02/19/2012 China (Christian Post) - Jeremy Lin's rise to fame has gotten the attention of many Chinese Christians, and inspire those who face religious persecution in their Communist homeland.
Jeremy Lin isn't Chinese, yet he has captured the heart of many people in China, including Christians who are often times persecuted. According to a Wall Street Journal Report, Beijing attempts to control religious practices in China, requiring churches to register, and overseeing religious education. They also sanction less than 25 Protestant seminaries and Bible schools with less than 10 full-time employees.
Even the Christianity of China's latest hero is hidden in Chinese media. Out of 1.4 million micro-blogging messages on mainland Chinese websites that mentioned Lin, only 1,500 mentioned his Christianity. State news media also heavily cover Lin's stellar basketball play, but omit mentioning his faith.
Despite the censorship efforts of the Chinese governments, Lin's story of success, including his Christian faith has caught the attention of Christians in China, according to The New York Times.
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Professor Yan Ronghui of the Zhejiang Theological Seminary in Hangzhou, told The New York Times that she plans to use Lin's religious faith and basketball success as a model for students in her theological English course.
Hu Shubang, 25, a student at the seminary, said that Lin could become a symbol for Christians in China to use in seeking converts.
"Just by his being a Christian, it is a fantastic way to broadcast the ways of Christ," Shubang said.
Hu believes that only five men out of the 180 student population seminary and hardly any women even know about Jeremy Lin's faith, due to the Chinese media omitting and censoring religious subjects.
Protestant denominations in China have expanded 60 percent in the last four years, despite Mao Zedong's order to have all Protestant denominations merged in 1958. The Chinese government only allows one Protestant seminary per province as way to control the spread of Christianity.
It is estimated that of China's 1.3 billion population, 100 million are Protestant Christians. Jeremy Lin is a Taiwanese-American, since his parents grew up in Taiwan. His maternal grandmother is from China, but she fled to Taiwan in the 1940s to escape China's Civil War. Lin's great-grandfather was converted to Christianity by American Protestant missionaries.






