Compass
Direct - August 2002
Posted 30 August 2002 on Religioscope
The
Protestant church in Inner Mongolia is still quite small but
growing rapidly. Inner Mongolia is also a stronghold of Catholicism.
Catholics number at least 200,000. There are four bishops
appointed by the CPA, but there are also three underground bishops loyal to the Vatican.
Inner
Mongolia is a huge region that straggles along the Mongolian
border for a thousand miles. Most of the area is a sparsely
inhabited wilderness, from the burning deserts of the Gobi
to the thickly forested mountains on the Siberian frontier.
Over the last century, Chinese settlers have moved into the
main cities and now constitute a majority of the inhabitants.
The total population in 1999 was 23,620,000, of which only
about 4 million are Mongols.
The
Protestant church in Inner Mongolia is still quite small but
growing rapidly. When the Chinese Communists took over power
in 1949, there were only 11,789 Protestants in this huge area
served by 33 pastors, 76 elders and 62 evangelists. On the
eve of Chinas Cultural Revolution in 1965, the number
of believers had shrunk to 8,775. The following year, all
churches were closed. Thirteen years of fierce persecution
followed. Churches started to re-open after 1980.
In
1982, there were 12,000 registered Protestants. But the number
of ministers had been decimated by persecution. Only six pastors,
22 elders and 50 evangelists were employed in the state-controlled
churches.
However,
by 1988, the total number of Christians had shot up to 71,000.
Between 1987 and 1993, thirty-nine new churches and 477 government-registered
meeting points were established. In March 2000, the state-church
magazine Tian Feng reported 160,000 Christians and
962 registered churches and meeting points. But in November
2001, it gave figures of 172,000 believers and over
1,000 official churches and meeting points.
Inner
Mongolia is also a stronghold of Catholicism. Catholics number
at least 200,000.
In
1997, the government-controlled Catholic Patriotic Association
(CPA) opened about 50 Catholic churches and 130 meeting points.
There are four bishops appointed by the CPA, but there are
also three underground bishops loyal to the Vatican.
About 80 priests are active, over half are young men, and
two priests are Mongols. Mongol Catholics in the diocese of
Yimeng number over 2,000.
Protestant
house churches are also numerous in Inner Mongolia. The city
of Wuyuan has strong house churches in the Jesus Family tradition, which stresses a simple lifestyle and vigorous
evangelism.
However,
the overwhelming majority of Protestant Christians in both
the official church and the house churches appear to be Han
Chinese, and most live in urban areas. In Hohhot, the capital,
there are at least 10,000 Christians associated with the official
church, which has four large churches in the city center.
The
church faces two major obstacles: persecution and cults. In
recent years, churches have been demolished in some areas
of Inner Mongolia by hostile local authorities. In some areas,
Christianity is virtually banned. Because of the lack of trained
pastors, cults have made easy inroads. Over the last year,
80 percent of the house churches in the Linhe area on the
banks of the Yellow River in the western part of the region
have been taken over by the cult Lightning from the East,
which proclaims a female messiah.
Inner
Mongolia is one of the most backward areas in terms of gospel
witness, laments a house church leader who is overseer
for 30 congregations in the Hohhot area. Today many
house church leaders here have received extreme teaching,
even heresy, from overseas, particularly Singapore and South
Korea. We thank God for Christian radio, which is helping
to build up our remote congregations.