Back to Jerusalem movement

The Back to Jerusalem movement (Chinese: 传回耶路撒冷运动; pinyin: chuánhuí yēlùsālěng yùndòng) is a Christian evangelistic campaign that began in mainland China by Chinese believers to send missionaries to all of the Buddhist, Hindu, and Muslim peoples who live "between" China and Jerusalem.[1] They believe that the Back to Jerusalem Movement is a call from God for the Chinese church to preach the gospel and establish fellowships of believers in all countries, cities, towns, and ethnic groups between China and Jerusalem.[2]

History

The Back to Jerusalem idea was initially conceived during the 1920s by the Jesus Family church in Shandong province. While the vision eventually lost visor in the Jesus Family, the Northwest Spiritual Movement would split from the Jesus Family and revive the original vision. Simon Zhao would become the principal leader of this movement in the 1940s. In 1946, another group in Henan province, the Back to Jerusalem Evangelistic Band, would independently develop a similar vision.[3] However, government restrictions and persecution forced the movement to go underground for decades, and its leader Simon Zhao spent 40 years in prison in Kashgar.

Since 2003, the most vocal international proponent of "Back to Jerusalem" has been the exiled Chinese house church leader Liu Zhenying, also known as "Brother Yun". Yun intended for "Back to Jerusalem" to evangelize fifty-one countries by sending a minimum of 100,000 missionaries along the Silk Road, an ancient trade route that winds from China to the Mediterranean Sea.[4] The ongoing work of evangelism, both within China and beyond its borders, are being done anonymously by Chinese church members, who make no appeals for money or seek any publicity for themselves.[5]

References

  1. Aikman, David (2003). Jesus in Beijing. Washington, DC: Regnery Publishing. p. 196. ISBN 978-0-89526-128-1.
  2. Hattaway, Paul (2003). Back to Jerusalem: Three Chinese House Church Leaders Share Their Vision to Complete the Great Commission. Gabriel Publishing. p. x. ISBN 1-884543-89-8.
  3. Brandner, Tobias (2009). "Mission, Millennium, and Politics: A Continuation of the History of Salvation – from the East". Missiology: An International Review. 47 (3): 318–319. doi:10.1177/009182960903700302.
  4. Klassen, Herb (February 4, 2005). "The Back to Jerusalem movement". 44 (2). Mennonite Brethren Herald.
  5. Feng Cheng, Jenny (2009). A Legacy Continues: in Appreciation of James Hudson Taylor III, 1929–2009. Hong Kong: Overseas Missionary Fellowship; Alliance Press. ISBN 978-962-8402-14-4.

See also

External links

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