China is the most 
populous nation on earth.  With more than 1.2  billion people, it 
contains one-fifth of the world’s population.  
 Approximately 93 
percent of the people are Han Chinese; the remainder  is made up of 350 
minority groups — 55 of them are commonly recognized   — which have 
their own language, culture, and religion.
 China has the third 
largest landmass of any nation.  Only Russia and  Canada are larger.  
China is slightly larger than the United States.  
 There are 31 
provinces, autonomous regions and special  municipalities.  Hong Kong, 
which reverted to China in 1997, is referred  to as a special 
administrative region.  
 The four largest cities, Chongqing, Shanghai, Beijing, and Tianjin are administered directly by the central government.  
 Approximately half the land is occupied by minority people groups  such
 as Mongols, Tibetans, Yugur, and Bai.  Only about 15 percent of  
China’s land is farmable, so there is a great strain on the land to feed
  so many people.
 Mandarin Chinese (also known as Putonghua) is the 
primary language,  and is spoken by more than 70 percent of the 
population.    Cantonese  prevails in Hong Kong and in parts of the 
Guangdong Province.  Many  other dialects abound.
 With its first recorded history dating back to 1500 BC, China claims the world’s oldest existing civilization.  
 During most of its history, China was ruled by a series of dynasties.  
 The last dynasty ended in 1911 with the establishment of a republic by 
 Dr.  Sun Yat-sen.  
 From 1911 until 1949 there was great turmoil in
 China as various  factions fought for supremacy, ending with the 
establishment of the  People’s Republic of China on October 1, 1949.
 Since 1949, the country has been under communist rule.  China’s  
governments claims that during that time there has been an eradication  
of opium, an increased life expectancy, and a reduction of the infant  
mortality rate.   
 But, there have also been periods of great 
turmoil, the worst of  which was the Cultural Revolution, officially 
lasting from 1966-1970,  though many historians extend its effects until
 the death of Mao Ze-dong  in 1976.
 The Cultural Revolution was a period of unprecedented turmoil in which society was virtually turned upside down.  
 Students, in the form of Red Guard, went on a rampage.  Schools and  
universities were closed, intellectuals and artists of all kinds were  
dismissed, persecuted, sent to labor in the countryside, or killed.  
 Temples, monuments, and works of art were defaced and destroyed.    All
 religious institutions were closed and religious workers were sent  to 
prison or to work in factories or in the countryside.   This was a  time
 of suffering for all the Chinese people.  Its effects are still  felt 
in society.
 Except for a few minority groups and some rural dwellers, families are strongly discouraged from having more than one child.   
 Those who ignore the admonitions can be severely penalized.  The  
government takes pride in this intrusive manner of population control.
 China’s economy has been improving rapidly since 1979 when China  
opened the doors to foreign investment and opened the economy to more  
private initiative.  
 This has resulted in a vast increase of 
consumer activity, so that  upper middle class families have many 
symbols of middle class affluence:  refrigerators, telephones, color 
televisions, video CD players, and  more.  
 Commercialism and materialism are increasingly popular in China.  However, there is still terrible poverty as well.
 Even though the Communist government encourages atheism, there are  
five recognized religions in China today: Buddhism, Taoism, Islam,  
Catholicism, and Protestant Christianity.  
 Ancestor worship is a 
daily practice for many.  Confucianism is not  officially a religion, 
though through the centuries, there have  periodically been temples 
devoted to the worship of Confucius.  
 In any case, Confucianism 
remains a major element of the Chinese  value system.  The government 
cracked down on a very popular Falunggung  religious practice in 1999, 
terming it a dangerous cult.
 Robert Morrison was the first Protestant to introduce Christianity in China.  He arrived in Canton in 1807.  
 From that time until 1949, hundreds of sending agencies sent  thousands
 of missionaries to serve in China.  China was a difficult  mission 
field; converts came slowly. In 1949 there were no more than  750,000 
Protestant Christians in China. 
 After all the foreign missionaries 
left China in the early 1950s and  all religious institutions were 
closed from about 1966 because of the  Cultural Revolution, it was 
feared that Christianity might have died out  once again.  
 But, 
when the churches began to open up in 1979 it was discovered,  even to 
the Chinese Christians’ amazement, that there were at least 6  million 
Christians. 
 No longer foreign, all Chinese churches are just that: 
indigenous  Chinese churches, and thousands of Chinese, young and old, 
are turning  to Christ every day.
 Nobody really knows how many 
Christians there are in China.  Accurate  statistics are hard to come by
 because there is no systematic or  standard reporting system and the 
numbers change rapidly.  
 Estimates for members of registered 
(government sanctioned)  congregations range up to 15-20 million, with 
more than 37,000  congregations meeting in church buildings referred to 
as churches and  25,000 meeting in other locations, referred to as 
meeting points.   
 But there are also many millions of believers, 
perhaps 45-80 million  of them, who meet in house churches that are not 
government approved.  
 Even by placing the estimate at the high end 
of 100 million total  Christians, one is reminded that there are still 
more than one billion  Chinese who don’t know Christ! 
