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  A letter from Don and Wei Hong Snow in China  
             
 

March 12, 2007

China Notes 20

Friends,

For anyone who has their heart set on peaceful co-existence between China and the United States, visiting a bookstore can be a sobering and even discouraging experience. A large and apparently growing number of books have titles like China: Friend or Foe? (DeBurgh), America’s Coming War with China (Carpenter), The Coming China Wars (Navarro), The Great Wall: China Against the World (Lovell), and the rather wordy China Shakes the World: A Titan’s Rise and Troubled Future—and the Challenge for America (Kynge). Similar themes are also common in popular magazines. For example, the lurid red cover of a recent issue of Time (January 22, Asian edition) announces: “China—Dawn of a New Dynasty: With the US tied down in Iraq, a new superpower has arrived. Here’s how to deal with it.” Even glancing over such titles tends to create a sense that conflict is inevitable and possibly imminent.

For the moment, relations between the United States and China are relatively harmonious, at least in contrast to U.S. relations with Iraq, Iran, and North Korea. However, there is an underlying level of chronic conflict over issues such as trade and economic policy, religious freedom, intellectual property rights, protectionism, and Taiwan. Furthermore, as the titles above suggest, there seems to be a wider popular process in which Americans are sizing up China and trying to decide if ultimately it will be friend or foe—a nation with which we can do business or an opponent in a new struggle for international dominance. Of course, this process is mutual. There are similar books in Chinese stores reflecting a similar process in which Chinese people are sizing up the United States. In both nations, a struggle of perceptions is currently going on, and the results will determine how hard each nation tries to work out individual problems in the Sino-American relationship as they arise. If the consensus is that we should view each other as potential partners, it is more likely that we will make serious and sustained efforts to work problems out; if the consensus is that we are foes, we will more quickly resort to tougher measures.

Blessed are the peacemakers

One of the emphases of PC(USA) mission work is to work toward peace and reconciliation around the world, and our long history in China (well over a century and a half) gives us a special responsibility to work for peaceful ties with that nation. While one aspect of our peacemaking work is to help re-establish peace and work toward reconciliation in situations where violent conflict has already broken out. Another important aspect is trying to head off trouble before it begins—by building fair and balanced perceptions before conflict hardens negative perceptions to the point that constructive relationships are difficult to build.

One aspect of Presbyterian peace-building in China is placing Presbyterian personnel here, giving more Chinese a chance to base their perceptions on actual Americans rather than on characters from Hollywood films or images from news broadcasts. Admittedly, the number of Chinese who will have direct contact with a Presbyterian in China is limited. Yet, most of the personnel the PC(USA) places in China are teachers working in teacher-training colleges, so we not only have direct and sustained contact with literally thousands of students, but also have indirect impact on the students who our own students will eventually teach.

A second aspect of our role here involves helping Americans to get a balanced and normal picture of China, a picture that supplements and balances impressions created by the media, which often filter out the normal and letting only the dramatic and extreme (and usually negative) come through. Given that religious freedom issues are the main points of irritation in the Sino-American relationship, it is particularly important that Americans have a balanced and accurate view of what Christian life is normally like in China. To this end, it is helpful to have Presbyterians involved with Chinese Christians and churches in a sustained and ongoing way.

The role that one denomination can play in a relationship between two large and powerful nations is admittedly modest, but our long history and strong network of relationships gives Presbyterians the opportunity to make a contribution exceeding our demographic size. To the extent that we can help Chinese people build fair and accurate perceptions of Americans, and Americans of Chinese, we increase the chances that these two world powers will try to work with each other to deal with whatever problems we face. We are called to live in the faith that the “coming war” of which the book titles above speak is not inevitable; we are also called to build the foundations of a constructive relationship that makes such conflict avoidable and even improbable. “An ounce of prevention….”

Interpretation assignment

We will be in the United States for interpretation assignment from July through October this year. We’ll participate in the New Wilmington Mission Conference in July and in Mission Challenge ’07 being organized by the GAC offices for October. During September we are available to visit congregations, and would be more than happy to do so. If you would like us to visit, let us know. As always, we can be reached at donsnow48@hotmail.com or donsnow48@gmail.com. We look forward to seeing many of you later this year.

God’s peace,

Don and Wei Hong

The 2007 Mission Yearbook for Prayer & Study, p. 244

 
             
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