Beijing escalates crackdown on underground Christian pastors
In its largest religious crackdown in years, the Chinese Communist Party detained dozens of underground church leaders in a fresh campaign to rein in independent Christian worship.
Over the weekend, Chinese authorities launched coordinated raids on unregistered house churches, including the arrest of prominent pastor Ezra Jin Mingri, signaling yet another attack on religious liberty in the name of “internet regulation", as Breitbart reports.
The 56-year-old Jin, founder of the influential Zion Church in Beijing, was reportedly charged with “illegal use of information networks”—a charge that conveniently aligns with newly imposed rules limiting online religious expression.
Chinese Authorities Target House Churches Without Warning
Zion Church, like many house churches in China, operates outside the government’s official control, refusing to bow to state ideology wrapped in spiritual clothing. That defiance came at a cost, as Jin and nearly 30 others were rounded up over the course of the weekend.
Roughly 20 of those detained remain in custody. Some were taken publicly, others simply disappeared—an old playbook for regimes that dislike questions.
Jin’s family says he’s been denied access to a lawyer and may not be receiving his diabetes medication in detention—shining a spotlight on China's frequently callous treatment of political detainees.
Restrictions Increase As Government Tightens Grip Online
The official reason behind the arrests? Distributing unregistered religious content online—a newly criminalized offense under April regulations that all but prohibit digital forms of ministry.
The rules ban livestreams, online sermons, AI-generated religious material, and forbid clergy from using the internet to discuss faith or minister to minors. It’s internet censorship cloaked in supposed morality.
Pastor Jin had become a guiding force for other house church pastors during the pandemic, especially by helping them spread their message online when gathering in person wasn’t feasible. That apparently didn’t sit well with state officials allergic to unsupervised worship.
Faith Leaders Disappear As Beijing Enforces Party Line
Jin’s story is far from unique. The government previously detained 11 pastors from Zion Church earlier this year, and imprisoned others in June under vague fraud accusations—a familiar move when evidence won't do.
Sean Long, a U.S.-based pastor affiliated with Jin’s church, described the crackdown as part of “a new wave of religious persecution this year.” He’s not wrong—the trends have been picking up speed, not slowing down.
The arrests come against the backdrop of the Chinese Communist Party’s policy of “Sinicization,” which demands that religious practice conform entirely to Party doctrine. In other words, worship the way Beijing wants, or not at all.
Washington Calls For Release Of Detained Pastors
The United States is watching, but whether words turn into real pressure remains to be seen. Secretary of State Marco Rubio condemned the arrests, calling them a clear display of the CCP’s hostility toward believers who choose faith over state control.
“This crackdown further demonstrates how the CCP exercises hostility towards Christians who reject Party interference in their faith and choose to worship at unregistered house churches,” Rubio said, summarizing the Church’s core concern in one brutal sentence.
Meanwhile, Christian nonprofit leader Bob Fu put it even more directly: “Faith is not a crime. Worship is not a crime. Prayer is not a crime.” He praised the courage of China’s underground pastors, whose unshakable stance seems to terrify officials more than any foreign military.
Millions Worship Outside Government Approval
Despite years of surveillance, harassment, and legal threats, millions of Chinese Christians still choose to attend house churches over government-approved religious sites that peddle state doctrine alongside Scripture.
While the Party claims these crackdowns are about law and order, it's hard to miss the pattern—Christian leaders are disproportionately targeted, especially those who reach large, independent audiences.
Jin’s journey into ministry, sparked in the aftermath of the Tiananmen Square massacre, tells you everything you need to know about where his loyalties lie. And it's not with any earthly regime.
Religious Freedom In China Remains Grim
With no access to legal counsel, no guarantee of medical care, and no end in sight, Pastor Jin's detainment is shaping up to be a test case for how far China’s rulers are willing to go in regulating the souls of their people.
And if this past weekend is any indication, the answer is: all the way.
For now, the world watches. But as history has shown, light in the dark doesn't vanish easily—no matter how thick the curtain Beijing tries to draw.





