China’s “Christianity Fever†Revisited: Towards a Community-Oriented Reading of Christian Conversions in China
Katrin Fiedler ()
Journal of Current Chinese Affairs - China aktuell, 2010, vol. 39, issue 4, 71-109
Abstract:
Chinese Protestant Christianity has been continually growing over the past three decades, with an estimated one million converts per year. A number of studies have sought to explain this phenomenon. This paper critically reviews existing studies of China’s “Christianity Fever†and then outlines the role of the community as one crucial factor in the conversion process. With its emphasis on communality, as a central element of both Christian theology and the fellowship activities that are part of Christian practice, Protestant Christianity fills a gap opened up by the change in traditional familial and social structures. By discussing specific aspects relating to the communal nature of Christianity, such as familism, elitism, and dynamics at work in face-to-face evangelism, this paper offers an alternative reading of existing studies.
Keywords: China; Christianity; Protestantism; community; Christianity Fever (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2011-02
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