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HomeNewsChina Detains Priest On ‘Illegal Business’ Charges Over Sermon Recordings

China Detains Priest On ‘Illegal Business’ Charges Over Sermon Recordings


by Stefan J. Bos, Worthy News Chief International Correspondent
BEIJING (Worthy News) – Chinese authorities have charged a prominent house church leader in the coastal city of Wenzhou with “illegal business operations” over distributing sermon recordings, rights activists said Friday.
Pastor Huang Yizi and several church members were detained on June 26, though the reasons for their arrests were initially unclear, according to monitors including ChinaAid and Christian Solidarity Worldwide. Authorities later alleged the group sold audio players preloaded with hymns and sermons without a business license.
Church members maintain that the devices were part of ministry outreach, especially for Christians with visual impairments or those unable to attend worship, and were not intended for profit. “Unregistered house churches encounter additional restrictions, particularly when it comes to evangelistic tools like sermon recordings,” said advocacy group Voice of the Martyrs Canada (VOMC).
In China, only state-approved congregations can operate websites, and even then, content is heavily monitored. Christian posts on the government-regulated WeChat platform are frequently censored, VOMC added.
Huang remains in detention with three church members. Two women, Ding Liqing and Shao Haiyan, were released on bail on July 26.
In comments shared with Worthy News, Pastor Huang’s wife, Lin Aili, said the women appeared “noticeably thinner but showed joy on their faces, testifying to God’s presence with them throughout the ordeal.”
Advocacy groups have urged “prayers” for the detained believers, their families, and China’s broader underground church movement, which they say faces “growing surveillance, raids, and censorship” under Communist Party rule.
Nearly 100 million Christians live in China, according to Open Doors, which ranks the country 15th on its annual World Watch List of 50 nations where believers face the most persecution.
The group said the government has “aggressively tried to ensure all religious expression is brought into line with official Communist philosophy,” leaving unregistered congregations under constant threat of closure and arrest.

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