons Promontory National Park
- wine
- Woodburn
- World Evangelical Alliance
- World Vision
- World War 2
- Yale Lectures on Preaching
- Yarra Glen
- Yarram
- Yemen
- Zapatista National Liberation Army
- Zimbabwe
- Zorastrian



TSPM offers Bibles and “assistance,” but rights groups say efforts fall short.
DUBLIN, December 9 (Compass Direct News) – In recent months Chinese officials have attempted to build bridges with the Protestant house church movement even as police raided more unregistered congregations, arrested Christian leaders and forced at least 400 college students to swear they would stop attending such worship services.
With rights groups saying more effort is needed to address rights abuses and secure full religious freedom for Chinese Christians, two research institutes – one from the government – organized an unprecedented symposium on Nov. 21-22 that concluded with an agreement for house church leaders to begin a dialogue with government officials.
A delegation of six house church leaders from Beijing, Henan and Wenzhou provinces attended the seminar, entitled, “Christianity and Social Harmony: A Seminar on the Issue of Chinese House Churches,” along with scholars and experts from universities and independent research facilities. Members of the Minorities Development Research Institute, a branch of the China State Council’s Research and Development Centre, and the Beijing Pacific Solutions Social Science Research Institute co-hosted it.
In a report summarizing the forum, Beijing house church representative Liu Tong Su said that China’s religious institutions and regulations were clearly outdated and inadequate to meet the needs of the church.
At the conclusion of the meeting, house church delegates agreed to dialogue with the government, Liu said, though he insisted, “Only God can control the spirituality of faith. No worldly authorities have the right to control a man’s spirit.”
The government has been entrusted by God with the authority to maintain external public order, Liu added.
“If the government can limit its governing territory to areas of maintaining public order in external conduct, then according to the teachings of the Bible, the house church will definitely obey those in authority within the boundary that God has set,” he said.
Experts presented reports on the rapid development of house church networks, including the number of Christians, geographical distribution, cultural and ethnic make-up and connection with foreign Christians, according to the Gospel Herald.
A month earlier, the chairman of the Three-Self Patriotic Movement (TSPM) – responsible along with the China Christian Council (CCC) for overseeing China’s Protestant churches – told a gathering of 200 Hong Kong church leaders of his desire to assist Chinese house churches and provide them with Bibles, according to Ecumenical News International (ENI).
At the Oct. 22 conference entitled, “Chinese Church – New Leaders, New Challenges,” TSPM Chairman Fu Xianwei declared, “For those house churches without registration, we will try our best to be with them, to recognize them and to help them, so long as they have an orthodox faith, don’t stray from the truth and don’t follow heretics.”
Fu and 11 other members of the newly-elected leadership team of the CCC/TSPM also said they were willing to provide house churches with Bibles, ENI reported.
Bible distribution is largely the responsibility of Amity Press, China’s only official Bible printing company, which recently announced its intention to place more Bibles in the hands of rural Christians. Daniel Willis, CEO of the Bible Society in New South Wales (NSW), Australia, launched an appeal on Nov. 12 to support Amity in this goal.
Speaking at the launch, Willis asserted, “Smuggling Bibles into China places Chinese Christians at risk, and now with the new Amity Press operational in Nanjing, smuggling is a waste of resources.”
Amity opened a new multimillion dollar printing facility in May with a capacity to print 12 million Bibles per year. Most of those Bibles are printed in foreign languages for export outside China.
“China is experiencing a great freedom of worship,” Willis added. “With this wonderful change the church is spreading rapidly … Each Chinese Christian would like to experience the joy … that owning their own Bible brings – but unfortunately for many, obtaining a Bible is difficult and often out of their reach financially.”
The China Aid Association (CAA) issued a statement on Nov. 20 that Amity did not produce enough Bibles to meet the vast needs of the church in China or to replace lost or worn copies. It also pointed out that distribution was still strictly limited to government-approved channels.
Earlier this year, the Rev. Dr. Chow Lien-Hwa, vice-chairman of the board of Amity Press, stated in an interview with the NSW Bible Society that Amity was printing 3 million Bibles per year for mainland China. Chow also outlined a plan to allow Bible distribution through a chain of government bookshops and claimed that house church Christians could buy Bibles from TSPM churches without having to provide personal identity information.
Pastors from both house churches and official TSPM congregations have reported to Compass a shortage of Bibles and other Christian materials in Beijing, the northwest, the northeast, and the southwest. Church growth in tribal areas also has created an urgent need for Bibles in minority languages.
Raids, Arrests Continue
Rights groups pointed to recent raids and arrests, however, as confirmation that Chinese authorities still restrict freedom of worship for local house church Christians.
Police raided a house church gathering in Tai Kang county, Henan province on Dec. 3 and arrested all 50 Christians, CAA reported on Thursday (Dec. 4). Public Security Bureau officers also raided another gathering of 50 house church believers in Xiji town, Zaozhuang city, Shandong province on Dec. 2, arresting 20 Christian leaders and demanding a fine of 2,500 yuan (US$365) per person to secure their release.
CAA also confirmed that police carried out multiple raids on house church gatherings in Beijing and in areas near college campuses in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, from late September to early November, detaining leaders of the Local Church house church network. Four leaders in Zhejiang were sentenced to labor camp for 12 to 18 months.
Officers also arrested at least 400 Christian college students. After intense questioning, police forced each student to write a statement of repentance agreeing to forsake such gatherings.
Commenting on reports of persecution in China, Chow of Amity Press claimed victims were not true Chinese citizens, but Chinese with foreign citizenship who had entered China to carry out illegal activities.
“When we go to another country we must be law-abiding citizens of that country,” Chow insisted. “The law, whether you like it or not, says you can only preach in the churches, you cannot go on the street.”
Some house churches are actively seeking registration with authorities to avoid arrests and inconveniences, ENI reported in October. Such groups, however, prefer to register outside the CCC/TSPM structure, disagreeing that different Protestant beliefs can be reconciled under the TSPM as a self-described “post-denominational” umbrella organization.
House church members also object to the TSPM’s interference in congregational practices, according toe the U.S. State Department’s International Religious Freedom Report 2008. The report notes that many unregistered evangelical Protestant groups refuse to register with TSPM due to theological differences, fear of adverse consequences if they reveal names and addresses of church leaders or members, or fear that it will control sermon content.
Released from Prison
Responding to international pressure, officials on Dec. 2 released house church pastor Zhu Baoguo of Henan province, citing medical reasons. Authorities had raided a house church gathering on Oct. 12, arresting Zhu and four other leaders, before sentencing Zhu on Oct. 30 to one year in labor camp, CAA reported.
Officials also released house church pastor Wang Weiliang from prison on Nov. 25 for medical reasons, according to CAA. Authorities sentenced Wang to three years in prison in December 2006 for protesting the July 2006 destruction of Dangshanwan Christian church in Xiaoshan, Zhejiang province. Seven other believers were arrested at the time; authorities have released all but one, who remains in detention in Hangzhou.
A Breakthrough for China’s House Churches?
At last month’s symposium on Chinese house churches, officials from government research organs, scholars from government think-tanks and universities, independent researchers and an unprecedented delegation of six house church leaders from Beijing, Henan and Wenzhou attended.
At the groundbreaking conference, sponsored by the Minorities Development Research Institute of the China State Council’s Research and Development Center and the Beijing Pacific Solutions Social Science Research Institute and entitled, “Christianity and Social Harmony: A Seminar on the Issue of the Chinese House Churches,” participants discussed every aspect of the house church movement in China.
Statistics were a key issue, with most agreeing that the number of house church members was vast and rapidly increasing. Estimates ranged from 50 million to 100 million members of Protestant house churches, as compared with approximately 20 million members of registered Protestant churches.
Delegates were surprisingly bold in their discussion and criticism of China’s religious policy, and several put forward practical plans for the abolition of institutions such as the State Administration for Religious Affairs (formerly the Religious Affairs Bureau) and the Protestant Three-Self Patriotic Movement.
They also called for serious and ongoing discussions between the government and house churches, and Christian leaders called for the lifting of a ban on house churches and a review of restrictions on church registration and appointment of pastors.
Many participants agreed that the democratic management of house churches in accordance with the rule of law was a logical step to bring religious policies into line with China’s open-door economic policies.
While certain sectors of leadership may welcome these suggestions, others entrenched in the atheist system of the Communist Party were expected to balk at such reforms.
Report from Compass Direct News
Posted in Australia, Bible Society, China, Christianity, Communism, Hong Kong, New South Wales, USA, atheism | Tags: abolition, abuses, accordance, according, activities, address, addresses, adverse, agreed, agreement, allow, Amity Press, announced, appeal, appointment, areas, arrested, arrests, aspect, asserted, assist, assistance, atheist, attempted, attended, attending, Australia, authorities, authority, avoid, balk, ban, Beijing, Beijing Pacific Solutions Science research Institute, beliefs, believers, best, Bible, Bible Society, Bibles, board, bold, bookshops, boundary, branch, breakthrough, build bridges, CAA, called, campuses, capacity, CCC, CEO, certain, chain, chairman, change, channels, China, China Aid Association, China Christian Counsil, China State Council, Chinese, Chinese Church - New Leaders New Challenges, Christianity and Social Harmony: A Seminar on the Issue, church, church growth, churches, citing, citizens, citizenship, claimed, clearly, co-hosted, college, commenting, communist party, company, compared, concluded, conclusion, conference, confirmation, congregational, congregations, connection, consequences, content, continue, control, copies, country, county, created, criticism, cultural, Dangshanwan Christian Church, Daniel Willis, declared, definitely, delegation, Democratic, desire, destruction, detaining, detention, development, dialogue, differences, disagreeing, discussed, discussion, distribution, dollar, economic, Ecumenical News International, effort, efforts, ENI, entered, entitled, entrenched, entrusted, estimates, ethnic, Evangelical, expected, experience, experiencing, experts, export, external, facilities, facility, faith, fall, fear, financially, fine, follow, forced, foreign, forsake, forum, freedom, Fu Xianwei, gathering, geographical, goal, God, Gospel Herald, governing, government, government-approved, great, groundbreaking, groups, Hangzhou, Henan, heretics, Hong Kong, house church, house churches, human rights, identity, illegal, inadequate, inconveniences, increasing, independent, information, insisted, institutions, intense, intention, interference, international, interview, joy, labor camp, languages, launch, launched, law, law-abiding, leaders, leadership, leadership team, lifting, limit, limited, Liu Tong Su, logical, lost, mainland, maintain, maintaining, make-up, management, materials, medical, meeting, members, Minorities Development Research Institute, minority, movement, multimillion, multiple, names, Nanjing, needed, needs, networks, new, New South Wales, northeast, northwest, NSW, obey, object, offers, officers, official, officials, ongoing, open-door, opened, operational, organization, organized, organs, Orthodox, outdated, outlined, overseeing, owning, participants, Pastor, pastors, personal, plan, pointed, police, policies, policy, post-denominational, practical, practices, preach, presented, pressure, print, printing, prison, Protestant, protesting, provide, provinces, Public Order, Public Security Bureau, questioning, raided, raids, rapid, reach out, reasons, recently, recognize, reconciled, reforms, refuse, register, registration, regulations, release, released, religious, Religious Affairs Bureau, religious freedom, repentance, replace, report, representative, research, Research and Development Centre, research institutes, resources, responding, responsibility, responsible, restrict, restrictions, Rev. Dr. Chow Lien-Hwa, reveal, review, right, risk, rule of law, rural, scholars, sectors, secure, self-described, seminar, serious, sermon, Shandong, short, shortage, smuggling, southwest, spirit, spirituality, sponsered, State Administration for Religious Affairs, statement, statistics, step, stop, stray, street, strictly, structure, students, suggestions, summarizing, support, swear, symposium, system, Tai Kang, teachings, territory, theological, think-tanks, Three-Self Patriotic Movement, town, tribal, truth, TSPM, U.S. State Department, U.S. State Department International Religious Freedom R, umbrella, unfortunately, universities, unprecedented, unregistered, urgent, vice chairman, victims, Wang Weiliang, waste, welcome, Wenzhou, wonderful, worldly, worn, worship, worship services, Xiaoshan, Xiji, yuan, Zaozhuang, Zhejiang, Zhu Baoguo