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China poised to become "World's MOST CHRISTIAN Nation" in 15 years as numbers grow exponentially.

西方普遍认为中国人没有信仰,这是错误的。中国人没有找出自己的上帝,去有规律有系统地参拜。但绝对不能说中国人没有信仰,中国人死的时候,不需要向哪个神说,请宽恕我的罪。中国人活着的时候,也不需要寻求哪个神给他力量让他觉得生是那么有意义,中文对信仰的解释:信仰,是指对圣贤的主张、主义、或对神的信服和尊崇、对鬼、妖、魔或天然气象的恐惧,并把它奉为自己的行为准则。
 
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But the point is that people are talking that Islam will surpass Christianity and peoples are also saying that conversion in Islam is higher than any other religon.
I don't think Islam can surpass Christianity if in next 10 years more than 100 million Chinese will convert in Christian
They keep talking. Islam will grow certainly but Christianity is growing as well.
Muslim birth rates will start falling in another decade or two. They are already stabilizing across the globe.

For better or worse, the future of Islam will be decided in India and Pakistan, not anywhere else. Together these two nations will house the largest Muslim population anywhere on Earth.

It is a great opportunity for Indians, provided we are wise to avail of it.
 
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They keep talking. Islam will grow certainly but Christianity is growing as well.
Muslim birth rates will start falling in another decade or two. They are already stabilizing across the globe.

For better or worse, the future of Islam will be decided in India and Pakistan, not anywhere else. Together these two nations will house the largest Muslim population anywhere on Earth.
People talk sh*t everyone knows that birth rate in every religion falling rapidly and you are right that in coming 1 or 2 decade that birth rate of Muslims will fall.
What about Indonesia ? They have got largest population of Muslims and also peaceful :-)
 
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This is just western wishful thinking. China was atheist nation before and will remain like that in the future. This has nothing to do with communist party, it is our tradition and we only worship our ancesters.

We have thousands years of experience and willpower to resist this kind of culture/religion invasion.
 
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People talk sh*t everyone knows that birth rate in every religion falling rapidly and you are right that in coming 1 or 2 decade that birth rate of Muslims will fall.
What about Indonesia ? They have got largest population of Muslims and also peaceful :-)
Its not about peace. Its about power.
Indonesia is already at 2.4 TFR. That is near to replacement level. As Indonesian economy grows, it will become more expensive and their TFR will steady at or below 2.1

In either case, the biggest Muslim concentration on Earth will be India and Pakistan.

The collective power of 400 million prosperous Muslims in one stable and prosperous region will change the center and focus of Islamic world from Middle East to South Asia provided the Indians and Pakistani's take that leadership and position from the Middle East. Now as Indians grow richer, they already exert more and more influence across the globe. We are certainly going to do it.

Now if Pakistanis were to become more nationalistic and care for their own people more, they would join India in this. The Gulf will change to accommodate Pakistani instead of Pakistani's changing their ambitions to accommodate middle eastern concerns. Gulf countries have already started to take Indian wants and needs far more seriously than before.

All this can only happen if Pakistani's understand this. But they have been fooled into becoming dumber by their leaders who are subservient to Arabs and have now made Pakistani's mentally subservient to Arabs. It suits the Arabs perfectly to make Pakistani's keep falling head over heels and hat in hand for ummah and Islam, instead of talking about Pakistan first.

The question is are Pakistani's willing to take their focus away from Middle East and take leadership or are they happy to constantly look to Middle East for inspiration. Currently its the latter, the real question is whether and when it becomes the former.

As I said for better or worse, the future of Islam will be decided in India and Pakistan, not Middle East or anywhere else.

@Hyperion @Oscar @Manticore . @Jungibaaz @Secur I am sure you realized this as well. And your views are most interesting to me.
 
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Sons of heaven
Inside China’s fastest-growing non-governmental organisation
From the print edition



ZHAO XIAO, a former Communist Party official and convert to Christianity, smiles over a cup of tea and says he thinks there are up to 130m Christians in China. This is far larger than previous estimates. The government says there are 21m (16m Protestants, 5m Catholics). Unofficial figures, such as one given by the Centre for the Study of Global Christianity in Massachusetts, put the number at about 70m. But Mr Zhao is not alone in his reckoning. A study of China by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life, an American think-tank, says indirect survey evidence suggests many unaffiliated Christians are not in the official figures. And according to China Aid Association (CAA), a Texas-based lobby group, the director of the government body which supervises all religions in China said privately that the figure was indeed as much as 130m in early 2008.

If so, it would mean China contains more Christians than Communists (party membership is 74m) and there may be more active Christians in China than in any other country. In 1949, when the Communists took power, less than 1% of the population had been baptised, most of them Catholics. Now the largest, fastest-growing number of Christians belong to Protestant “house churches”.

In a suburb of Shanghai, off Haining Road, neighbours peer warily across the hallway as visitors file into a living room, bringing the number to 25, the maximum gathering allowed by law without official permission. Inside, young urban professionals sit on sofas and folding chairs. A young woman in a Che Guevara T-shirt blesses the group and a man projects material downloaded from the internet from his laptop onto the wall. Heads turn towards the display and sing along: “Glory, Glory Glory; Holy, Holy, Holy; God is near to each one of us.” It is Sunday morning, and worship is beginning in one of thousands of house churches across China.

House churches are small congregations who meet privately—usually in apartments—to worship away from the gaze of the Communist Party. In the 1950s, the Catholic and main Protestant churches were turned into branches of the religious-affairs administration. House churches have an unclear status, neither banned nor fully approved of. As long as they avoid neighbourly confrontation and keep their congregations below a certain size (usually about 25), the Protestant ones are mostly tolerated, grudgingly. Catholic ones are kept under closer scrutiny, reflecting China's tense relationship with the Vatican.

Private meetings in the houses of the faithful were features of the early Christian church, then seeking to escape Roman imperial persecution. Paradoxically, the need to keep congregations small helped spread the faith. That happens in China now. The party, worried about the spread of a rival ideology, faces a difficult choice: by keeping house churches small, it ensures that no one church is large enough to threaten the local party chief. But the price is that the number of churches is increasing.

The church in Shanghai is barely two years old but already has two offspring, one for workers in a multinational company, the other for migrant labourers. As well as spreading the Word, the proliferation of churches provides a measure of defence against intimidation. One pastor told the Far Eastern Economic Review last year that if the head of one house church was arrested, “the congregation would just split up and might break into five, six or even ten new house churches.”

Abundant church-creation is a blessing and a curse for the house-church movement, too. The smiling Mr Zhao says finance is no problem. “We don't have salaries to pay or churches to build.” But “management quality” is hard to maintain. Churches can get hold of Bibles or download hymn books from the internet. They cannot so easily find experienced pastors. “In China”, says one, “the two-year-old Christian teaches the one-year-old.”

Because most Protestant house churches are non-denominational (that is, not affiliated with Lutherans, Methodists and so on), they have no fixed liturgy or tradition. Their services are like Bible-study classes. This puts a heavy burden on the pastor. One of the Shanghai congregation who has visited a lot of house churches sighs with relief that “this pastor knows what he is talking about.”

Still, the teething troubles of the church are minor compared with the vast rise in the number of Christians. After the Tiananmen Square massacre of 1989 many disenchanted democrats turned to Christianity: six of the 30 or so student leaders of the protests became Christians. China's new house churches have the zeal of converts: many members bring their families and co-workers. One Confucian Chinese says with a rueful smile that most of the pretty girls at university were Christians–and would date only other Christians.

Holier and trendier than thou

Christianity also follows Chinese migration. Many Christians studied in America, converted there and brought their new faith home. Several of the congregation of the Shanghai house church studied abroad, as did Mr Zhao. In 2000, says one Beijing writer and convert, most believers were in the countryside. After 2000 they brought their faith into the cities, spreading Christianity among intellectuals.

All this amounts to something that Europeans, at least, may find surprising. In much of Christianity's former heartland, religion is associated with tradition and ritual. In China, it is associated with modernity, business and science. “We are first-generation Christians and first-generation businessmen,” says one house-church pastor. In a widely debated article in 2006, Mr Zhao wrote that “the market economy discourages idleness. [But] it cannot discourage people from lying or causing harm. A strong faith discourages dishonesty and injury.” Christianity and the market economy, in his view, go hand in hand.

So far, Christianity's spread has been largely a private matter for individual believers. The big question is whether it can remain private. The extent of its growth and the number of its adherents would suggest not. But at the moment, both Christians and Communists seem willing to let a certain ambiguity linger a while longer.

Christians are willing to stay within the system,” says Mr Zhao. “Christianity is also the basis for good citizenship in China.” Most Christians say that theirs is not a political organisation and they are not seeking to challenge the party. But they also say clashes with public policy are inevitable: no Christian, one argues, should accept the one-child policy, for example.

Formally, the Communist Party forbids members to hold a religious belief, and the churches say they suffer official harassment. The president of the Beijing house-church alliance, Zhang Mingxuan, was thrown out of the capital before the Olympic games and told he was unwelcome when he returned. In early June, the state government of Henan arrested half a dozen house-church members on charges of illegally sending charitable donations to Sichuan earthquake victims. CAA claims harassment of house churches is rising.

In fact, the state's attitude seems ambivalent. In December 2007, President Hu Jintao held a meeting with religious leaders and told them that “the knowledge of religious people must be harnessed to build a prosperous society.” The truth is that Christians and Communists are circling each other warily. But it is hard to avoid the conclusion that Christianity will have a political impact one day. “If you want to know what China will be like in the future,” concludes Mr Zhao, “you have to consider the future of Christianity in China.”

Christianity in China: Sons of heaven | The Economist
 
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#24
ZHAO XIAO, a former Communist Party official and convert to Christianity, smiles over a cup of tea and says he thinks there are up to 130m Christians in China.?

Zhao xiao ?能告诉我是哪个省的政府官员吗?
如果,没有确凿的证据,请不要胡说八道,免得丢脸?
 
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time to crackdown on all those underground churches , learn from iran we replaced chinese crack with christianity and it worked around the clock.
 
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#18
Always trying to outdo us on everything...?
噢~宝贝,你是你们上帝派来逗我开心的吗?
在我眼里,你们美帝最让中国无法超越的就是那颗充满侵略的霸权之心!
 
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西方普遍认为中国人没有信仰,这是错误的。中国人没有找出自己的上帝,去有规律有系统地参拜。但绝对不能说中国人没有信仰,中国人死的时候,不需要向哪个神说,请宽恕我的罪。中国人活着的时候,也不需要寻求哪个神给他力量让他觉得生是那么有意义,中文对信仰的解释:信仰,是指对圣贤的主张、主义、或对神的信服和尊崇、对鬼、妖、魔或天然气象的恐惧,并把它奉为自己的行为准则。

中国人唔需要用外国人的宗教。五千年历史,外国有咩?个啲人信耶酥代我意见系无中国精神。但系很多中国人信耶稣多数党聚会。

In fifteen years there will be less Christians in China as majority of Chinese will realize that it's western brainwashing and will revert back to atheism, Buddhism and Taoism
 
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中国人唔需要用外国人的宗教。五千年历史,外国有咩?个啲人信耶酥代我意见系无中国精神。但系很多中国人信耶稣多数党聚会。

In fifteen years there will be less Christians in China as majority of Chinese will realize that it's western brainwashing and will revert back to atheism, Buddhism and Taoism
讲得好~ 估唔到 外国论坛仲可以见到中国人
 
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