Beijing, 27th June 2008 (CNA) - The Chinese government has said it will
permit booklets of the Gospels, New Testaments, and full Bibles to be
distributed during the Olympic Games, even though it normally controls
publication of the Bible.
The Bible Society, a British-based Christian charity, has confirmed that
50,000 bilingual booklets containing the four Gospels will made available in
the Athletes’ Village in Beijing and five other Olympic Cities.
Additionally, 10,000 New Testaments and 30,000 Bibles will be printed, the
Times Online says.
The nearly $400,000 cost of printing the Olympic Bibles will be met by the
Bible Society. The Bibles themselves will be printed by Amity Printing Press
at a new multimillion dollar facility which opened in Nanjing last month.
Amity produces one Bible every second. It produced its 50 millionth in
September.
For the first time, Bibles will be distributed outside of registered shops
and with the approval of the Communist party. The Beijing Olympics
organizing committee is allowing the free use of its logo on the Scriptures.
During China’s Cultural Revolution Bibles were banned and confiscated. Bible
printing in China resumed in the 1980s with the assistance of Bible
Societies from around the world.
Christians in China can own Bibles, but they still face persecution if they
practice Christianity outside of registered churches. According to the Times
Online, a June report from Christian Solidarity Worldwide and the China Aid
Association said there has been a recent crackdown on “house churches” and
claimed foreign Christians are being expelled at a rate “not seen since the
1950s.”
Olympic athletes and visitors will be allowed to take religious materials
into the Olympic Village for their own use. On the other hand, The Times
Online reports that Beijing officials are unlikely to permit the mass
distribution of religious literature deemed to be propaganda material, such
as the writings of the Dalai Lama.