Why, with no apparent resources, Chinese churches thrive.
By Philip Yancey | posted 7/01/2004 12:00AM
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Shi must travel constantly, eluding police through narrow escapes. The house churches, recognizing his leadership skills, have promoted him so that he now supervises 260,000 Christians in his province.
Just as our meetings concluded, someone knocked on the door. It was Pastor Paul, a sprightly senior citizen who had decided to defy the ban and meet with me anyway. "I'm 90 years old, and I've spent 22 years in prison—what are they going to do to me?" he said with a grin. He gave me a dvd that showed a mass baptism of 453 believers in 2003.
Before going to China I met with one of the missionaries who had been expelled in 1950. "We felt so sorry for the church we left behind," he said. "They had no one to teach them, no printing presses, no seminaries, no one to run their clinics and orphanages. No resources, really, except the Holy Spirit." It appears the Holy Spirit is doing just fine.
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