Thoughts in Response to the End of the “Golden Age”
...any conclusions. We may need to wait a few decades to see “patterns in the dust” (as the title of Nancy Bernkopf Tucker’s book on Sino-American Relations during 1949–1950 aptly...
...any conclusions. We may need to wait a few decades to see “patterns in the dust” (as the title of Nancy Bernkopf Tucker’s book on Sino-American Relations during 1949–1950 aptly...
...to the next generation, to preserve the harvest of our children, lest they fall away. Let us look at the situation of children and teenagers in our churches today. I...
...These are questions we need to carefully consider, and I will write another article to discuss more specifics. Original article: 《互联网宗教信息服务管理办法》落实后的教会牧养初探 by Gospel Times. Translated, edited, and reposted with permission....
Thus far, I have addressed the importance of family, church leaders, and the struggles the second generation youth face. I discussed two competing worldviews that are at war within the...
...and 13. “They offer very raw thoughts and fresh perspectives,” Goh said of his mentees. “I like to empower them like how I used to be given responsibilities when I...
...So I did not stop but continued to pursue my obsession with theology. In Jinling Seminary, I found the theological palace that I was looking for. Although I didn't take...
...critical ministry work in a critical context. It will need enduring prayer. Could you pray? People: Finding a champion for this concept is a critical need. A person or a...
...know his kingdom is both “now and not yet,” we still have a long way to go. The need for oneness in Christ is more glaring in this winter season...
...entitled, “Returnees—A Topic Worth Revisiting.” We are grateful that this issue of ChinaSource Quarterly is devoted to just that, as were the winter 2011 and autumn 2016 editions. I commend...
...numerous isolated and exclusive communities and has difficulty effectively pooling resources for the missionary task. Some Chinese pastors purportedly have the attitude, “I’m the only good one. I don’t need...
...that we acknowledge our need for God only after he has touched our hip socket, when we are limping along. Only then do we acknowledge we need others as well,...
...in more detail what you mean by that? I don’t mean sober in the sense of being somber or sad. What I mean is this: in the middle of the...