Sunday, April 10, 2011

Chinese Underground Churches Face New Challenges

BY SUCCESS KANAYO UCHIME

The Underground Churches in China are daily facing new challenges from the hands of the authorities there, with the recent news of attacks on Beijing and Guangzhou underground Churches.


Asia News report (http://www.asianews.it/) indicates that in addition to the ever-present threat of violence, the authorities now use administrative rules and legal technicalities to shut down Churches. The faithful, however, are prepared to pray even in snow-covered parks.

(One of the Chinese Underground Church leaders detained by the police)
It noted that underground Chinese Christians are increasingly the target of the authorities and that just recently, one of the largest home Church has been shut down.

According to the report, another one in Guangzhou has been forced to stop its activities, whilst a third one has been expelled from the premises it had rented. Although less violent as in the past, such actions shows how the central government is pursuing relentlessly and more effectively its policy of religious repression.

Commenting on this new development, one of the underground church leaders in China, Rev Jin Tianming said that the Beijing-based Shouwang Church, with about 800 members, now has nowhere to worship after Sunday as its landlord has come under pressure to stop renting it a spacious film studio to host its services.

He noted that it is not the first time that this Church has been under pressure to stop meeting. It has been evicted from rented premises many times in the past and the authorities have used administrative measures, such as allegations that it breached fire regulations, to put pressure on the Church to close.

He said the faithful however plan to hang tight. To each act of persecution, they respond peacefully adding that the last time they were kicked out from their place of worship, in November 2009, they held Sunday worship outdoors, when the Church was forced to hold services in a park in a snowstorm.

Tianming observed that under Chinese law, unauthorized meetings are illegal, but "We don't have a choice. We're willing to face the consequences. In Guangzhou, things are not much better. Local authorities ordered the Tianyun Church, which has a congregation of about 200, to stop worshipping starting this week,” he stated.

He confirmed that another Guangzhou house Church, which has a congregation of 4,000, is also feeling the squeeze after its landlord succumbed to pressure and stopped letting out premises the church had used as an extension to host its bulging congregation. The Rongguili Church owns its main worship venue.

Also commenting, a divinity scholar at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, Professor Ying Fuk-tsang, said the authorities tend to be anxious about underground churches, which have expanded rapidly and now have large congregations. "Many rights lawyers and intellectuals (who go to those churches) have criticized the government."

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