The Columbus Dispatch

Chinese government razes popular evangelica­l church

- By Russell Goldman

HONG KONG — Chinese police officers demolished one of the country’s largest evangelica­l churches last week, using heavy machinery and dynamite to raze the building where more than 50,000 Christians worshipped.

The Golden Lampstand Church in Shanxi province was one of at least two Christian churches demolished by authoritie­s in recent weeks, part of what critics describe as a national effort to regulate spiritual life in China.

Under President Xi Jinping, the government has destroyed churches or removed their steeples and crosses as part of a campaign that reflects the Communist Party’s long-standing fear that Christiani­ty, viewed as a Western philosophy, is a threat to the party’s authority.

Global Times, a state newspaper, described the building’s destructio­n as part of a “citywide campaign to remove illegal buildings,” and it quoted an unidentifi­ed official as saying that the church had been “secretly” constructe­d without proper permits and was initially disguised as a warehouse.

However, members of the megachurch have previously clashed with authoritie­s, including in 2009 when police confiscate­d Bibles and imprisoned several of the congregati­on’s leaders.

On Tuesday, officers of the People’s Armed Police, a state paramilita­ry organizati­on, detonated explosives in the church’s undergroun­d sanctuary and destroyed the rest of the building, according to ChinaAid, a U.S. watchdog group that monitors religious freedom in China.

“The repeated persecutio­n of Golden Lampstand Church demonstrat­es that the Chinese government has no respect for religious freedom or human rights,” said Bob Fu, the group’s founder.

ChinaAid said that the building was built by married evangelist­s Wang Xiaoguang and Yang Rongli with nearly $3 million in contributi­ons from local Christians, but that it had never been registered with authoritie­s, a legal requiremen­t.

Officially, Chinese citizens are free to practice the religion of their choice, but the government tightly controls spiritual life, and in some cases it bans certain groups, such as Falun Gong.

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