In January, police officers from the Economic and Technological Development Zone Branch of the Fuyang Municipal Public Security Bureau interrupted a childrenâs prayer meeting at the Fuyang Maizhong Reformed Church and conducted a raid.
Three Christians leading the childrenâDai Chuanli, Wang Dandan, and Ma Jiahuiâwere placed in administrative detention for fifteen days pending further investigations.
The Fuyang Maizhong Reformed Church is no stranger to such raids, having been harassed and surveilled since 2018 when its leader signed a letter of protest of house church pastors against a new Regulation on Religious Affairs that went into force early that year.
âHouse churchesâ are Protestant communities that do not subscribe to the government-controlled âThree-Self Church Patriotic Movement,â the official government supervisory organ for Protestantism in the People’s Republic of China. The Regulation on Religious Affairs targeted and sought to destroy the so-called âgray marketâ of temples, churches, and mosques that operate independently of Chinese Communist Party (CCP) control.
Until the Regulation, though gray market houses of worship were illegal, it was not illegal to belong to one. All that changed with the new regulation. Some house churches tried to go along with the new regulations, but when the CCP shut down the Beijing Zion Churchâone of the largest house churches in the cityâafter a campaign of surveillance, intimidation of church members, attempted bribery of a pastor, interrogation and finally coercing the churchâs landlord to cancel its leaseâit was clear that the intent was to shut down all but government-controlled houses of worship.
The letter of protest, signed by hundreds of pastors, accused the CCP of âviolent actionsâ that âattempt to alter and distort the Christian faith.â The letter states, âThese include demolishing crosses on church buildings, violently removing expressions of faith like crosses and couplets hanging on Christiansâ homes, forcing and threatening churches to join religious organizations controlled by the government, forcing churches to hang the national flag or to sing secular songs praising the State and political parties, banning the children of Christians from entering churches and receiving religious education, and depriving churches and believers of the right to gather freely.
âWe believe that these unjust actions are an abuse of government power and have led to serious conflicts between political and religious parties in Chinese society. These actions infringe on the human freedoms of religion and conscience and violate the universal rule of law.â
The letter, sent in September 2018, concludes, âUnder no circumstances will we lead our churches to join a religious organization controlled by the government, to register with the religious administration department, or to accept any kind of affiliation. We also will not accept any âbanâ or âfineâ imposed on our churches due to our faith. For the sake of the gospel, we are prepared to bear all lossesâeven the loss of our freedom and our lives.â
After enduring governmental shadowing, persecution, and intimidation for several years, the Fuyang Maizhong Reformed Church was attacked on October 8, 2021. Elder Chang Shun, leading a prayer meeting in a private home, was taken away by the police. His case was repeatedly postponed until he was administratively detained in September 2023. He was released but detained again on November 3, 2023, this time with two other parishioners.
Two weeks earlier, an office building where members of the church had gathered for a Bible study session was raided, and seven congregants were detained for several hours. Other church members have reported constant harassment by the police.
The CCPâs crackdown on house churches that refuse to join the regime-controlled Three-Self Church was taken up a notch by a strategy initiated in December by Xi Jinping at the National Conference on Work Related to Religious Affairs.
That month the U.S. State Department designated China a Country of Particular Concern for its unrelenting and egregious abuses of the religious rights of its people.
_________________
From its beginnings, the Church of Scientology has recognized that freedom of religion is a fundamental human right. In a world where conflicts are often traceable to intolerance of othersâ religious beliefs and practices, the Church has, for more than 50 years, made the preservation of religious liberty an overriding concern.
The Church publishes this blog to help create a better understanding of the freedom of religion and belief and provide news on religious freedom and issues affecting this freedom around the world.
The Founder of the Scientology religion is L. Ron Hubbard and Mr. David Miscavige is the religionâs ecclesiastical leader.
For more information, visit the Scientology website or Scientology Network.Â