Resources from 2014

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

Chinese Christian Voices

Christians Go Online to Comment on the Kunming Massacre

Chinese Christians offer their thoughts on the Kunming knife massacre. 

Blog Entries

Thank you!

We were hoping for 100 new subscribers and gained 186!

Blog Entries

What to Make of the Attack in Kunming

On Saturday, there was a knife attack at the Kunming train station. When it was over, 29 people were dead and hundreds injured. Here's how the Los Angeles Timesreported the scene:

Blog Entries

Love Online, Chinese Style

The explosion of China's online Christian community has not only provided believers with a new platform for expressing their faith, it is also helping to meet practical needs within the Christian community. Recently Chinese Church Voices featured an article from the online Christian newspaper Gospel Times about Christian dating websites in China.

Blog Entries

ZGBriefs The Weeks Top Picks, February 27 Issue

My top picks this week center on architecture, education, and the plight of the disabled in China.

ZGBriefs

February 27, 2014

A compilation of news from China this week, from around the Web.

Blog Entries

To Conquer Characters, Rethink Radicals

When I began learning Chinese at age twenty-one, I was encouraged to discover that every character has a "radical", a component which communicates meaning. Characters containing the "three dots", for example, denote something to do with water. River and lake , wash and rinse , and sweat and tears all contain the water radical on the left.

Chinese Christian Voices

Speed Skating Coach Li Yan Talks about the Bible

The most successful short track speed skating coach in the world is Li Yan. She is also a Christian. The Christian Times reports on the importance of faith in her life.

Blog Entries

Being Salt and Light Among the Disabled in China

James Palmer, a Beijing-based journalist has penned an excellent, yet disturbing, piece about the disabled in China, titled "Crippling Injustice." "Disabled people in modern China," he writes, "are still stigmatised, marginalised and abused." "What hope is there for reform?"

Blog Entries

Theological Chinese for Non-native Speakers

Chinese language learning opportunities have mushroomed in recent decades. For those seeking to work specifically with the church in China, however it is still not easy to find a program that covers both the requisite theological vocabulary and is accessible to non-native speakers.