Public faith, shame and China’s social credit system

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapter

Abstract

In September 2018, Beijing Zion Church, was shut down by local government officials after refusing to install CCTV on their premises. Zion’s senior pastor Ezra Jin has previously been a major advocate for the Chinese missionary movement, Back to Jerusalem, and, with others, has argued for unregistered churches to actively engage in the Chinese civil society. Whilst religious control has been tightening in China since 2014, the recent events must also be connected to the first phase of China’s Social Credit System—a means of assessing the trustworthiness of a person based on various criteria, ranging from financial credibility to behaviour on social media and the broader society. This chapter will argue that the rise of digital technologies like social media and CCTV complicate questions of religion and the public-private divide, both in Chinese and Western societies, and further suggests that these technological changes raise new questions to understandings of Christian mission in the digital age.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationMissio Dei in a Digital Age
EditorsJonas Kurlberg, Peter M. Phillips
PublisherSCM Press
Chapter12
Pages236-256
ISBN (Print)9780334059110
Publication statusPublished - 30 Dec 2020

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