Church Here, There,
and Everywhere: Being LDS in China
By Belinda
Wong, BYU Meridian Correspondent
I don’t know how many of
you have attended sacrament meeting every week sitting
on a couch in someone’s living room or having your Young
Women meet on a bed.
Or how about this — have
you had to find your shoes among a hundred other black
pairs, after you have had to take your shoes off
for church?
Having lived in three cities
in mainland China where the Church is not officially recognized,
these are just some of the experiences that I’ve had.
Despite these somewhat unusual meeting environments,
I have found that what Jesus Christ said holds true,
for “where two or three are gathered together in my
name, there am I in the midst of them” (Matthew 18:20).
As long as we are gathered
together as Saints in his church, it doesn’t matter
where we are.
When my family went to
live in Shanghai,
I was still in Primary. To my delight, I found out
that church (strictly for expatriates) was conducted
at a friend’s house. It tickled me to see the same
room where we had had a sleepover just the night before
transformed into a Primary room the next day. I loved
the fact that we got to sit on big, fat, luxurious sleep-inducing
couches for sacrament meeting.
When we had to have sacrament
one week at my apartment, I was even more excited —
I felt important.
The novelty of all of this
soon became part of routine, however, and I no longer
became distracted by the many decorations and odds and
ends of having church at someone’s apartment. Ordinances,
meetings, and lessons were still the same as in any
other church, and I took comfort from this: I knew that
church was the real thing, even when there was no real
pulpit or church benches.
Tianjin
brought another experience of church altogether. This
time, the challenge wasn’t in the environment (which
was still at someone’s house), but in the numbers of
the members. I was one of three Young Women; if I didn’t
attend church, our numbers were cut by one-third.
The Young Men even had
it worse; there was one.
Did I get tired of the
same people giving talks or offering prayers? I must
admit, I sometimes did. What tried my patience even
more was the fact that every talk had to be translated
either from Chinese to English or vice versa, for the
Taiwanese members of the branch. For those who understood
both languages, it was dull repetition.
Several members traveled
hours one-way to attend church. Even the more fortunate
of us had to travel two hours one way to Beijing
for stake conferences. I knew that this was nothing
compared to the stories of Saints in other countries
who travel days to attend church conferences, but cramped
in a distorted position with four other people in the
back seat for two hours, I felt as if I were among the
most patient Saints in the world.
I always itched to be outside
when I was in church, but the faces of the other members
revealed no such similar desire. Inwardly, I applauded
the members for their faith and their integrity. Those
members taught me something. They taught me the importance
of attending church meetings. Their attendance strengthened
my testimony of the gospel. If the church isn’t true,
then I can’t imagine the extent of fortitude and perseverance
a true organization requires of its members.
The fact that the meeting
place at Beijing
had a pulpit and “The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints” was actually on a displayed plaque made me feel
as though I was in advanced society. Members who needed
translations could wear a headset, leaving more normal
time allotments for talks. I never felt as though I
was missing out on anything.
The Young Women experience
in Beijing was almost identical
to Young Women in Hong Kong, or in Salt
Lake City. We laughed and learned the way girls all
over the world must do. Sitting around the table every
Sunday, the beautiful voices of the girls would lift
in clear harmony as we sang the opening hymn. Such
beautiful voices were found no matter which Young Women
meeting I attended.
Other places besides China
have confirmed to me the divine and inspired structure
that the Church possesses. I’m attending Brigham Young University right now, where the wards,
obviously, consist of one overwhelming demographic group
— young adults. Sometimes I feel as if the bishopric
is quite literally babysitting us; yet I am still amazed
that the quality of church meetings is never hindered
by our youth and inexperience.
The numerous holidays that
I have spent in Australia have likewise confirmed to me the uniform
nature of our church. Despite the fact that their captivating
accents prove quite a distraction, the speakers there
invite the same spirit to the meeting.
My experiences in such
diverse places as Provo, Sydney and Beijing have taught
me that the gospel is universal. The truth of our
gospel doctrine is the same no matter where we are,
no matter how small or big our membership is. Sometimes,
sitting in Sunday School, I imagine the Saints in some
apartment in China,
learning the same lesson that I am learning — whether
it is on temple ordinances, the Second Book of Nephi,
or the prophet Heber J. Grant.
Sometimes I think we have
the mindset that this church belongs to us who reside
here in the American continent — that it is “ours.”
It isn’t. It is God’s, and God loves that boy in Tianjin,
Ghana, or Tahiti, just as
much as He loves me.
I wouldn’t give up those
years in China
for anything. People gasp and inquire what church is
like in China
when they find out that I’ve lived there. To them I
say, “It’s the same. Church everywhere is the same.”
Well — maybe. Except for that time when I increased
the Mia Maid population by 200 percent just by turning
14.