Blog Entries from 2021

The Resource Library is where you will find the latest resources from across our publications.

Blog Entries

A New Year for Those Living in China’s New Normal

As we end one year and begin a new one, it’s time to look back and reflect—and take a deep breath, bracing ourselves for what is to come in 2022. And as we look back and prepare for the future, we do so with open hearts and anticipation, and with awareness of the world around us.

Blog Entries

Looking to 2022 With Thanksgiving

Thank you for following and supporting ChinaSource in these critical times.

Blog Entries

New Media, New Direction

What happens when the regulations increase, and the darkness seems to grow? Jerry An of ReFrame Ministries reflects on the changes God has brought in the past year.

Blog Entries

Remember and Hope this Christmas

This season, as you remember and hope in the coming of Christ, we at ChinaSource wish you all a very Merry Christmas.

Blog Entries

Defying Western Expectations

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.

Blog Entries

CMC Global 2021

Register for CMC Global 2021 and be encouraged by what God is doing around the world.

Blog Entries

Chifa Workers of Peru

The Chinese diaspora in Peru has been there since the 1880s and have given their new country a national dish. However, there are few Christians in the community.

Blog Entries

China’s Reforming Churches Rising to Today’s Challenges

China’s house churches have a long history of defying Western expectations, and every indication is that this history—which is about far more than numerical growth—has not yet run its course.

Blog Entries

Christmas Music in Chinese

Christmas music is popular in China. Get into the holiday spirit with a playlist of Chinese Christmas songs.

Blog Entries

Cross-Cultural Encounters: China and the Reformed Church in America

A Book Review

An in-depth look at Reformed missionaries working in China in the late 1800s, emphasizing both often-overlooked individuals and the ways that they worked through cross-cultural encounters with Chinese partners.