
Christians fill a church in China during a Sunday service.
During the 1980s, there were only 10 million Christians in the
People's Republic of China, at a time when the country was still finding
its ground politically and economically. By 2007, the number of
Christians in China rose to a staggering 60 million, indicating an
impressive annual growth rate of 7 percent.
As of last year, a recent study estimates that some 100 million
Chinese citizens already believe in Jesus Christ and His teachings.
What exactly is driving the growth of Christianity
in a communist country that officially does not subscribe to any
religion but whose citizens are mostly those who practice Buddhism,
Confucianism and Taoism?
Two academics, Rodney Stark and Xiuhua Wang, provide an answer in
their book "A Star in the East: The Rise of Christianity in China,"
published this year. For them, more and more educated Chinese are
becoming Christians to find the true meaning of life in modern times.
Stark, a sociologist by profession, explained that many Chinese
citizens, especially the better educated ones, are currently
experiencing "cultural incongruity" between traditional Asian culture
and industrial-technological modernity. This leads to "spiritual
deprivation," which can best be answered by Christianity, he said.
"The question of what does the world mean, and how do we live in it,
persists – and so that's a major motor in the Christianisation of China,
and it explains why it's the most educated Chinese who are the most apt
to join," the author explained.
He added that most Chinese intellectuals think that traditional
Eastern religions "don't fit the modern world they're engaged in" and
are "anti-progress."
"They all proclaim the world is going downhill from a glorious past,
and that we should look backwards, not forwards. None of them admit that
we're able to understand anything about the universe – it's something
we have to meditate on, not something to try and theorise about, as the
physicists and chemists do," Stark explained.
In contrast, Stark believes Christianity fits in very well with modern scientific technology.
Source: ChristianToday




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