On July 28 the Wall Street Journal ran a front page article on the state of China's underground churches. The underground, Protestant church in China is very large. Government-backed (and therefore conservative) estimates say China has 23 million Protestants. The number is probably at least triple that. According to this article, the city of Beijing has 20 underground seminaries.
One of the underground churches is called the Shouwang Church. It has over 1,000 members. These members were evicted from their meeting place last April. But the churches are becoming defiant. Brian Spegele, writing for the WSJ:
A vast national network of underground churches across the country promises to have staying power. No sooner was Shouwang shut down, for example, than [Beijing] Zion [Church] became more prominent.
Beijing Zion is a church of 800 with a pastor who is increasingly outspoken. The government is making statements, trying to keep the believers under control. The following excerpt is from an editorial printed in the Global Times, a newspaper run by the state:
A church should not become a power which can promote radical change . . . Otherwise, the church is not engaged in religion but in politics, which is not allowed for a church.
Such is life in Communist China. When members of Shouwang Church assembled outside, they were shut down by the police. According to Spegele, "Some have been confined to their homes while others have been expelled to their hometowns in the provinces."
Jesus knew this would happen. So he preached:
Blessed are you when others revile you and persecute you and utter all kinds of evil against you falsely on my account. Rejoice and be glad, for your reward is great in heaven, for so they persecuted the prophets who were before you.
It is hard for Americans to understand what it is like to wake up with the realization that this very day you could be banned from attending of Bible study, refused entrance into a city, or imprisoned--all because you want to assemble in the name of Jesus Christ.
I'm sure it is hard for many of these Chinese believers to understand how we can be so timid when it comes to sharing our faith when we have the freedom to do so.