Open Access BASE2013

The Political Contexts of Religious Exchanges: A Study on Chinese Protestants' International Relations

In: Journal of Current Chinese Affairs; Vol 42, No 3 (2013): Local Autonomy and Welfare Policy in Greater China; 149-179

Abstract

This article surveys the complex ecumenical, missionary and international church relations of Chinese Protestant Christians. It argues that the inter-church relations to other parts of Asia are overshadowed by relations to Christians in the West, thus reflecting a political preoccupation with relationships to the West. This is evidenced by an analysis of worldwide and Asian ecumenism as well as bilateral church and missionary relationships. The dominance of contacts with the West not only contradicts the idea of a multipolar world and increased South-South contacts, it also stands in contrast to the reality of growing and increasingly important Christianity in Asia. Methodologically, this paper analyses different kinds of international relations (multilateral and bilateral, inter-church and missionary) and develops a typology of different inter-church and inter-state relations to assess international church relations in Asia today. The typology shows how China's international church relations support its political relationships with its neighbours and beyond.

Languages

English

Publisher

GIGA German Institute of Global and Area Studies, Germany; National Institute of Chinese Studies (NICS) of the White Rose East Asia Centre (WREAC), United Kingdom

Report Issue

If you have problems with the access to a found title, you can use this form to contact us. You can also use this form to write to us if you have noticed any errors in the title display.