Chris White
Max Planck Society
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Featured researches published by Chris White.
Cultural Diversity in China | 2016
Chris White
Deciphering the number of Christians in China has been a particular fascination for Western scholars, church leaders, politicians, and journalists. Rodney Stark and Xiuhua Wang’s recent volume, A Star in the East: The Rise of Christianity in China, is the latest attempt to do just that. In addition, this slim volume (under 130 pages of text) attempts to provide a more precise demographic profile of Christians, both Protestant and Catholic, than population numbers alone reveal. The book begins with an overview of the state of religious belief in China in which Stark and Wang hope to avoid the “nonsense” offered by other authors by basing their discussion on “reliable statistics, properly interpreted” (pg. 2). The data from this initial chapter, which is actually based (over half of it verbatim) on a journal article by Stark and Eric Liu, discusses two recent surveys conducted in China in which the authors attempt to reconcile the fact that while many Chinese claim to have no religion, their actions may not support this assertion. After looking at religion in China in general, Stark and Wang focus on the state of Christianity. While a 2007 survey reports 2.5% of the population as Christian (about 30 million), the authors massage this number to suggest that there were “slightly more than 60 million” (p. 11) Christians in China at that time. Chapters two and three provide a bit of historical background on the situation of Christianity in China both before and after the founding of the PRC in 1949 and set the stage for Chapters four and five, which as the heart of the book look at factors such as education and urban or rural environments on the number of Chinese Christians. There are nuggets of novel statistical and analytical information found in these chapters. For example, survey results show that the religious revival in China is not predominantly rural, but that Christianity overall is growing among both rural and urban populations. As the authors summarize, “if there is an outbreak of religious fever in China, it is everywhere” (p. 95). Stark and Wang also provide statistics that reflect the role of family networks in rural conversions. As they aptly remark, “[i]n the most literal sense, in rural China, Christianity is a family affair” (p. 107). The authors further contend that higher education is positively correlated to being a Christian in today’s China. The sociological analysis of Chinese Christians is interesting, such as the assertion that conversion, as an act of conformity, usually follows social networks and family ties, or the refutation of the deprivation theory of conversion. However, these are the exact parts of the volume found in Stark’s other publications. It would be of interest for future scholars to apply such sociological analysis to local studies and actually show how conversion works along such lines in modern China. The final chapter offers projections of Chinese Christianity in the future and what this could mean for China. Stark and Wang predict just under 300 million Chinese Christians by 2030 and nearly double that number in 2040. The authors are more cautious in their prediction of what this growth may mean for China, but suggest it could encourage greater economic liberalization and
Archive | 2019
Chris White
Two stone plaques border the main entrance of Xinjie Church, located just off of Zhongshan Road, Xiamen’s main shopping area that has now been turned into a pedestrian street.
Archive | 2019
Chris White
It was a normal night in the spring of 1924 for Liao Shuirong, a deacon of the small Haicang Church, as he lay fast asleep in his room above the family bakery just a stone’s throw from the local church. Suddenly, Liao was awakened by a strange voice calling his name.
Archive | 2019
Chris White
I was recently told of a Christian from Xiamen who, born during the tumultuous Cultural Revolution, grew up on the small island of Gulangyu. When this individual started kindergarten in the mid-1970s, she was shocked to find that some of her new playmates did not know who God was and she was even more horrified to see that her classmates did not pray before their lunch.
Archive | 2017
Chris White
It was a typical Monday evening as the Christian residents of Shicuo 施厝, all of whom are relatives of a branch of the local Shi lineage, gathered in the central hall of the branch’s ancestral home. The back wall of the room displayed a painted red cross, topped by a silver crown and flanked by portraits of deceased ancestors looking down on those in attendance (see Image 8.1). Children ran in and out, scrambling among the feet of the twenty adults sipping tea and snacking on fruit around the room’s long table. The local pastor hurried into the room to lead the mid-week services as hymnals and Bibles were passed out to those in attendance. The ceremony commenced with the communal singing of hymns, followed by a sermon the pastor largely read from her cell phone. The service ended with a time of sharing and prayer, after which the family members slowly dispersed, flashlights illuminating their paths as they returned to their homes in the village. Such mid-week religious gatherings are common for Protestants in rural South Fujian, or minnan 闽南, where Christians may attend Sunday morning services at the nearest church building, as well as one (or more) mid-week meeting.2 What is interesting about the service here, though, is that it is lineage-based and held in the family’s ancestral home. In the post-Mao years, China has experienced a revival of many traditional customs, and in South Fujian the building or refurbishing of ancestral halls and the repurposing of ancestral homes as focal points for family activities and religious rituals are manifestations of this resurgence of once-banned practices.3 This chapter, based on fieldwork and interviews throughout the region,
Chinese Law and Government | 2017
Chris White; Mark McLeister
Christianity and the Internet are two of the most controversial issues found in Western discourse on China. The most common angle to these discussions tends to emphasize coercive actions from the s...
Studies in World Christianity | 2017
Chris White
Archive | 2019
Chris White
Archive | 2017
Chris White
Archive | 2017
Chris White