We have seen that traditional Chinese culture contains many “hints and shadows” of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Now let us look at ways in which modern Chinese society prepares the way for the light, life, and love of God as expressed in the Good News. I shall call these “pressure points.”
Hints and Shadows
In past Reaching Chinese Worldwide newsletters, we have looked at various methods of reaching Chinese around the world with the Gospel of Christ. Now we shall begin a new series on “Points of Contact” with Chinese people and their culture, hoping to explore ways in which Christians can speak to existing conditions and concepts.
Is Christianity a “Chinese” Religion?
Zurich Statement on the Church in China Issued by the Religious Liberty Partnership, March 2008
Gospel and Gunboat: Strange Bedfellows
As we study Chinese history from 1800-1950, we see two main dynamics happening in relation to foreigners and foreign missions in China. On the one hand, we see foreign imperialists forcing China to sign unequal treaties and taking advantage of an obviously weakened Chinese state, unable to defend itself. With these unequal treaties, we see an opening for foreign missions organizations that come into China on the coattails of the imperialists. On the other hand, we cannot ignore all the wonderful works that the foreign missionaries accomplish, including Bible translation, setting up schools, Universities, and the start of the modern day Christian church in China.
Criticism of Missionaries: Just or Unjust?
Missionaries have been criticized for a wide variety of reasons: In China, they came in with the European gunboats, which forced open the door to trade, including the import of opium. This led to one humiliation after another, and it was hard for Chinese to distinguish missionaries from their governments.
Chinese Christians and the Government
The Chinese Character
Does anything uniquely “Chinese” remain stable and steady in the midst of the vortex of shifting values and practices that we are now witnessing? If so, what characteristics provide a common identity among so many different people scattered around the world? Wherever they are found, Chinese people around the world tend to exhibit the following traits.