secretly extended multiple invitations to Christians who privately set up meeting points. This action publicly challenges the principle of independent, autonomous, domestically organized religious associations, and therefore represents a rude interference in Chinese religious affairs.
Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Sunday, October 17, 2010
China Bars House Church Members From Attending International Conference
The New York Times reported Friday that in China more than 100 Christians were barred by authorities from leaving the country to attend the Third Lausanne Conference on World Evangelization that begins today in Cape Town, South Africa. The Christians seeking to attend are members of unofficial "house churches" in China. The Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs said that Conference organizers did not invite representatives of China's official Christian churches and instead: