EXCITING NEWS FOR MISSIONARIES TO CHINA

The doors might be opening up for missions to China in ways that haven’t been seen for the last 20 years. The media is just now admitting that China’s business climate has suffered tremendously under their ‘zero-covid’ strategy. Just a few months ago, main-stream media was trumpeting China as the poster child for the impossible idea that a lockdown could be done while maintaining a growing economy.

However, Beijing’s recent pivot away from its draconian rules and its sudden openness to the rest of the world is a cause for excitement for missionaries ready to return to China. Along with its Covid-19 policies, the Communist Party focussed on persecuting Christians. Educated and business savvy missionaries were forced out of the country in droves in 2019 and 2020, because of new policies and regulations targeting the underground house churches.

What Beijing didn’t see coming however, was the massive number of multi-national businesses that fled the country in 2021 and 2022. China’s aggressive political policies, which naturally paired with their persecution against Christians, caused some of the biggest corporations from South Korea, Taiwan, Japan, and the United States to pack up their bags and move their production to other nations. Jobs have dried up and small businesses have closed their doors. Investors have packed up and gone home and taken their investments with them.

However, there seems to be a tingle in the air that China could be on the verge of opening up again in 2023. The sudden unexpected drop of Covid-19 rules will have many in China waking up to fewer opportunities than just three years ago. China has been the production capital for the world, but many factory owners have fled and those manufacturers will not return overnight because of the investment they needed to leave in the first place. China’s travel industry has been hit hard and rusty planes and absent pilots will not be easy to replace.

As they did in the 1990s when there were not many people ready to make sacrificial investments in China, the Communist Party will be forced to look for investors that have a desire to serve the people rather than their own bottomline and those future investors might just come in the form of missionaries.

 

Dr. Eugene Bach is a known trouble-maker with an active imagination and sinful past. He has a PhD, but is not a real doctor, so please do not call for him during a medical emergency on an airplane when someone is having a heart attack. Eugene started working for Back to Jerusalem in the year 2000 after a backroom deal involving Chinese spies, the NRA, Swiss bankers, and a small group of Apostolic Christians that only baptize in Jesus’ name. He spends most of his time in closed countries attempting to topple governments by proclaiming the name of Jesus and not taking showers. From time-to-time he pretends to be a writer. He is not good at it, but everyone around him tries to humor him.

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