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China escalates crackdown on house churches


WASHINGTON (BP) — The Chinese government is engaging in a three-phase campaign to eradicate Protestant house churches, according to the China Aid Association.

According to the ChinaAid information from an unnamed source, the government’s strategy was clearly outlined in a document released during a training class last September for “Patriots in the Christian Community” conducted by the State Administration for Religious Affairs (SARA).

The ChinaAid information was circulated in a Compass Direct News report in late April. The existence of an elevated government crackdown on house churches also has been verified by Baptist Press.

The Chinese government’s strategy document calls for local authorities, in phase one, to conduct a thorough investigation of house churches nationwide from January through June of this year and create dossiers on each of them.

In phase two for the following two to three years, authorities would strongly encourage unregistered churches to affiliate with the government-approved Three-Self Patriotic Movement (TSPM).

In phase three, to be completed within 10 years, churches refusing to comply would be shut down, according to the ChinaAid information.

Officials also would ban the words “house church” and all reports on house churches from websites and other media and replace the term with “house gatherings” — a term that would refer to groups meeting in sites affiliated with the TSPM.

In a random survey conducted by ChinaAid’s source in several provinces, more than 95 percent of house church leaders said they had already felt the impact of these investigations, while 85 percent said local religious affairs departments already had created a dossier for their group.

“Since the beginning of 2012, we have noticed an increase in the frequency of persecution,” ChinaAid said in a press statement, dated April 20. “In addition to the continuing persecution of Shouwang Church in Beijing, the number of similar cases has risen 20 percent over last year and has spread into other areas, including Christian education, publication and bookstores.”

The campaign first emerged in December 2010 through a secret document titled “Operation Deterrence,” issued by the Communist Party’s Central Committee. This directive urged officials at all levels to “guide” house church Christians to attend only churches belonging to the government-approved TSPM and to break up large house churches into smaller groups.

Shouwang Church, numbering some 1,000 members, felt the effects of this directive almost immediately. Having blocked Shouwang’s attempts to register legally or to find a suitable worship venue, officials in April 2011 began to arrest and interrogate church members who sought to meet outdoors in a public plaza.

Police detained 12 church members who again gathered for outdoor worship on Sunday, April 22, a little over a year after the first outdoor service in April 2011, according to Shouwang’s Facebook page. Three members were quickly released but the others were sent to local police stations and held for several hours of interrogation. Another church member was detained in a hotel on Friday afternoon, April 20, and was not released until Sunday morning.

“In the past year … our experience of the Lord differs every week. It is His grace and peace that have protected us and sustained us until now,” a church staff member wrote. “May the power and glory of the Lord become our strength while waiting for God in this difficult circumstance.”

Operation Deterrence also empowered SARA to certify and create files on all Protestant clergy as a means to further implement China’s Regulations on Religious Affairs — a process that should be completed by the end of 2012, according to a statement in January by SARA Deputy Director Jiang Jianyong. Churches led by clergy who are not certified under this system will then be at greater risk of being shut down.

Simultaneously, the China Christian Council and the TSPM are rolling out joint “Training Sessions for Ministerial Certification” across China. These sessions include instruction on China’s Regulations on Religious Affairs and the need for patriotism, according to ChinaAid.

According to the document circulated last September, the government plans to use “humane law enforcement measures” to achieve the total eradication of house churches.

“Humane law enforcement, long-term implementation and ‘united front’ style registration — how will this … impact house churches that are seeking a path to religious freedom?” ChinaAid asked in its statement, issued April 20.
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Adapted from Compass Direct News (www.compassdirect.org). Compass, based in Santa Ana, Calif., focuses on Christians worldwide who are persecuted for their faith. Used by permission. The ChinaAid report referenced in this story can be accessed at http://www.chinaaid.org/2012/04/chinaaid-special-report-chinese.html.

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