"You can observe a lot by watching." -Yogi Berra

Tag: Chinese Church

The Real China: Conclusion

The ultimate travel fantasy is not to any place, but to the foreign country of the past, to see the people who lived in one’s home country and culture in their shockingly ancient yet familiar form. The language could be understood and the traditions recognized, but the words used and the way people were would be the most fascinating difference.

My desire to see China was not a longing to live in another hemisphere where the people’s faces looked different and they lived in more exotic architecture. I wanted to see China because I wanted to see what it was like to be human without being a modern American. I wanted life without the restraints of American assumptions. All of our culture and language has a precedent, and I wanted to be in a society that had grown from different roots.

Would the people’s facial expressions and voices be the same as I was used to- in general- only substituting strange-sounding words? Would I feel a natural connection with people and make friends across cultural barriers? Would I feel at home away from home? Would I find my niche? How would things feel differently from the way I had always assumed the world was?

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Going to China was not just time spent abroad, a résumé highlight or adventurous gap year. It was life lived among people with completely different hearts, minds, and habits. Things overlapped, as human customs everywhere will, but in colloquial terms these people had no interest in football tailgates, processed foods, hip-hop music, or the American dream. (Well, if you want to be difficult, many Chinese families do dream of sending a child to America for college, and it seems as if as many Chinese as possibly can do emigrate out of China into whatever clean and wealthy country they can get into, with America traditionally at the top of that dream list, but that is not to say that the typical person in urban or semi-urban China conceives of life in American terms.)

In many ways, it was a relief to be there, and I savored the luxuries of Chinese life. By that I mean it was a luxury to find reprieve from the cultural nuisances I lived with in America. In China, the people might have had loud phone conversations in small, public spaces (e.g. the elevator or taxi cab) but my brain had no idea what they were saying. I did not have to involuntarily eavesdrop the way I do with all the rude, sometimes scandalous private conversations I overhear in America.

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Another great thing, I only had a guest spot in Chinese society, so it did not stress me to hear people boast about their status. I had no idea, again, what it meant when they advertised the name of their university or the corporation they worked for. “Good for you,” I would tell them without envy. No one I met in China really had what I wanted, so proclamations of personal success rolled off me like water off a…Peking duck before it was killed and roasted- when it had water-wicking feathers, that is.

My acquaintances were not pursuing the American dream- a big house in the suburbs with a big yard, big cars, big salary, and big retirement fund- they were after the Chinese dream- moving to a big, crowded city with job opportunities at mostly depressing jobs, living in a dingy apartment, having one male child, having a foreign car that was inconvenient to park and dangerous to drive, and either getting rich from a non-stop work schedule or from Communist Party funds. I did not want what the Chinese were after, so it made it easy for me to shrug off the competition.

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I also savored being around young people who tried to dress in a youthful way rather than an older, sexier way, whose appearance was modest in that they wore simple clothes that covered rather than showed off their bodies, modest in that their attitudes and actions were carefree and without worldly cynicism. The people did not often assert themselves and their identity. In China, when an authority figure or respected leader admonished the people, they listened. They may not have followed, and too often the things they did follow were the irrational words of a demagogue meant to cow the people, but as a people they felt oneness with each other and tried to band together.

That seems like ugly naivety to say that, I know, like I have come around after all my criticism to apologize for China’s brutal authoritarian state, but my meaning is the sense of place felt by the common man. Everyone in China seemed like a part of a whole, or at least the people I met uniformly expressed a strong connection to their Chinese identity. The phrase “We Chinese…” was used to begin many declarative sentences, and it was never a question if the individual saying it could speak on behalf of “we, the Chinese people.” Coming from a land of individualism, alienation, and identity politics, that seemed amazing.

And from the schools and students I saw, there were no obvious cliques of outcasts, rebels, or sharply defined popular kids. Making friends seemed so easy when every student spent their day with the same 30-50 classmates and they all saw school not as a social gaming table but as a serious work with coveted rewards of choice schools and jobs.

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I was relieved not to be around the darkness and apathy of American individualism, where not one thing can be said, not one value can be preached, without the strife of vulgar internet message boards and self-justifying arguments. In a fractured society, every piece has sharp edges; they cannot be put together with incompatible pieces. I could better tune out the hostile words in China because I could not understand more than a small fraction of what was spoken. It was up to me to search out the English language materials of my choice. I was free from the bombardment of slang terms that grow like bacteria off of the internet, pop music, and television. No one in China ever told me, out loud, “LOL,” “awesome sauce,” “that rocks my face off,” or insulted my ignorance of the newest shorthand terms for drugs and sex acts. No one, except for people in Shanghai and Hong Kong- possibly– ever judged me for my clothes, for not wearing cool jeans and shoes, or for wearing my shirt tucked into my pants “like an old man.”

China, a land or loud crowds and pollution, was in many ways my place of solitude. I escaped the tyranny of American culture that had left me a pariah in my own hometown. I knew I would not be excluded or shunned the same way in China because the people did not know how to judge me.

My essays on China were not written for personal judgment, but for comment and critique of culture. I write not so much about China as about why people do what they do, how they live, and what are the observable consequences in a people’s culture. The perspective I gained in China I apply to my view of every culture, including my own. China happened to be the place where I lived, the place I commented on, but if you have been reading closely, you will have noticed that this commentary critiqued America sharply, too, and the broader cultural forces that are universal to all societies.

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Back to the dream of traveling to the past. I would like to do this for the same reasons I went to China. All the documents and artifacts and the way the scholars, historians, journalists, filmmakers, and writers have described the past- is it true? Or more exactly, how close is it to the truth? What would the people really be like? Live like? Talk like? If they used English, how well would I understand them? Our dictionaries overlap, but from the way the people of earlier times wrote, I can tell they think, believe, and speak in fundamentally different ways than the people I live with today. I do not wish to escape to the past, but I would like to see it, be immersed in it, and let my observations and intuition shape my perspective. That is what I have done with China.

The real result is that there was much to be offended with in the country that I looked to with such airy anticipation. But if a man expects to live in any society, he either has to believe in it and be a part of it, or he has to make peace with his unhappy conscience and abide in a small niche of a corrupted whole. I could not accept the corruption of China. I could not smile and say the good outweighed the bad. I think I have long desired to depart the United States for much of the same reasons.

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I am convinced that, if Americans from before our grandparents’ generation could see their homeland today, their strongest impression would not come from our computers, our convenient home appliances, or our city infrastructure. They would not be most surprised by a child using a smart phone or families traversing interstates in a hybrid car. Instead, they would be shocked by the way children talked to their parents and the way parents talked to their children. They would be taken aback by how all the easy technology had isolated people and made their minds dependent, how it had changed basic attitudes and behavior. I am sure they would question the widespread example of parents who were modeling a conformist, materialistic lifestyle for their children. Personal music devices and DVD players would not be as amazing as the language and content of the material being played. The amazement of smart phones would sour when it was seen how much they spoiled dinners and conversations.

Americans from the past might fall prey to the quick and facile lifestyle of microwaved meals and instant entertainment- human nature dictates they would- but I imagine that the first impressions of many would mirror my observations in China. I was not so surprised at the different vehicles being driven on Chinese city streets, but in the willingness of the drivers to run me over. People mattered most, not technology.

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I was not confused by the sound of the Chinese people’s words, but by the volume and aggression they were regularly spoken with. I expected to see poverty, but what most alarmed me was how a brand new hospital building could be overwhelmed with loitering families who filled the just-opened lobbies with dirty blankets and careless trash. Foreign technology and television had made its way into China, and the ingestion of electronic media was very familiar to me. The car had made its way even to the smallest towns I visited (I was told by my two Australian friends that only about five years before our town had one traffic light and no cars). Technology in China and the outward forms of buildings and cities- while often very different- were familiar to me in their basics and not surprising at all. What shocked me about Chinese streets was not the way they looked different, but the way people spat and urinated on them. An American-born Chinese person (“ABC” in both Chinese and Chinese-American slang) can instantly be told apart from her Chinese-born peers not by her iPhone and Nike clothes, which can be bought in China, too, but by the way she wears her clothes and the way her face looks.

The point of observing culture- the point of this whole effort- is not to be found in a bloodless survey of outward modes of living. The point is to see the outworking of human thought and human hearts. My Aunt Fong would always tell me “China need time,” a strange apology from a civilization always boasting about its most ancient character, but no, I thought, China need reform- foundational reform that comes from the reform of people’s hearts

Since leaving, I have vacillated between foreswearing China forever and making a return someday to see Aunt Fong and try and find a better way of living there. I love Aunt Fong like my mother, and I talk to her every week over the computer. I also long to see all the friends and students I met in China again. I imagine being able to start new relationships with them, having my heart refined by experience and renewed hope. But I also keep in mind that China is still much the same place as I left it. I might be admired by the people there, but most of them can only giggle and gawk at me, perhaps asking me about my favorite NBA team and whether I can use chopsticks.

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I do plan on seeing Aunt Fong again- how could I not? My dilemma now is how long to stay in China and what to travel there for. A one or two-week vacation is not worth the expense or time of a twenty hour flight in my opinion. A stay longer than a month would require a visa sponsorship; I would need to have work in China. I hesitate to do that because of the misery I already experienced standing in front of a Chinese classroom. As much as I respected my elementary school music teachers and participated in their classes, that is how much my Chinese students responded to me. To my former teachers: I have done my penance. I see what I was like. I am sorry.

I was always hoping to see more of the church in China. I have asked Aunt Fong to help me find a way to observe the house churches and meet with them. She has helped me get peaks inside a few churches in what turned out to be frustrated visits. Perhaps, God willing, that hope will fully come to fruition.

For now, I am where I am. I daily dream about finding a new culture to live in and observe, or I think through how best I should get to work from my home base in Iowa writing about my experiences already. Eventually, I hope to find a place where I can be at peace and believe in what I am doing, not so much because I have found the right location, but because I have been refined and found people that I want to join together with as one culture.

Thank you for reading and commenting.

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Christmas in China

December isn’t the Christmas Season in China. Well, it is in some ways, surprisingly, but the people aren’t taken with the Christmas Spirit as Americans were once upon a time.

Walking through the shopping streets in the early dark of winter, I began to notice more and more window decoupage displays of white paper snowflakes over red and green backgrounds. Next to the fashion mannequins, there might have been stacks of presents wrapped in shiny paper, and the whole scene would be advertised with text that read “Ho! Ho! Ho!” or misspelled, gibberish renderings of “Merry Christmas” and other holiday greetings. If a store had a Santa dummy (the Chinese called him Christmas Man), he would usually be dressed in gold or red, maybe silver, and he was always playing the saxophone. I asked one of my students why Santa was always playing the sax, and I received the only answer one can give to such a question: “I don’t know.”

CUH-RIS-A-MERS MAN!

CUH-RIS-A-MERS MAN!

"M-R-R-E everyone!"

“M-R-R-E everyone!”

The surprising part of Christmas in China, to me, came when I devoted lessons to Christmas, asking students what they knew about it and how people celebrated. My classes knew the melody of “Jingle Bells” and a few other classics, which seemed natural enough, and they also shared the new Chinese tradition of giving apples stamped with a Christmas pattern to their friends- stencils of a reindeer or “Christmas Man” surrounded by the Chinese characters for “Merry Christmas.” I found one of these apples in the spring, after losing it in between my refrigerator and kitchen cupboards, and it still had the same color and firmness as the day I received it. I shudder to think what they sprayed or injected their produce with; the bananas were also uniformly yellow.

All the chemicals in Chinese food made my stomach shake like a bowl full of jelly.

All the chemicals in Chinese food made my stomach shake like a bowl full of jelly.

What truly surprised me was when I asked my students as a class, “What do you do for Christmas?” and several of them replied without shyness, “Go to church.” China was still convalescing from Mao and his brand of communism, I thought, and I assumed that like the university professors and public officials who professed the faith, students in school would be hush-hush about church.

Assembling for worship in China, of course, isn’t taken for granted as it is in America, where buildings for every Christian denomination- and then some- can be found within walking distance of every residential area. The public church buildings in China (Three Self Patriotic Movement churches) were registered with the state, and people could openly attend, but state controls hamstrung evangelical efforts and what ministers could preach and teach. It is “the church” with bureaucrats of the Communist Party as head.

Those birds un-caged by state controls, the house churches, were many and various in China, and these were all treated with secrecy for fear of government action (i.e. arrest and imprisonment). So, when I had students freely tell me they were going to attend church with their grandmothers on Christmas, I was taken aback. I was stunned for a moment, and I knew to not ask them what type of church they attended in front of their classmates. Perhaps they went to one of the public churches, and they could share so without reprisal, or maybe it was that they were part of a house church, and attitudes had relaxed to the point that young students thought nothing of discussing it openly. I was left to assume the former, not able to dig into the issue in front of a class of peers, only slowly having my questions about the church in China answered in small increments as time went by. Those small peaks I did get inside church life in China were densely filtered by screens of language and culture.

When I asked my two classes of university students what they were doing on Sunday, the 25th, I heard a groan in reply: “Tests.”

“Tests on Christmas!” I exclaimed, like a claymation character from a Rankin/Bass movie, “That’s terrible.” They concurred.

Earlier that week, I spoke to a Chinese English teacher who told me that one of her fondest school memories was when her foreign English teacher threw a Christmas Party for his students. So, I decided to brighten my students’ day. After they finished their tests, they could come over to my apartment that Sunday for a Christmas Party.

Now, between my two college classes (I had 18 other classes of middle school students), I probably had 45 students, but I did the invitation math I had learned in America and expected 15 people to come, 20 tops, and then only an hour after the official start time. I figured that it would be safe to host the event in my apartment with such a modest crowd, and besides, I had no idea how to reserve a room on campus.

Six o’clock sharp came, official party time, and I had candy and a Christmas cake on the table (cake in China is just like cake in America, only it tastes bad. Imagine the quality of cake you might find in a tawdry convenience store, and that is what cake in China tastes like). I had yet to button up my shirt, but I heard a knock at my door and my phone was beeping with text messages asking me to clarify directions to my apartment. I let the first batch of students in, and from that point on there was a continual stream of new guests. I learned a valuable lesson about Chinese culture that night: if you invite people to a party, they will show up.

Maybe five to seven of my especially anti-social university students didn’t come that night, but the rest of the 45 did come, and some even brought friends. A student who never came to my class (because 10 o’clock was too early in the morning for him) even showed up. At one point, I had over thirty people in my living room. I opened every window to let in the winter wind and try and alleviate the collection of body heat. We could hardly move or hear each other speak, but everyone was in high spirits, with students taking turns to sing solos, and candy and cake being obliterated on and around the table.

A ring of people lined my living room and poured into the kitchen and study.

A ring of people lined my living room and poured into the kitchen and study.

Another thing about cake in China- it’s often double-layered with a thin spread of cream or jelly filling in between, and there is a light, fluffy frosting on the outside. Not unusual for a cake, but the tall and triangular slices, I want to note, carried messy potential inside and out. It would be tricky to eat such a big, sloppy slice as it was, but in China, people do not keep forks or dinner plates in their kitchen. And cake is one food that will cause the Chinese to relent and admit it cannot be eaten sensibly in a bowl with chopsticks, so Chinese bakeries supply cake buyers with a stack of thin, four-inch paper plates and tiny plastic forks that would be better used to spear cheese cubes.

Also, in China, people devour all of your treats. They don't pretend they're uninterested and walk away from leftovers as in American culture.

Also, in China, people devour all of your treats. They don’t pretend they’re uninterested and walk away from leftovers as in American culture.

Big, sloppy cake did not combine neatly with tiny plates and forks. Twenty different mouths slicing cake on my coffee table and struggling to cut it into bites with underpowered forks against handheld, flimsy plates turned my living room into a mess quicker than Old St. Nick could ascend a chimney. I didn’t mind so much, I was too busy trying to accept gifts and play the host by saying hello to the unmanageable mob of people. It was a fantastically big end to the holiday weekend.

The night before, Christmas Eve, I was with Aunt Fong in her hometown, a much larger city than my university town. She took me to a hotel, where a church group had rented a ballroom to put on a Christmas program. People lined the long rows of folding tables, watching the front as new groups came out to sing or speakers shared a teaching or narration. Of course, Aunt Fong had to show me off, so she brought me up front, stuck a microphone in my hand, and had me sing a Christmas song for everyone. Speaking as a man who hates approaching people and feels uncomfortable talking to cashiers at the store, I can say honestly that I was an exceptionally good sport about singing for a ballroom-full of Chinese strangers.

Aunt Fong showing me off. The hat was not my choice.

Aunt Fong showing me off. The hat was not my choice.

I'm the tall blurry one in the back. Aunt Fong is on my right.

I’m the tall blurry one in the back. Aunt Fong is on my right.

After the Christmas program ended, Aunt Fong and I headed toward the shopping district. Meanwhile, my phone received “Merry Christmas!” text messages without ceasing. We were out after ten o’clock at night, but the streets and stores were filled with people, probably more crowded than I had ever seen them in that city. That is a noteworthy event. But no one was caroling or wishing passersby “Merry Christmas!” Instead, it seemed like a tame version of a Mardi Gras festival. Children were buying balloons shaped into spirals and other creative shapes, people were wearing carnival masks, and food vendors were on every street corner. I had a hard time getting my bearings in the midst of the colors, crowd, and confusion, and it felt dreamlike as Aunt Fong pulled me through the streets and shopping malls.

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The next morning, I returned to my university apartment. Grant and Sue, my Australian neighbors on the fourth floor, had invited me over for Christmas dinner. Also, there was Lee Ahram, the Korean teacher, and Theresa, a Chinese student who had studied in Brisbane- Grant and Sue’s hometown. Sue, savvy shopper that she was, had managed to find a countertop toaster oven, probably the only one in the whole city, so she was able to prepare roasted chicken and potatoes for our meal. China, like many countries in Asia, only has gas burners in its residential kitchens; because the only ways people prepare food at home are by boiling or stir-frying (less commonly, foods could also be steamed over a burner, or stewed or braised).

Grant, Theresa, Sue, and Ahram.

Grant, Theresa, Sue, and Ahram.

Western meals were difficult to prepare in China. Besides the difference in produce, it was hard to come by certain ingredients and spices, and there were no ovens to bake anything. People were stuck with bad store-bought cake.

So, Sue’s Christmas dinner was a special meal for a special time for our group of assorted foreigners. We were far from our families at home, which was a daily heartache around the holidays, but we had a bond as strangers in a strange land who pined for a Christmas celebration with some solemnity and familial warmth.

At the end of the meal, Sue brought out plates of Christmas pudding, which I was as eager to see as I was to taste. Being an American, the only pudding I had ever seen was Jell-O pudding, and on rare occasion, bread pudding. I had heard talk about pudding in British media, and I had always assumed it was some formless dessert that only the English could love, and that America should probably send a delegation to tell them to start building some structure into their dishes.

Well, the Christmas pudding was formless, but it was a custard not far off from American pudding. Sue had spooned it over a slice of, I think, fruit cake. I can say for sure it was custard and a slice of dense cake. I thought it was pretty good, but Sue lamented that it didn’t turn out quite right; she had to use a can of not very good custard mix, the only kind she could find.

It was all well and good by me. My time in China was often a lonely and isolated experience; having that mid-year holiday celebration was a reviving oasis.

One of my favorite and Aunt Fong's least favorite photos. The girl on the left was a student of mine named Tiffany.

One of my favorite and Aunt Fong’s least favorite photos. The girl on the left was a student of mine named Tiffany.

The Real China- “It is not a story. It is the truth.”

It was autumn. Late enough that I brought along my jacket, but early enough in the season that I could leave it in the back of the charter bus. After a two-hour bus ride, split between high-speed highways and hilly village pathways, our group collected itself at the statue of the Han Emperor, Liu Bang. Aunt Fong, me, and her colleagues- both fellow faculty and some professors from nearby universities- assembled into rows to take pictures in front of the mounted, charging emperor.

Aunt Fong was always happier to show me places than I was to see them.

Aunt Fong was always happier to show me places than I was to see them.

It was a simple day trip, and although I assumed that because of the cave and its history this tourist area must have been well-known, whenever I tried describing it to my students afterwards they had no idea what place I was talking about. Perhaps it was my pronunciation; Chinese isn’t a language accommodating to outsiders (I describe it as permutations of ch, sh, and j sounds with rising and falling tones). Our plan was to hike through the woods to the cave at the top of the hill, enjoying as we went the greenery and the bluest sky I had yet seen in China. Although that doesn’t mean the sight was spectacular, the sky still shined clearly through the tree canopy. The environment was remarkable in another way, which is that it was the largest space in China I had seen uninterrupted by the detritus of civilization. Outside of vendor huts loaded up with the same wooden, seemingly-traditional goods, and the bright rainbow of plastic junk toys and junk food, there were no remnants of concrete buildings, no car exhaust (or blaring horns), and no litter pooled together by the roadside into a disgusting faded rainbow swamp.

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One of the professors from another university, English name Lily, was an English professor who occasionally translated for me in a dignified, steady voice or interpreted the sights along the ascending pathway. She also asked me a few grammar questions that had been on her mind, point blank. An example, not necessarily one of hers, but of the type I heard from her and from students: “What is the difference between may not/might not and cannot/ could not?” I also had one student ask me why words have more than one meaning, or why two different phrases can mean the same thing. As a rule, when answering these types of queries, the first thing I would say- no, drone- was, “Uh…”

Lily was a lovely lady, though, who told me about her college classes and about her son studying computer science at Stanford (many of the Chinese I met aspired to study in America at one of the top 50 universities. In China, extracurricular activities are a nearly non-existent priority compared to test scores, so in their system the bright and ambitious- and well-funded- can realistically study abroad at a prestigious university.) Then, after we climbed the stone stairways overgrown with roots of 2,000-year old gingko trees, and passed through the colorful, incense and idol-filled temple, we approached another statue of the Emperor Liu Bang (pronounced more like Bong or Baang) and the heralded cave he and his men hid in from their enemies. An eroded stone stairway led the way up, and a crowd of people ascending and descending, balancing and slipping, made their way in and out of the cave (tourist attractions did not have the same safety rails and caution paint as is mandatory in America, not even close). Without its history, the cave would not have attracted attention. Hardly ten people could comfortably stand in its space. But one significant feature was the large stone covering the mouth, said to have fallen “from heaven” to protect the emperor.

Tourists stumbling down the eroded stairs.

Tourists stumbling down the eroded stairs.

The stone "fallen from heaven."

The stone “fallen from heaven.”

Lily explained this all to me, and she said that it was similar to the way a stone was rolled over Jesus’ tomb and removed by angels. Now this pricked my ears. I knew that, as a professor, she was required to be a member of the Communist Party and disavow religion. I also knew that, at her age, she had grown up in a China slowly opening up to the West, with a foundation of atheistic beliefs laid over centuries of Chinese philosophy and folk religion. So, her knowledge of the Resurrection account could have been simply head knowledge, or, more likely, she could have been familiar with it because she was Christian.

I tread carefully. I asked her an opening question about the similarity between the Emperor’s cave and Jesus’ tomb. Then, I followed up with, “So you know the story of Jesus rising from the tomb?”

Without swaying, Lily replied, “It is not a story. It is the truth.” She said it with conviction, and I quietly explained that “story” can also be a true story; it does not only mean a fiction or fantasy. I don’t know if she heard or understood me; as we walked on I was left to think of her words and replay them in my mind.

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I was surprised at the number of Christians I met in China, and the openness with which students of mine happily volunteered that they went to church for Christmas or believed in Jesus. I had assumed that religion, the Christian faith especially, was kept quiet about in public. I knew that persecution in the forms of imprisonment and execution were still real. And I knew that the government expected to control its people’s religious activities to a large extent. The Chinese state would not accept divided loyalties and sought to arrest the leaders of independent churches that attracted too much attention. As part of my teaching contract with my university, I was not allowed to participate in religious activities that violated the government’s laws and interests, which would include religious meetings with students.

I broke that law. Word always spread through the social networks in China, and it was not long before some student I did not know approached me because she knew who I was, inviting me to a students’ prayer meeting. She asked me if I was a Christian, which was not surprising because I had been approached several times by other students who said they saw me praying before I ate in the cafeteria, or they suspected that I was Christian since I came from the land of the free, which every other country knows is the place where everyone is so religious and church-going. Like several other students, when I told her that I was a Christian and interested in the Chinese church, she said, “That’s great! Praise God!”

Her English name was Kate, and she was a chipmunk-cheeked sophomore student who responded to everything I said with fulsome praise and giggling. I was very happy to meet her and be introduced to some Christian students by her, but it was a little difficult to hold my smile and nod my head as she responded to everything I said with girlish squeals and statements like, “You are so great!” A foreigner’s life in China, even someone like me without fame or name, will have many such celebrity encounters, simply for being a “handsome” or exotic-looking white person. With people like Kate- a sweet, impressionable young girl- my only option was to grin and bear it. Although I was tempted to be frank and dispel her fascination with me, I silently sat on the receiving end of her praise and did my best to make spare conversation in return.

There was one other student who got into the habit of following me around, sitting in on my classes, and taking pictures of me as I taught, and at one point I was afraid that the school administrators were going to think that I was encouraging this or making romantic advances. My policy, as a shy, introverted Iowan, was to keep my eyes on my shoes as I walked and only make as much of a verbal response as was politely necessary. I rode out the storm of social discomfort and eventually the tension subsided. Fascination with foreigners could be unrestrained in my young Chinese acquaintances; for good and ill I had to live with it.

"Insurance way be careful you." Wise words. I would have to watch my steps throughout China.

“Insurance way careful you.” Wise words. I would have to watch my steps throughout China.

In Kate’s case, she introduced me to a group of students who covertly met in an empty, fourth-floor classroom before the first bell on Friday mornings. I was excited to meet them because I had read about Chinese church meetings and I wanted to see if the reality lived up to my mental visions: persecuted peasants huddled in a locked room, curtains closed, praying fervently, filled with an intensity of spirit unparalleled among the casual, comfortable church services I had experienced in America. Besides excitement, I also felt a mild fear. Word got around in China, and everyone at that meeting would have a story to tell about the conspicuous foreign teacher who came to join them for prayer. Long before the links of my social network would have connected me to Kevin Bacon, they would have traveled to the school authorities with news that I had broken an iron stipulation of my contract. I accepted the possible consequences and went forward, knowing that I could face any reprimands with boldness. If the expression of my Christian belief went up against my loyalty to my Chinese handlers, I knew which one would win out.

The prayer meeting was in a small, typical Chinese classroom: one dusty chalkboard in the front and one chalkboard in the back painted over with classroom cheers and patriotic minders, old window frames covered by tattered, heavy curtains, and everything illuminated by a morning sun filtered through the thick haze of industrial China. We sat around a cluster of desks on a dirty, gritty tile floor. When I entered, I scanned the gathering for familiar faces but found none. This was somewhat of a relief, since one of my students might have been able to report my attendance to a class monitor or faculty supervisor.

The students opened their Bibles (much rarer in China and without the dozens of translation variations of English Bibles) to the hundredth chapter of a book, which I recognized had to be Psalms. I followed along in English; occasionally someone would ask if I understood, or they would try and translate something simple to me. I would assure them I understood their point and thank them kindly. After a brief Bible study, the group would transition to prayer. Every student would bow their head, and they would speak rapidly in hushed sounds, rushed out without pause or breath. Somehow, as one student was pushing out a stream of overlapping syllables, the rest of the group was able to time their responding shouts of “Ah-men!” in unison. I was startled by their prayer method, and I found myself raising my head out of my bowed position and watching in confusion as one student forcefully chanted and the rest joined in for bursts of “Ah-m’n!” every few seconds. I wondered how they knew to respond with Amen so rapidly and so often, and in unison- what was their cue?

Before long, I became frustrated with these prayer meetings because I did not feel fulfilled and I questioned their spirit and their methods. The meetings felt very bare, and the praying was so agitated. My spirit was already flagging because of my doleful daily experience in China, so I had a difficult time willing myself out of bed and walking to the distant meeting room by seven in the morning. As my spring semester wore down, though, I realized my weeks in China would soon come to an end, and no more prayer meetings would be possible. So I made the effort to meet with the Christian students as often as I could, which included a couple meetings outside the school campus along with the Friday prayer meetings.

But before concluding my experience with the student fellowship, I should mention my church experiences outside of the university and the small surrounding city. In Aunt Fong’s more urban hometown nearby, she took me to some Christian gatherings she found out. The first church experience I had was in the city’s old downtown district, which was a very busy street filled with clothing shops and pedestrians. Right next to an Adidas store there was a black façade with a large, neon red cross above the entryway. I thought it was odd to have such a prominent church edifice in a very public place. Weren’t churches supposed to be secretive in China?

I was naïve. Inside the building, old women in cotton jackets and simple, fabric shoes squatted on wooden benches and stools. Every seat was filled. Aunt Fong and I walked upstairs and searched through the aisles, the back seating area, and the side seating area, until we found a seat towards the back of the upper level. Seeing so many people in China singing along to a hymn was a moving sight. The church pews and chairs in America sit half-empty, and in the large churches that attract the public, the music is amplified so loud that the people- sitting in the dark- are drowned out. In China, I saw real people- huddled masses of the poor- gathering together by the hundreds. I was moved by it, perhaps too much.

That church, as anyone familiar with Christian worship with China will already have identified, was a government-sponsored church. The official name is the Three-Self Patriotic Movement (TSPM) Church. TSPM Churches are allowed to have public buildings, whereon they may hang crosses, and wherein the people may gather to sing hymns and listen to a person in a white robe preach, but that preacher is approved by the Chinese government’s TSPM offices, and the subjects and biblical books preached on, even the sermons, are governed by the TSPM offices. I was not fully aware of this at the time, so the four or five times Aunt Fang took me to attend the church service downtown, I sat silently and lethargically read from my Bible or e-reader as the preacher moralized at length. TSPM churches cannot preach about essential Christian topics like the resurrection of the dead, so what they are left with is basically moral lessons equivalent to the popular philosophy and history professors’ lectures that were broadcast on Chinese TV.

I could not understand the words, which was a handicap with an advantage because I could only perceive the mood of the meeting and the tone of the preacher. It felt cold and dry, and I was intimidated as if under the watch of a browbeating librarian. One Sunday, the woman preaching halted her monologue and pointed her finger accusingly at some poor soul sitting near the front. The preacher began screeching at the congregant and gave her a tongue-lashing as a parent would if her child had just drunkenly crashed the family car. I was afraid to speak up and ask Aunt Fong, “What is it? What is wrong?” Aunt Fong couldn’t say so at the time, but she would refer to that scolding incident later as an example of the unreliable nature of church meetings in China.

China, because churches are growing and multiplying so rapidly, and because Christian belief is new to so many, has many deceptive leaders and untrustworthy church gatherings. The situation is bad enough that people always remain suspect of the the different churches and meetings, and someone like my Aunt Fong felt helpless to determine which she could trust.

For independent churches- those house church gatherings outside the government’s watch- there are many different networks and types of churches, whose description can be found in books or websites elsewhere. For my part, I went (accompanied by Aunt Fong, of course) to a few different house church gatherings around and outside the city. One group we sat in with changed their meeting place from a factory house on the outskirts of town to a nondescript apartment in the center of the city. Their meetings began with group singing and were followed by their teacher standing up front at a whiteboard and giving a Bible study lesson. Aunt Fong was nervous to be there, and our attendance at these meetings was a secret partially known of but unspoken of by Uncle Jiang, who dismissed it all with a stern saying: “It is none of my business.”

Aunt Fong and Uncle Jiang knew it was dangerous to attend a private, independent house church meeting, and they knew Chinese society far better than I did, naturally. Still, after enduring much of my pleading, Aunt Fong tried to satisfy my desire to see the real church meetings in China by taking me to visit these house churches, which she would learn of through the friend of a friend.

At one place, the woman leading the singing asked me to stand up and sing for everyone, a common request in China. Aunt Fong was dragging me by the arm out of the room and telling the woman “Another time” as she pulled me away from our insistent host. My aunt did not trust the gathering or she did not trust the safety of it, or she just panicked, and she wanted out. My biggest disappointment in China came after meeting in Aunt Fong’s apartment with a small group of university students. I was excited about the church that was being built up, the Christian fellowship that I had found and wanted to nurture, but it came to an abrupt halt. Uncle Jiang and Aunt Fong both were bothered enough by it that she stopped inviting the students over. It was an issue of staying within the government’s religious laws, she said, and Aunt Fong argued with me that because the students came to her apartment as a group, and because one of the students was considered their leader, then their participation wasn’t voluntary. Involuntary indoctrination of students was a serious breach of Chinese religious law and we could have faced penalties and arrest for it. I was upset by the termination of our meetings, and I was left to wander between the Friday campus prayer meetings to the small apartment gatherings of Christians singing hymns together to the TSPM church services and only occasional house church meetings accompanied by Aunt Fong.

I'm not sure which church group it was, but this is a performance at a Christmas party I attended inside a rented hotel ballroom.

I’m not sure which church group it was, but this is a performance at a Christmas party I attended inside a rented hotel ballroom.

It was difficult, limited, and strained, and overall my most frustrating experience in China because I could not see the vibrant, growing church that I had heard was alive and well. The most inspiring scenes I saw were small ones, like the four or five people I met by chance, just seeing a red cross poster on their door and letting myself in when I heard singing, who would meet on Sunday nights to sing hymns together, and graciously allowed me, a white stranger, to join them. That was the most powerful religious singing I have ever experienced, because they did not dress up the music with amplifiers, instruments, or lights. They would practice one song, line by line, until everyone knew it by heart, then sing it together and clap along to keep rhythm. A small roomful of Chinese Christians moved me far more than any semi-professional stage show in an American mega-church auditorium.

The other moving moment came when I met with the students’ prayer group at the end of the school year. It was the last meeting before everyone parted ways for the summer- some graduating and moving back to their hometowns permanently. The students had prepared a large meal with a dozen dishes for everyone to enjoy, and they had purchased a couple cakes to celebrate the occasion. At the end, in that hot, small concrete house located down a bumpy back alley, when everyone was saying their good-byes, Kate and several other of the students came to hug me and tell me how much they appreciated me. Kate’s praise had always been fulsome and her giggling around me was always too much, but when she told me, “God bless you. God will always be with you,” and she told me how much she and everyone were grateful for me, I was overcome and had to lower my face to hide my tears. As excessive and undeserved as I had found her praise and adoration, in that final moment it was given without any pretense or reservation, and I felt the full warmth of this childish woman’s intentions.

I had always been secretly ashamed of myself when Kate, or someone like her, told me “You are great,” and I wanted to correct them that they had assumed too much about me. In that final moment, though, all the guilt and self-hatred were gone. It didn’t matter that I knew better about myself and I knew I was a secret scoundrel. Kate and the others’ affection was stronger.

My hopes of connecting with the Christian church in China were frustrated and unfulfilled, but I was not without fellowship and hope. It was the light I wanted to see in gray China, and although it never broke through the haze I was in, I did feel its warmth. I was, at times, pleasantly and hopefully uplifted when these rays of sunshine broke through, when a Chinese stranger would surprise me with news about how their family all believed in Jesus since He answered their grandmother’s prayers, and I could see the new green shoots growing up through the crumbling concrete.

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