100 Worshippers Abducted on Sunday

Worship
Worship (photo: Pixabay)
By Faith MagbanuaDecember 10th, 2018

About 100 worshipers from an unknown Christian Church in China has been abducted by the authorities on Sunday evening, December 9, 2018.

According to reports, Chinese authorities have marked the members of the Early Rain Covenant Church across various districts of Chengdu, the provincial capital of Sichuan, in what appears to be an effort to close down one of the country's most prominent Protestant house churches.

Prior to the abduction, the members' personal accounts and cell group discussions on social media channels were blocked at around 9pm on Sunday while the church's telephone line was also cut. The homes of the church's leaders, including pastor Wang Yi, were among those raided.

Meanwhile, Zhang Guoqiang, an assistant deacon of the Early Rain Covenant Church, was among two church members who were released on Monday morning after his arrest by Chengdu police in the Sunday night raids.

Zhang is now being watched around the clock by "security personnel" in his home.

According to Zhang's statement, he headed to Wang's home at around 7pm on Sunday after hearing about the raids but the pastor and his wife Jiang Rong were nowhere to be found.

"His home was ransacked. It was a mess," Zhang said.

"The police said our church is an illegal organization and we cannot attend any more gatherings from now on."

The Early Rain Covenant Church is one of China's few unofficial house churches - Christian assemblies that operate without state sanction - and this is not the first time Wang and other members of the church have been detained.

While most of China's Protestant house churches operate underground to avoid attracting official attention and control, the Early Rain congregation openly practices its faith, posting sermons online and evangelizing on the streets.

"Even if we are down to our last five, worship and gatherings will still go on because our faith is real," Li said.

"Persecution is a price worth paying for the Lord, we would rather live through it than to hide our faith and we hope more Chinese churches will speak up and stand with us."

 

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