A well-reasearched, eye-opening, sobering, and encouraging read for anyone interested in gaining a greater cultural understanding of one of the the world's greatest cultures.
David Aikman, a former *Time* magazine bureau chief in Beijing, provides a journalist's overview of China's religious (Christian) history for the purpose of asking what role might Christianity play from within China as China evolves into a major economic and world super-power.
In a talk delivered in Beijing in the summer of 2004 (the transcript of which is included in one of the many helpful appendixes in the back), Aikman rehearses the thesis of this book: "If China becomes a Christianized society, and this of course I'm repeating as the thesis of the book, you have a nation which in maybe forty years will be the dominant superpower the world. I think it's unlikely that the United States will be able to maintain military dominance, and certainly not economic dominance, for another forty years. China will emerge. And the question I ask in this book is, and I think the question we should all ask , is 'If China becomes the dominant nation of the twenty-first century, what kind of China will it be?'" (p. 359)
The book is sixteen chapters, each covering a different aspect of China's religious history, from 635 AD right through to the modern era. For those familiar only with Hudson Taylor's work in China, the first one-hundred pages or so provides a rich history narrated through several short biographies chronicling China's religious development apart from foreigners.
The book orients the observer to China's religious landscape by introducing the reader to the history, distinctions and similarities, and beliefs and practices of groups like the the "house churches" and the "Three-Self Patriotic Movement." Aikman also includes chapters discussing the results China's Cultural Revolution have had on Christianity's growth, along with the significant and severe abuses of human rights sanctioned by the government.
He concludes: "A moment may come when the Chinese dragon is tamed by the power of the Christian lamb. The process may have already started with house churches."