China Pulls Bibles from Online Bookstores in Crackdown on Christianity.
In the wake of the release of a new white paper on “religious
freedom,” Beijing has ordered bibles and other Christian books removed
from online bookstores across China, sparking a wave of complaints.
In the absence of any official government statement explaining why
the bible has been removed from online bookshops, the most common
theory has been that a new, state-approved translation is in the works that will square with Chinese socialist ideology.
Last
week, China announced that one of its biggest tasks in the coming years
is to enhance “Chinese-style Christianity” by reinterpreting and
retranslating the Bible. The announcement came in a document, titled
“Principles for Promoting the Chinese Christianity in China for the Next
Five Years (2018-2022),” which was launched in Nanjing on March 28, two
days before bibles started disappearing from websites.
As commenters have pointed out, the bible itself is not officially
approved by the Chinese Government for publication and therefore is
technically an illegal publication that cannot be sold and can only be
circulated in churches. Moreover, the government has announced that all
“foreign religions” must be reconciled with Chinese socialism, or
“Sinicized.”