“If
I’m following Christ, why am I such a good insurance risk?”
Ernie
Campbell
According to a disturbing new report, police
in China arrested a woman, Xu Shizhen, along with her daughter and 3-year-old
grandson, for singing Christian songs in a public park. Recently, China passed
even more restrictions of practicing faith that make it illegal to publicly
minister if you’re not inside of a church that’s been registered with the
government. Christianity Today reports that, according to Chinese
advocates inside the country, since the arrest, the three have not been seen.
“The new religion regulations are sweeping in
scope and, if fully enforced, could mean major changes for China’s unregistered
church, not only in its worship and meeting practices, but also engagement in
areas such as Christian education, media, and interaction with the global
church,” wrote ChinaSource president Brent Fulton. “Yet the nature of
these activities and, indeed, of much religious practice throughout China,
makes enforcement extremely problematic.”
It appears enforcement, at least in Xu’s
Xianan district of Xianning, is going to be very strict. The regulations which
include prohibitions against publishing religious materials without approval,
accepting donations without approval, or renting space to an unregistered
church, don’t even officially go into effect until February 2018. Other
provinces have been coming down especially hard on religious education for
children. In Zhejiang province—where hundreds of crosses were ripped off
of churches over the past several years—elementary and middle school
children weren’t allowed to attend church or Sunday school this past summer. In
Wenzhou, a coastal city in Zhejiang province nicknamed “China’s Jerusalem,”
officials warned more than 100 churches to keep their teenagers home from
summer camps or Sunday schools. North of Zhejiang, officials in Henan province
also forbid church summer camps, claiming the “hot summer
temperatures would be unhealthy for youth.”
China’s young Christians drew international
attention over the summer when two were killed by ISIS in Pakistan. Meng Li Si,
26, and Li Xinheng, 24. These two Chinese martyrs were teaching in a
private school in Quetta when they were kidnapped and murdered. Their deaths
prompted scrutiny from both China and Pakistan. Meng and Li were in Pakistan on
business visas, two among thousands of Chinese sent West to help build
infrastructure and trade routes as part of China’s “One Belt, One Road” trade
push. Chinese believers are using their careers in China’s trade initiatives to
send out thousands of lay missionaries to spread the Gospel. Only God could use
an atheistic government to unknowingly finance bi-vocational missionaries to
share the Gospel in anti-Christian Islamic ones. With the boldness of the early
church, believers living under the iron heel of Communism are being imprisoned in
their own country or martyred in another for their faith. Not only are Chinese
believers sharing their faith in China – risking their lives, children, and property
but they’re fanning out over the fields of the world to share the message of
God’s grace. And because there are so many of them, and they must be covert,
there are no accurate numbers of how many, but there are lots of them.
At
Grace today we are participating in the Annual International Day of Prayer for the
Persecuted Church. It’s tempting to act as if Christianity is American
and wrap our faith in the Stars and Stripes. We too easily forget that we have
more in common with Christians in China (and around the world) than we do with
our unregenerate neighbors who live across the street. They worship the same
God, have the same worldview, live life with the same blueprint (the Bible), and
hold to the exclusivity of Jesus Christ as the only means of salvation and
restoration of a relationship with a loving, holy God. They have the same final
destination in that we will spend eternity with them worshiping the One who
died so that we might live.
My
heart is often broken as I learn of the suffering of brothers and sisters
around the world for the sake of the Gospel. Lately, I’ve been mulling over: When
did we start to think that Christianity is supposed to be safe?”
Christianity has
never been safe. Jesus warned us in John 15:20, “If they persecuted Me, they will also persecute you.” We truly
know so little of persecution in Western Civilization. Having a “friend” not
invite you to the annual Super Bowl Party or making fun of you behind your
back, or even losing your job for your faith – is hardly persecution.
According
to Open Doors USA, a Christian advocacy group focused on ministering to persecuted
Christians, 1 in 12 Christians today experiences high, very high or
extreme persecution for their faith. Nearly 215 million Christians face high
persecution with 100 million of those living in Asia. It’s estimated that
between the years 2005 and 2015, 900,000 Christians were martyred.
That’s an average of 90,000 Christians each year.
How dare we play it safe? How can we rationalize not sharing the Gospel with a lost friend or co-worker because they might not like us anymore? How can we keep silent about our faith with our family because it might cause tension at the annual holiday get-together? Obviously, we should never be rude, insensitive or obnoxious (which sometimes Christians are), but isn’t it time for us, as Christians in America, to stop playing it safe? Jesus didn’t play it “safe” when He came to earth. The Gospel is risky and revolutionary. It should turn your life upside down. It’s also the only hope for a decaying world. True Christianity is anything but safe!
Can we help you spiritually? Can we help you know Jesus better? Please check out more resources on our church's web page, Gracechurchwi.org. Or, call us at 262.763.3021. If you'd like to know more about how Jesus can change your life, I'd love to mail you a copy of how Jesus changed my life in "My Story." E-mail me at Carson@gracechurchwi.org to request a free copy. Please include your mailing address.
How dare we play it safe? How can we rationalize not sharing the Gospel with a lost friend or co-worker because they might not like us anymore? How can we keep silent about our faith with our family because it might cause tension at the annual holiday get-together? Obviously, we should never be rude, insensitive or obnoxious (which sometimes Christians are), but isn’t it time for us, as Christians in America, to stop playing it safe? Jesus didn’t play it “safe” when He came to earth. The Gospel is risky and revolutionary. It should turn your life upside down. It’s also the only hope for a decaying world. True Christianity is anything but safe!
Can we help you spiritually? Can we help you know Jesus better? Please check out more resources on our church's web page, Gracechurchwi.org. Or, call us at 262.763.3021. If you'd like to know more about how Jesus can change your life, I'd love to mail you a copy of how Jesus changed my life in "My Story." E-mail me at Carson@gracechurchwi.org to request a free copy. Please include your mailing address.
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