The Sabbath Sentinel |
www.biblesabbath.org |
November-December 2000 |
HOUSE
CHURCHES IN CHINA
Paul Wong
[For the protection of the House Churches in China their identities have been witheld]
The house church originated at Jerusalem when Christianity was at its
infancy. Right from apostolic times the
gospel has spread not only through preaching at public places, but also through
meetings in believer’s homes. After
Pentecost, the disciples met in homes and broke bread “from house to
house”(Acts 2:46). The apostle Paul
wrote to the disciples in Rome to greet Priscilla and Aquila and also “the
church that is in their house” (Rom. 16:3-5).
House churches have been in operation throughout the centuries.
Generally there are two types of Christian churches in China. The first type consists of Chinese
government approved institutionalized churches that are organized by the Three
Self Patriotic Movement (TSPM). Normally
these churches are also members of the China Christian Council (CCC). The second type consists of house churches
that are also known as “underground churches”.
These house churches operate illegally, that is without the sanction of
the Chinese government. Before the
Communist takeover of China in 1949 there were three indigenous movements that
worshiped in house churches. They are
the Xxxx Xxxxx Church, Yyyyy Yyyyyy and Zzzzzz Zzzzz. Of the three only the Xxxx Xxxxx Church worship on the Seventh
Day Sabbath. After the takeover these
churches continued their worship in house churches and operated in clandestine
manner in many parts of China.
Due to lack of demographic data it is impossible to
have an accurate count of the Christians in China. Most researchers agree that there were less than 1 million
Christians in China in 1949, and that serious church growth did not start until
the 1970s. The Amity News Service from
Hong Kong that based their report presented to the Sixth National Christian Council in January 1997 gave an estimate of ten to fourteen million Protestant
Christians. These figures do not
include the Catholics or the Underground Church. Researchers from the Zzzzzz Zzzzz claimed there were 30 million
Christians meeting in house churches.
Later estimates went higher still to 50 million and beyond. These reports are amazing because during the
past 50 years the Chinese Church has undergone severe persecution, probably
comparable to the ones that were experienced by the Early Christians under the
Roman tyranny. Estimates of Christians
that were, imprisoned, tortured and killed for their faith go into the
millions. In addition, virtually entire
evangelical Chinese intelligentsia was destroyed or silenced. Therefore, by even the most conservative
estimates, the Chinese church must be considered one of the most victorious in
the world. During a fifty year period when the churches in the developed
countries have not experienced any significant growth at all, and in many
places have even decreased in size, the Chinese church has grown at least
twenty, and perhaps fifty-fold.
It seems today that most of the ferment of growth in China is
occurring, not in the Government sanctioned "Three-Self Patriotic
Movement" (TSPM) churches, but in less organized and illegal house
churches.
Characteristics of the House Churches in China
1.
The house churches are indigenous to China
The house churches are not affiliated or associated
with any organization and certainly have no formal ties with any Christian
churches outside China. When the
organized churches were destroyed in the Cultural Revolution, traditional forms
of Christian ministry were also done away with. The dynamics of house churches, therefore, flow partly from their
freedom from institutional and traditional bondage. Without any organizational structure, they are not bothered with
committee meetings, agendas, reports and the power politics so common in large
organized churches. They are also free
from control by any central or national organization.
Without an institutional and hierarchic structure
the house churches rely on the Holy Spirit for guidance. Just like the Holy
Spirit gave directions to the early Christians the house churches also receive
direct instructions from the Holy Spirit.
While in Hong Kong I met a small group of young Christians from the Xxxx Xxxxx Church that had worshiped in house churches in China. All of them have wonderful testimonies of
their experiences that I shall relate here.
For security and protective reasons only fictitious names are used in
this article.
2. The house churches rely on the power of the Holy Spirit
The Xxxx Xxxxx house churches operate through the
gifts of the Holy Spirit. One of their
members that I met in Hong Kong was Sister Su.
She took out a black book and told me that was her Bible. It was filled with her own handwriting on
every page. She said that after the
Communist Cultural Revolution Bibles were scarce and difficult to obtain. Their house church prayed and asked the Lord
Jesus Christ to give them His word. She
said there was an elderly deaconess who was over eighty years old. She had totally fasted (abstention from food
and water) and prayed for nineteen days.
She became filled with the Holy Spirit and would sit in the middle of
the house church. Everyone would sit
around her. Through the unction of the
Holy Spirit this sister would recite Bible verses loudly and clearly, and every
one would write down the words in their books.
Every word is the word of God.
At the time when there were few Bibles in China God had anointed a
sister with a special charismatic gift of reciting Bible verses. God feeds His people with His word if they
hunger for it.
Sister Su told me how her family got out of China is
truly amazing. While the family was
praying for guidance God spoke to them through interpretation of tongues and
gave them a message. God told them they
have a mission to warn all the Christians in the free world that they have to
prepare themselves for the coming Great Tribulation. The Christians in the western countries will experience the same
kind of sufferings and persecutions that the Christians in China went
through. For the purpose of warning
Christians in the free world, God would let them go out of China. He had given them a date and told them to
apply for an exit permit. They obeyed
God and left China on the exact date. I
am passing on God’s warning message to you.
Another brother told me that the house churches meet
in different homes so that the Communists could not detect their meeting
places. One must remember that in China
telephones were very scarce and very few homes had them. Because of wiretapping by the government it
was not safe to talk about meetings on the phone. How do the Christians know where and when to attend the
meetings? They had to completely rely
on the Holy Spirit to direct them. The
Christians would pray earnestly and asked God to show them the place to attend
the meetings. It is incredible that the
Holy Spirit would direct each believer to the same place of meeting at the same
time.
Here is another astounding example of how the Holy
Spirit protects the house churches.
While the meeting was going on the preacher said the Holy Spirit had
just revealed to him God was dealing with a person in the room. There were about fifty persons in
attendance. Through the charismatic
gift of knowledge the preacher said there was a Communist spy in the
congregation. He preached the love of Jesus and showed how God loves everyone
and urged the person to confess his sins and accept Jesus as his Savior. One man stood up and confessed that he was a
Communist spy who had disguised himself as a believer. Nobody knew his identity and intention. He confessed he came with the intention of
spying on the house church and then report to the government and get the
believers arrested. Since the Holy
Spirit exposed him he became fearful of God and was convicted of his sins. Praise God he accepted Jesus as his
Savior. Such incidents are often
reported in the house churches in China.
God really protects His Church.
3. The house churches are abound with miracles, signs and wonders
I am told more than 80% of the believers in the XXC
house churches in China believed in the Lord Jesus Christ because they have
either seen or experienced some miracles, signs and wonders. How else can you convince atheists there is
a One True God? “God also bearing witness both with signs and wonders, with
various miracles, and gifts of the Holy Spirit, according to His own will.” (Heb.
2:4)
The main occupation of some thirty thousand people
in Sun Island off the China coast is fishing.
A fisherman’s family had accepted Jesus Christ as their Savior through
the preaching of an itinerant preacher from the XXC. At one time when the preacher arrived on the island one of their
family members had died. During the
funeral service the preacher comforted the bereaved family and while everyone
was praying the dead man was resurrected.
This news spread throughout the island and almost all the inhabitants
believed in the Lord Jesus Christ. More
than two hundred cases of people resurrected from the dead have been reported
in the XXC in China.
In Hong Kong I met an atheist who became a believer
on his first visit to the house church in China after he received healing. Tong worked as a machinist in a government
factory. There was some problem with
the machine and the electric saw had accidentally cut his right thigh. He was bleeding profusely so they rushed him
to the hospital. Due to lack of proper medical treatment gangrene had already
set in the wound. They told him that
his thigh had to be amputated the following morning. Tong was highly distresses.
Chen, a colleague of Tong’s in the factory, came to visit him in the
hospital. He told Tong that his leg
might not need an amputation if he agreed to attend a meeting with him. That evening Chen came and placed Tong on
the back of his bicycle. They came to a
house that Tong could not recognize.
Inside the house there were about 30 to 40 people. They placed Tong on a chair. When the
meeting started Tong heard for the first time in his life everybody was
praising Jesus and shouting “HalleluYah”.
After singing praises they all knelt down and prayed in unison. Many were praying in the Spirit; some laid
hands on him calling on the name of the Lord Jesus Christ. Within a few minutes Tong felt the pain in
his right thigh was gone. The wound had
healed instantly. He was released from
the hospital without amputation.
Brother Tong showed me the scar on his right thigh. He looked at me and smiled, “This is how I
came to know Jesus. Praise God,
HalleluYah!” He then picked up the
phone and called long distance to a relative in Indonesia and witnessed to him
about the Lord Jesus Christ.
4.
The house churches receive God’s protection
One of the difficulties that the house churches of
the Xxxx Xxxxx Church in China encounters concerns water baptism that must be
administered in the “Living Water”, that is natural bodies of water that are
created by God such as seas, lakes, rivers or springs. Man-made pools, cisterns and tanks are not
used. In order to avoid detection by
the Chinese Communist government water baptismal sites are often obscured,
remote and hard to find. For security
reasons the location cannot be divulged.
At one time over six hundred believers in a certain
locality had to be baptized. The
leaders had chosen a national holiday because they figured on that day the
number of Communist military men on duty would be minimal. The baptism was to be administered at night
so that the movements of the believers could be kept secret. They had chosen a river deep inside a
mountainous area that could only be reached by walking through a ravine. There was only one way in and a one way
out. Thank the Lord Jesus Christ over
six hundred believers were baptized into Him without a hitch in the river that
night. It was still dark when the
believers started walking out of the baptismal site. When they almost came to the opening of the ravine the dawn was
beginning to break. They saw something
that perplexed them. There were many
guns strewn all over the place, but no one was there. Everybody praised the Lord that the baptism was carried out
successfully. On the following day a
house church brother overheard the conversation between two soldiers in the
marketplace. One soldier was saying to
the other: “It was weird yesterday. We
received information that many Christians were inside the ravine. We were setting an ambush for them. Suddenly
an army of giants appeared. They had
shiny white uniforms. We did not shoot
them because the gunshots would let the Christians know we were there. The giants were big and strong and they were
coming straight at us with their drawn swords.
Every one of us got so scared that we left our weapons and ran for our
dear lives. . . .” God protects His
Church. “The
Angel of the LORD encamps all around those who fear Him, and delivers
them.”(Psm. 34:7) “Do nor fear, for
those who are with us are more than those who are with them.” (2 Kn. 6:16) Praise the LORD.
My personal visit to a house church in China
I have heard and read a lot about the house churches
in China and I had longed to visit at least one of them. I want to praise and thank our Lord Jesus
Christ for making it possible for me to realize my desire in April 1987. At that time it was not easy to obtain a
visas to enter China. In my application
I had to write my reason for visiting China was to study Chinese religious
buildings. The Chinese Consulate in
Houston checked out my occupation as an architect before approving my
application. I had to wait for more
than six months for Brother Ling (fictitious name) a house church brother from
China to get to Hong Kong to act as my guide.
I had to pay for all his expenses in Hong Kong and airfare back to the
mainland. There was an agonizing three
days flight delay because of bad weather conditions in China. Due to the sensitive nature of the house
churches in China I have to skip all the details and go straight to the
description of the house church that I visited.
The house church that I visited is situated in a
village hidden deep inside a mountainous terrain. I had rented a van for a week and also had another house church
brother to drive it. We came to the end
of the paved road and could go no further because the paths were uneven and too
steep. We had to walk uphill about five
miles along winding paths before sighting the village. On entering the village Brother Ling pointed
to a building on the crest of the hill and said, “That is our Church.” As we approached the building I saw a
prominently displayed sign-board with the Chinese characters “Xxxx Xxxxx
Church.” I was excited and elated
because I was told that church names could not be displayed in China. Brother Ling explained: “This is our village
and we are separated from the outside world.
We are amongst believers and friends.
We can worship God the way He wants us to. The Communists don’t bother us here.” This is a house church in China that was unaffected by the
Communists. My thought was that God
would set up places of refuge for His people during the time of the Great
Tribulation.
When it got dark I realized there was no electricity
in the whole village. People were
holding oil lamps on the streets. There
was a Church service that evening. The
chapel was on the attic floor because I could see the sloped ceilings and
exposed roof trusses. As in most XXC
chapels the platform was very small.
Only two people could stand there.
A kerosene lamp was placed on the pulpit for Bible reading. I was told there was only one Bible in the
whole church. That was considered very
fortunate. Most house churches do not
even have a single Bible. The minister
introduced me to the congregation that I estimated to be close to 150 persons.
The service format was very similar to the ones that I had been used to in the
outside world. After the hymn singing
and prayer I was invited to speak.
After my short address of encouragement the local preacher also spoke. After the sermons they had a closing prayer,
then everyone stood up to sing the choruses.
The service that lasted about one and half hour ended with a benediction
given by the elder of the church.
HalleluYah, Amen!
May God bless you.
Paul Wong is a Christian minister and the President of ARK International.
His ministry also serves as an architectural service company in Houston.
The ARK Forum on the Internet is international and non-denominational.
|
Write to: |