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February 12, 2012

Home > 2010 > AugustChristianity Today, August, 2010
The Village Green
Smuggle Bibles into China? The More, the Better
Covertly supplying Bibles to China is not only legitimate—it is a necessary element of obedience to Christ.




Gary Russell, international director for China Harvest, Todd Nettleton, director of media development for the Voice of the Martyrs USA, and Jonathan Brooks, president of the Voice of China and Asia Missionary Society, weigh in on whether Christians should continue to smuggle Bibles into China.

The best way to illustrate the need for Bibles in China today is to share the testimony of a longtime friend, Brother "Han."

Born a peasant, Han came to Christ while in university. While planting churches in urban centers, he found the number of available basic Bibles growing. Getting enough Bibles was not the problem. That need, he concluded, was being met on a nationwide basis.

Soon, Han was asked to help develop a major Chinese study Bible for pastors, and he worked to help pastors use it in every imaginable church setting. Many of those churches—especially rural ones—began asking him for regular Bibles to distribute. He was shocked to learn that they had only very limited access to officially sanctioned Bibles. Han found himself confronted by hundreds of thousands of Bible requests. The number of requests he receives is still growing.

Different areas in China have widely different circumstances and must be approached using different practices. But nationwide, there are just not enough Bibles to go around. Paul Hattaway, founder and director of Asia Harvest, recently compiled a county-by-county report of the number of Christians in China from 2,000 published sources, and arrived at a total of more than 102 million. Taking the loftiest estimate of Bibles supplied from all sources and comparing it with reasonable but conservative estimates of the number of Christians in China, one is left with a deficit in the tens of millions.

Whether working primarily in registered or unregistered churches, we should agree on some common realities.

Every Chinese person deserves access to God's Word, and hundreds of millions do not have it now; the need has increased in the past 30 years.

Amity Press Bibles are legal, authentic, and available in many areas, and have made a substantial contribution to the need. But the Amity route is limited in quantity, variety, and distribution. Editions for children and pastors have barely been addressed. And millions of Chinese still have no regular access to a Bible.

Given these realities, covertly supplying Bibles to China is not only legitimate—it is a necessary element of obedience to Christ. While civil authorities are to be honored and respected, their authority is delegated by and limited under God. Restrictions against evangelizing and providing Scripture are not legitimate, and those who love God and China serve well by increasing the country's Bible supply.

But government-sanctioned and clandestine Bible suppliers contradict the very Bible they are distributing when they attack each other, oversimplify China's context, or otherwise undermine their unity in Christ to appease their own constituents and stakeholders. Both suppliers are appropriate, share the same goal, and are utterly insufficient to achieve that goal working alone.

Supplying Bibles to China by any means is a great contribution to the cause of Christ. All concerned would do well to exhibit Christlike humility, recognizing that we "see through a glass darkly."


Related Elsewhere:

Gary Russell is international director for China Harvest, which ministers to needy individuals inside China. Todd Nettleton and Jonathan Brooks also weighed in.

Christianity Today spoke with more ministries last year about the Bible smuggling debate.

Previous Village Green sections have discussed frozen embryos, creation care, intelligent design, preaching, immigration, Lent, premarital abstinence, aid to foreign nations, technology, and abortion.





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archae ologist

August 23, 2010  4:11pm

i actually disagree with the justifications used in this article and cannot support its message. since there is a legal way to get Bibles then believers should be makingit possible for the poor to obtain copies the legal way. thatway the persecutionof themis avoided and believers can enjoy God's word inpeace and without a guilty complex.

tim w

August 19, 2010  5:31am

I am writing from Shanghai. There are actually more than enough Bibles in China. But when a church leader wants to buy a 100 copies; there is no way to buy at large quantities. Yet if an individual believer wants to buy one, there are many ways; they can even buy online, at US$2 each, plus $1 courier fee. The real problem Chinese believers have today, is not knowing how to read the Bible well; like American Christians 20 years ago. That is where some of us are trying to help, look at this webcast website in China, on which I uploaded videos for educational purposes: http://www.tudou.com/home/fish-cafe/

tim w

August 19, 2010  5:30am

Me again from Shanghai. While many Chinese believers have more than one bible; just 5 years ago, virtually no one knows who Gordon Fee was. Now the situation is a little better. With their lack of reading techniques, many extremist teachers managed to creep in, and became very popular among Chinese believers. Such as Chinese versions of Mar-Joe, such as occultish abusive sects, Korean Adventists, and Westminster Confession extremists who tell the Chinese that "Gordon Fee is heterodoxical", and tell them that "Methodists are deceived by Satan". So the real need is, better exegesis education that is easily accessible and understandable even by the village people.

lewis vansteenkiste

August 18, 2010  4:17pm

In total agreement, i have been there and done that and will support any metod to get Bibles into China.

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