Every Sunday several million Chinese citizens flock to urban churches in the big cities of the
People's Republic of China. How do they conceive the meaning of Christian life when China in
search for new moral orientation turns to 'Chinese traditional values' and 'core socialist
values'? Through comparison between the prevailing 'moral language' reflected in schoolbooks
and descriptions of Christian life in sermons this empirical study provides tangible insight
into the changes which happen when Chinese morality meets the Christian Gospel.