Website review: Asia Times Online :: China News - C...
mark-the-lark discovered this in Religion
•3 reviews since Aug 6, 2007
religion
•atimes.com/atimes/China/IH07Ad03.html
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mark-the-lark discovered 12 months ago- Mind blowing. The first paragraph: "Ten thousand Chinese become Christians each day, according to a stunning report by the National Catholic Reporter's veteran correspondent John Allen, and 200 million Chinese may comprise the world's largest concentration of Christians by mid-century, and the largest missionary force in history. [1] If you read a single news article about China this year, make sure it is this one."

mikeize rated 12 months ago- From the page: "The World Christian Database offers by far the largest estimate of the number of Chinese Christians at 111 million, of whom 90% are Protestant, mostly Pentecostals. Other estimates are considerably lower, but no matter; what counts is the growth rate. This uniquely American denomination, which claims the inspiration to speak in tongues like Jesus' own disciples and to prophesy, is the world's fastest-growing religious movement, with 500,000 adherents." *shudders* nothing worse than a new convert.

laodan rated 12 months ago- Christianity finds a fulcrum in Asia in AsiaTimes by Spengler
Ten thousand Chinese become Christians each day, according to a stunning report by the National Catholic Reporter's veteran correspondent John Allen, and 200 million Chinese may comprise the world's largest concentration of Christians by mid-century, and the largest missionary force in history. ... Now the great migrations throw into the urban melting pot a half-dozen language groups who once lived isolated from one another. Not for more than a thousand years have so many people in the same place had such good reason to view as ephemeral all that they long considered to be fixed, and to ask themselves: "What is the purpose of my life?" ... People do not live in a spiritual vacuum; where a spiritual vacuum exists, as in western Europe and the former Soviet Empire, people simply die, or fail to breed. In the traditional world, people see themselves as part of nature, unchangeable and constant, and worship their surroundings, their ancestors and themselves. When war or economics tear people away from their roots in traditional life, what once appeared constant now is shown to be ephemeral. Christianity is the great liquidator of traditional society, calling individuals out of their tribes and nations to join the ekklesia, which transcends race and nation. Christianity finds a fulcrum in Asia "Christianity is the great liquidator of traditional society". Christianity has indeed been the ideological instrument of tribe "unifiers" and builders of kingdoms and empires. But this has been realized at the price of a tabula rasa policy that erased the result of tens of thousands of years of observation that had resulted in a large body of accumulated knowledge in all fields related to life under animism, what Spengler calls traditional society.. Christianity replaced that animistic body of knowledge with a simplistic foundational story that the West still largely lives off today. In short: - History as a straight progressive line with a beginning and an end: * The beginning of the story of human reality is presented as having been unleashed by a "first mover" called god. * The end of that story is a promize to the "good people" that they will join god in eternal happiness while the bad ones shall be suffering for eternity. (in the meantime you better behave and practice the teachings of the creed!) - Reality presented as a cauldron of dualism: * everything is seen as being on the side of, or good, or bad * this unleashes a perpetual fight between good and bad * and humanity is thus being extracted out of its organic life to fight for the good. If you want to see this comment in its entirety click here Loss of certainty and the purpose of life?"
- Christianity finds a fulcrum in Asia in AsiaTimes by Spengler