Chinese pastors tour Canada



Four Chinese pastors shared about the church in their home country at a “Lunch and Learn” event hosted by Mennonite Church Eastern Canada in Kitchener, Ontario, on October 29.

The pastors requested that their names not be used.

Churches in China are either registered with the government or are house churches, which operate outside the government’s knowledge. Some churches are able to operate partly within legal bounds and partly underground.

The visiting pastors said that laws and attitudes towards churches in China have changed significantly in the past five years. The Chinese government forbids Sunday school for children. If a church is found breaking this law, it is shut down, and the pastor risks arrest.

One pastor who spoke at the event attended Anabaptist Mennonite Biblical Seminary in Indiana. He said that when he encountered Anabaptist theology, he felt he had found his spiritual home; it made sense in a way other spiritual training had not.

The pastors see the Anabaptist faith tradition as well-suited to the context of church in China. They believe that teaching of non-violence, forgiveness, patience and simple living are powerful messages that China needs.

Jeanette Hanson worked in China for more than 20 years and is now director of International Witness for Mennonite Church Canada. Hanson, who travelled with the Chinese pastors to locations in Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan and B.C. this fall, said Mennonites were in China as early as 1909. Over the years, they built and supported hospitals and schools.

When China reopened in 1980, Mennonites started the first non-governmental exchanges. These exchanges grew, and many relationships between Chinese and North American Mennonites developed. The pandemic brought an end to these programs.

The pastors said the church is not easily accepted in Chinese society. Many of the encounters Chinese people have with the church are with fundamentalist missionaries. When a person becomes a Christian in that context, they are expected to give up their own culture; they are taught that Chinese culture is evil and they are expected to do things such as cover up their dragon art.

A commonly believed rumour in China is that many of the leaders of the Tiananmen Square demonstration fled to America and became pastors. Whether or not this is true, this kind of rumour fuels government distrust of churches and pastors.

These kinds of associations with Christianity make it more difficult for the church to be accepted in society. Growth of the church has slowed significantly from the 1980s and ’90s. Some say growth has stopped altogether.

MC Canada relates closely with global companions in 15 countries, including China.



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