Cracks
in the atheist edifice
The rapid spread of Christianity is forcing an
official rethink on religion
RELIGION
IN CHINA
NOV
01 2014 | ECN
THE
coastal city of Wenzhou is sometimes called China’s Jerusalem. Ringed by
mountains and far from the capital, Beijing, it has long been a haven for a
religion that China’s Communist leaders view with deep unease: Christianity.
Most cities of its size, with about 9m people, have no more than a dozen or
so visibly Christian buildings. Until recently, in Wenzhou, hundreds of
crosses decorated church roofs.
This
year, however, more than 230 have been classed as “illegal structures” and
removed. Videos posted on the internet show crowds of parishioners trying to
form a human shield around their churches. Dozens have been injured. Other
films show weeping believers defiantly singing hymns as huge red crosses are
hoisted off the buildings. In April one of Wenzhou’s largest churches was
completely demolished. Officials are untroubled by the clash between the
city’s famously freewheeling capitalism and the Communist Party’s ideology,
yet still see religion and its symbols as affronts to the party’s atheism.
Christians
in China have long suffered persecutiont. Under Mao Zedong, freedom of belief
was enshrined in the new Communist constitution (largely to accommodate
Muslims and Tibetan Buddhists in the west of the country). Yet perhaps as
many as half a million Christians were harried to death, and tens of
thousands more were sent to labour camps. Since the death of Mao in 1976, the
party has slowly allowed more religious freedom. Most of the churches in
Wenzhou are so-called “Three Self” churches, of which there are about 57,000
round the country. These, in the official jargon, are self-supporting,
self-governed and self-propagating (therefore closed to foreign influence).
They profess loyalty to China, and are registered with the government. But
many of those in Wenzhou had obviously incurred official displeasure all the
same; and most of the Christians who survived Maoist persecution, along with
many new believers, refuse to join such churches anyway, continuing to meet
in unregistered “house churches”, which the party for a long time tried to
suppress.
Christianity is hard to control in China, and getting
harder all the time. It is spreading rapidly, and infiltrating the party’s
own ranks. The line is blurring between house churches and official ones, and
Christians are starting to emerge from hiding to play a more active part in
society.
The Communist Party has to find a new way to deal with all this. There is
even talk that the party, the world’s largest explicitly atheist
organisation, might follow its sister
parties in Vietnam and Cuba and allow members to embrace a dogma other
than—even higher than—that of Marx.
Any
shift in official thinking on religion could have big ramifications for the
way China handles a host of domestic challenges, from separatist unrest among
Tibetan Buddhists and Muslim Uighurs in the country’s west to the growth of
NGOs and “civil society”—grassroots organisations, often with a religious
colouring, which the party treats with suspicion, but which are also
spreading fast.
Safety in numbers
The
upsurge in religion in China, especially among the ethnic Han who make up
more than 90% of the population, is a general one. From the bullet trains
that sweep across the Chinese countryside, passengers can see new churches
and temples springing up everywhere. Buddhism, much longer established in
China than Christianity, is surging too, as is folk religion; many more Han
are making pilgrimages to Buddhist shrines in search of spiritual comfort.
All this worries many officials, for whom religion is not only Marx’s “opium
of the people” but also, they believe, a dangerous perverter of loyalty away
from the party and the state. Christianity, in particular, is associated with
19th-century Western imperial encroachment; and thus the party’s treatment of
Christians offers a sharp insight into the way its attitudes are changing.
It
is hard even to guess at the number of Christians in China. Official surveys
seek to play down the figures, ignoring the large number who worship in house
churches. By contrast, overseas Christian groups often inflate them. There were perhaps 3m Catholics and 1m
Protestants when the party came to power in 1949. Officials now say there are
between 23m and 40m, all told. In 2010 the Pew Research Centre, an American
polling organisation, estimated there were 58m Protestants and 9m Catholics.
Many experts, foreign and Chinese, now
accept that there are probably more Christians than there are members of the
87m-strong Communist Party. Most are evangelical Protestants.
Predicting
Christianity’s growth is even harder. Yang Fenggang of Purdue University, in
Indiana, says the Christian church in China has grown by an average of 10% a
year since 1980. He reckons that on current trends there will be 250m
Christians by around 2030, making China’s Christian population the largest in
the world. Mr Yang says this speed of growth is similar to that seen in
fourth-century Rome just before the conversion of Constantine, which paved
the way for Christianity to become the religion of his empire.
In
the 1980s the faith grew most quickly in the countryside, stimulated by the
collapse of local health care and a belief that Christianity could heal
instead. In recent years it has been burgeoning in cities. A new breed of
educated, urban Christians has emerged. Gerda Wielander of the University of
Westminster, in her book “Christian Values in Communist China”, says that
many Chinese are attracted to Christianity because, now that belief in
Marxism is declining, it offers a complete moral system with a transcendental
source. People find such certainties appealing, she adds, in an age of
convulsive change.
Some Chinese also discern in Christianity the roots of
Western strength. They see it as the force behind the development of social
justice, civil society and rule of law, all things they hope to see in China. Many new NGOs are run
by Christians or Buddhists. There are growing numbers of Christian doctors
and academics. More than 2,000 Christian schools are also dotted around
China, many of them small and all, as yet, illegal.
One
civil-rights activist says that, of the 50 most-senior civil-rights lawyers
in China, probably half are Christians. Some of them have set up the
Association of Human Rights Attorneys for Chinese Christians. Groups of
well-paid urban Christian lawyers join together to defend Christians—and
others—in court. Missionaries have
begun to go out from China to the developing world.
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Wednesday, November 26, 2014
RELIGION IN CHINA Part One (1/2)
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1 comment:
China has a number of quite extraordinary Christians, who have endured torture and hardship for their faith. Would we be as strong as them? I often wonder how I would react. it's a scary thought.
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