Serving China’s missionary church will require seeing “success” through a new lens, defined not by big-budget projects and exotic stories, but by the faithfulness of those who are willing to labor in obscurity on the margins, often unannounced and unnoticed, with perhaps few visible results.
Brent Fulton
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February 23, 2022
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Stories
Brent Fulton comments on the diversity of approaches in Reformed churches in China in this adaptation of his ChinaSource Perspective article from the winter issue of CSQ.
Brent Fulton
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December 22, 2021
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Scholarship
Here we have a multi-faceted picture of churches that may identify with one another confessionally, but which differ on questions of where and how to worship, the role of women in the church, and how to relate to government authorities. Far from representing a rigid, cookie-cutter approach to church life, the Reformed tradition as it is currently lived out in China is dynamic and adaptable, reflecting the resourcefulness that has enabled the church to thrive amidst all kinds of adversity.
Brent Fulton
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December 13, 2021
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Scholarship
Leaders in the policy arena face the difficult task of taking constructive action while at the same time being intentional participants in a larger conversation that could directly impact their options. In a similar way, Christians engaged in China are called to expand the larger conversation beyond the currently acknowledged reality, exposing their fellow believers to new possibilities through a deeper relationship with China and its church.
Brent Fulton
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October 27, 2021
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Ideas
Embedded in today’s evangelical China narratives, particularly the narrative of the persecuted church, is the assumption that regime change will inevitably bring about greater openness for the gospel in China. But is that what Chinese history tells us?
Brent Fulton
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September 29, 2021
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Ideas
While Walls identified strongly with the church in Africa, where he served as a missionary from 1957 to 1966, his scope was global. His reframing of Christian history brings a much-needed perspective to the stories we often tell about God’s mission in the world, including in China.
Brent Fulton
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August 30, 2021
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Ideas
It has been said that for the person who has a hammer, everything looks like a nail.
For foreigners who go to China, it is often the case that what they find depends on what they’ve come looking for.
Brent Fulton
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June 23, 2021
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Ideas
Western narratives about China and its church are built on a fundamental, but often unspoken, assumption about the relationship between law and society.
Brent Fulton
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May 26, 2021
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Ideas
Many of the China stories told by Christians inside and outside China are uplifting accounts of faith, of changed lives, and loving communities. There is clearly a disconnect between these voices and those that have unfortunately become mainstream within some evangelical circles. When it comes to their rhetoric about China and the Chinese, it is time for these Christian leaders to take themselves, as well as the gospel, seriously.
Brent Fulton
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April 28, 2021
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Ideas
From the 2002 summer issue of ChinaSource Quarterly.
Brent Fulton
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April 14, 2021
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Ideas
These narratives can also have a distorting effect upon those who employ them, for our China stories speak to more than simply what we think about China; they also reveal what we desire.
Brent Fulton
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March 31, 2021
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Ideas
"It is curious, however, that to this day the Mao years remain the least studied period in the history of religion in modern China."
This book helps fill that gap.
Brent Fulton
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March 1, 2021
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Resources