Tracing God’s Work in Fujian
...Paul Hattaway’s latest book, Fujian: The Blessed Province, the book I’ve been waiting for much of my life. And though I savored it as if it were written just for me, this...
...Paul Hattaway’s latest book, Fujian: The Blessed Province, the book I’ve been waiting for much of my life. And though I savored it as if it were written just for me, this...
...My personal connection to the southern China coastal province of Fujian makes Paul Hattaway’s latest book, Fujian: The Blessed Province, the book I’ve been waiting for much of my life....
...form is online. Upon completion, I received a QR code by email. One question is about what visa you have. I selected “transit visa.” When I got to passport control, I...
...panel presentation I gave in the conference had a similar vision. I shared how I was inspired by the crucial financial risk faced by the Lingnan Christian community and how...
...of the Chinese communist revolution are luck and violence—at least, that’s according to Prof. Frank Dikötter. Continuing from our last episode on Prof. Frank Dikötter’s new book, Red Dawn Over...
...cultural imagination. But this remained a cultural identification. “I could identify with the culture,” he recalls, “but I could not believe there was a God.” This was the path many...
...World theology must move from a peripheral interest to a vital necessity. For centuries, “theology” was often synonymous with “Western theology.” European and North American frameworks—shaped by Enlightenment rationalism and...
...Asia Society, moderates the conversation. Events Online Book Club Discussion (ERRChina) Join us for a discussion of the book Breakneck: China’s Quest to Engineer the Future, by Dan Wang. Now...
...Nee? I grew up in this tradition. There are three or four generations in my family connected to the local churches, so I experienced Nee’s influence firsthand. But I also...
...institutional journalism. As a researcher within this field, I find it a biting irony that my primary data regarding major events within the Chinese Church often comes from the New York...
...Workers lived in the cities, and farmers worked in rice paddies in the countryside, she explained. “But I’m not farming,” I said. “Why am I a farmer?” I was puzzled....
...contextual member care model for Chinese mission workers (94). After reading the other articles in part two of the book, I can also see that models from other non-Western regions...