Living Wisely in China
...to you slowly, you need patience. Practicing Taiji requires “inner strength.” “Inner strength” refers to the resilience that can absorb a punch as well as hit back, but in a...
...to you slowly, you need patience. Practicing Taiji requires “inner strength.” “Inner strength” refers to the resilience that can absorb a punch as well as hit back, but in a...
...need to have realistic expectations of our staff and systems and know the limits of both. We first need to ask what is at stake. What would be the consequences...
In their recent book, Changing the Mind of Missions (InterVarsity Press, 2000; 192 pp, $12.99), James Engel and William Dyrness provide a challenge to the Western missions movement that is...
...shareholders, are pleased with the IT craze. In China’s history, there has never been an industry growth that excited so many people. I, personally, have never heard of anyone publicly...
...they need and to connect with co-workers are in development. Increasingly affordable digital video cameras, editing equipment, and projectors are making it easier to put a face on unreached peoples,...
A recent visitor to the Mu’en Three Self church of Shanghai confided, “Gosh, I didn’t expect it to be so Western—not after hearing them say they were an indigenous church.”...
...While Western evangelicals have had difficulty with some of the liberal theological positions Ding has espoused over the years, I, as an evangelical, believe his recent book brings out some...
...truth. It addresses many of the questions I have heard from intellectuals from the PRC and Taiwan, and I believe that educated Chinese will find it useful in answering common...
...process of change will be highly complex, even chaotic at times. We need to look beyond the superficial headlines about China as a threat to U.S. interests and see both...
...sent to the U.S. to gain new values as well as advanced degrees. Confusion, corruption, and the need for hope and loving communities are pushing people to look along religious...
...tragic incident in Belgrade, they understand the need for cooperation instead of confrontation. Their policies toward the U.S. will be firm, but not aggressive. New Chinese leaders all see reunification...
...likely to expand in China. Overall I liked the book, although it is quite academic. It fills an important gap in the English language literature on the new generation of...