Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
China: Remove pictures of Jesus or lose government aid
China: Remove pictures of Jesus or lose government aid
Jan 30, 2026 8:49 PM

The Chinese government demands a small price in exchange for your monthly check: apostasy.

Chinese Communist Party officials have ordered impoverished Christians to remove pictures of Jesus from their walls or lose the government aid that’s keeping them alive.

Crosses, images of Jesus or verses from the Bible must be replaced with pictures of President Xi Jinping or the greatest mass murderer in history, former dictator Mao Tse-tung.

In some cases, party functionaries even require believers who receive poverty relief funds from the government to recant their faith in Christ. “Officials were instructed to annul the subsidies [of] those who protest the order,” according to Bitter Winter magazine.

“Impoverished religious households can’t receive money from the state for nothing,” said a Communist official as he tore a calendar with a picture of Jesus off a Protestant pastor’s wall. “They must obey the Communist Party for the money they receive.”

The latest campaign, which began in April, targeted those receiving social welfare assistance in Shanxi province but also includes other regions.

An octogenarian Protestant in Jiangxi’s Poyang county said she lost her government benefits when she said, “Thank God,” upon receiving the $28 payment, because “they expected me to praise the kindness of the Communist Party instead.”

The government enforced a similar campaign of religious suppression three years ago in Jiangxi province. A social media account stated that villagers “willingly” removed 624 religious images and put up 453 pictures of Xi Jinping in their place in March 2017. But villagers confirmed that government officials used force — including threatening the loss of welfare payments — to replace Jesus with Xi.

“Of course, they didn’t want to take them down. But there is no way out,” one man told the South China Morning Post. “If they don’t agree to do so, they won’t be given their quota from the poverty-relief fund.”

Communist officials explicitly stated that they intended to replace faith in Christ with faith in Communism. Qi Yan, who oversaw the Jiangxi campaign, explained:

Many rural people are ignorant. They think God is their savior. After our cadres’ work, they’ll realize their mistakes and think: We should no longer rely on Jesus, but on the party for help.

Officials reported their efforts the same way evangelists would describe missionary work. One account from the CCP said its coercion campaign “melted the hard ice in [believers’] hearts” and “transformed them from believing in religion to believing in the party.”

“Help turn those who believe in religions into believing in the Party” /dKXnmX1KK8

— Yaqiu Wang 王亚秋 (@Yaqiu) November 13, 2017

Qi later insisted that his cadres only relegated Christ to second-class status. Communists graciously allowed Christians to keep images of Jesus “in other rooms,” he said. “What we require is for them not to forget about the party’s kindness at the center of their living rooms. They still have the freedom to believe in religion, but in their minds they should [also] trust our party.”

These atheistic crusades build on President Xi Jinping’s policy to “Sinicize” all religions by requiring Chinese clergy to interpret “religious thought, doctrines, and teachings in a way that conforms with the needs of the progress of the times” — that is, to tell their congregations that Christianity patible with socialism.

Since Xi announced the policy in 2015, the Chinese government has destroyed church crosses, replaced the Ten Commandments with socialist propaganda and erased the First Commandment of the Decalogue to “have no other gods.” No church has been spared. The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom reports:

Chinese authorities raided or closed down hundreds of Protestant house churches in 2019, including Rock Church in Henan Province and Shouwang Church in Beijing. The government released some of the Early Rain Covenant Church congregants who had been arrested in December 2018, but in December 2019 a court charged Pastor Wang Yi with “subversion of state power” and sentenced him to nine years imprisonment. Local authorities continued to harass and detain bishops, including Guo Xijin and Cui Tai, who refused to join the state-affiliated Catholic association. Several local governments, including Guangzho city, offered cash bounties for individuals who informed on underground churches. In addition, authorities across the country have removed crosses from churches, banned youth under the age of 18 from participating in religious services, and replaced images of Jesus Christ or the Virgin Mary with pictures of President Xi Jinping.

“The government is trying to eliminate our belief and wants to e God instead of Jesus,” said a house church pastor in Shanxi after this year’s reverse-missionary campaign.

The Communist government’s attempt to blackmail Christians into abandoning their faith — by withholding their own tax dollars — should underscore three lessons:

1. Socialists use welfare as a weapon. Government dependence can prove deadly. From pagan emperors in the fourth century, to Adolf Hitlerordering“the disbanding of all private welfare institutions,” to Venezuelan officials denying food to the enemies of autocrat Nicolás Maduro, socialists have a long history of weaponizing government programs. Some of history’s greatest monsters have used starvation as a political tool, because government pressure is most effective when deployed against its poorest and most vulnerable citizens. For that reason, Christians and other religious believers should do everything in their power to avoid ing dependent on the government. By contrast, the biblical vision of the kingdom promises a time of peace, when “everyone shall sit under his vine and under his fig tree, and no one shall make them afraid.”

2. Communism will co-exist with Christians … temporarily. Marxism is atheistic by definition. However, Marxists are more than willing to have Christians act as foot soldiers of the revolution. They may even allow limited, controlled expressions of the faith — as Qi said, as long as the Communist Party holds the central allegiance in their lives. However, they would prefer faith evaporate altogether, given that “socialist” Christians always have the danger of backsliding into authentic biblical faith. It is no coincidence that President Xi’s subjugation of the es as multiple sources now estimate that Christians outnumber the 90 million members of the Chinese Communist Party. Should they e too insistent in their faith, they could easily suffer the fate of China’s Uighur Muslim minority.

3. Socialism is a false religion. Socialism offers a false understanding of the human person, a substitute and conditional morality, passion, and an earthly utopia in place of the kingdom of God. One Chinese Communist official in Shandong confronted a Christian with pictures of Xi and Mao, uttering words strikingly similar to those spoken before the Golden Calf: “These are the greatest gods. If you want to worship somebody, they are the ones.” Communism, wrote Whittaker Chambers, is the “second oldest faith,” the promise “whispered in the first days of the Creation under the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil: ‘Ye shall be as gods.’” This is why every major Christian tradition — Roman Catholic, Protestant, and Eastern Orthodox — has condemned socialism. (For more, see “How socialism causes atheism” in the Summer 2019 issue of Religion & Liberty.)

This final point tells Christians something heartening, namely that at least one core Christian doctrine is right: The human heart cannot live without faith. Each human being is lovingly created for relationship, intimacy, and worship. Ultimately, each soul must choose whom he will serve. This truth should incentivize us to worship the one, true God — and to recognize pretenders to the throne for the malign influences they are.

ehrmann. CC BY 2.0.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Defend civilization itself
An excerpt from a mencement address by Mark Helprin, “Defend Civilization Itself,” delivered at Hillsdale College on May 24, 2002: I ask you to join this brotherhood, and, in your own way, whatever that may be, to defend and champion the sanctity of the individual, free and objective inquiry, government by consent of the governed, freedom of conscience, and the pursuit — rather than the degradation and denial — of truth and of beauty. I ask you to defend a...
Laura Ingraham
All of us here at Acton were saddened to hear the news that Laura Ingraham, radio talk show host and a friend of the Institute, has been diagnosed with breast cancer. From her website: On Friday afternoon, I learned that I have joined the ever-growing group of American women who have been diagnosed with breast cancer. As so many breast cancer patients will tell you, it all came as a total shock. I am blessed to be surrounded by people...
Survey: Nominal giving rises but actual giving stagnates
Via The Christian Post: Annual giving to churches rose by 11 percent, but after factoring in inflation, churches are getting about two percent more than contributed in 1999. Another trend was the practice of donating 10 percent of the annual e to church. Tithing is practiced by very few Americans at only four percent, according to Barna, though good stewardship remains an important priority for Christians. Ultimately, Barna explained, “Americans are willing to give more generously than they typically do,...
Instruction in faith
On this date in 1537 Geneva’s first Protestant catechism was published, based on John Calvin’s Institutes of the Christian Religion. ...
NAS releases guidelines
The National Academies of Science has issued a set of guidelines for human embryonic stem (ES) cell research. The guidelines also address the chimera phenomenon. The guidelines open a path for experiments that create animals that contain some introduced human embyronic stem cells. These hybrid part human, part animal creatures, called chimeras, would be “valuable in understanding the etiology and progression of human disease and in testing new drugs, and will be necessary in preclinical testing of human embryonic stem...
Remembering the first genocide
Yesterday, people all over the world marked the 90th anniversary of the genocide of 1.5 million Armenians by Ottoman Turks, memoration that has taken on added political frieght with Turkey’s candidacy for accession to the European Union. Given the refusal of Turkey to even acknowledge the genocide — which also targeted hundreds of thousands of Pontic Greeks and Syrians — the EU question should be put permanently on hold until the Turks face their past with honesty. But the prospects...
Power Ball
Mark McGwire hit 70 home runs in 1998.An article in The New York Times magazine over the weekend provides an up-close look at the stories of two men impacted by the burgeoning problem of steroid use in baseball. In “Absolutely, Power Corrupts,” Michael Lewis writes, Unable to parse the statistics and separate natural power from steroid power, the people who evaluate baseball players for a living have no choice but to ignore the distinction. e to view the increase in...
Canon within the canon
Having trouble understanding the Bible? Can’t seem to reconcile what you just “know” to be true with the plain meaning of Scripture? Why not take Episcopalian Bishop Spong’s hermeneutical approach? According to a column in the Detroit News, Bishop Spong, author of The Sins of Scripture: Exposing the Bible’s Texts of Hate to Reveal the God of Love, says you can feel free to downplay or ignore difficult passages. “Much as I wanted to think otherwise,” he says, “…sometimes (the...
Free and fair trade
S.T. Karnick at Signs of the Times passes along the words of Dr. Sean Gabb, an English Libertarian author, on the debate about fair trade, which is driven in large part by Christian groups (see Acton Commentaries here and here). Dr. Gabb contends, contrary to the claims of the ecumenical movement, that “To call the actually existing order liberal—or ‘neo-liberal’—is as taxonomically accurate as calling the old Soviet Communist Party syndicalist. That order is based on tariffs, subsidies and a...
Grading America’s giving: global action week for education
This week is Global Action Week for Education, and the Global Campaign for Education has given the United States an “F” grade. Anthony Bradley writes that this judgment is short-sighted, and that “support for education…should not be isolated from the promotion of peace and stability.” Read the full text here. ...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved