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Why Divorce Is on the Rise in China

[…] financial independence, lessening the incentive to get married and introducing a potential source of friction for those who do marry. The “one child” phenomenon has exacerbated the pressure posed by multiple older relatives interfering in the lives of their children or grandchildren, resulting in more “parent-driven” divorces. Divorces among Christian couples unfortunately follow the […]

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Reverse Culture Shock

[…] sets the cultural rule for how close we stand in a conversation at school drop off? Why is Facebook used that way? Why do Aldi check-out people pressure customers to exit so quickly? Why are the elderly not taken to parks in groups? Why don’t people feel free to sing or dance outside? Why […]

Lead Article

What Is Disability?

[…] to what should be the response of society, Social Role Valorization. Social Role Valorization (SRV) is the name given a concept for transacting human relationships and human service, formulated in 1983 by Wolf Wolfensberger (Osburn). SRV offers a structure for adding value to a person. Individuals with disabilities have experienced many wounds, like the […]

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How the Church Grows in China

[…] population. Of the 1,200 congregations in Steve’s initial sample, 120 ended up participating in the study, which entailed distributing a paper survey to members following the Sunday service, as well as a separate survey for pastors. Since congregations were required to have a response rate of at least 30 percent in order to be […]

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The Many Faces of the Chinese Church

[…] is within this segment of the Chinese population, within these fifty-five people groups, where the story of China’s people groups becomes truly intriguing. In other words, the number fifty-five does not tell the whole story. According to Paul Hattaway in Operation China, a comprehensive profile of China’s various people groups, many of the fifty-five […]

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Supporting China’s Indigenous Missions Movement

[…] with expatriates who work closely with them, this issue delves into a number of the practicalities now emerging as more believers in China enter long-term cross cultural service. In the case of the recruiting question referred to above, guest editor Wu Xi refers to the resurgence of outside agencies reopening recruitment offices in China […]

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Unmasking China’s “Official” Church

[…] religious locations, in reality most large TSPM churches have many affiliated meeting points around the community. In the case of this particular church, attendance on Sundays may number around 800. However, if the membership of the dozens of registered meeting points under the church's supervision is included the total number of Christians served by […]

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Who Moved My Church?

[…] Evangelicals today may well be asking, “Who moved my church?” In the year 1910, 93 percent of Christians lived in North American and Europe. By 2013 that number had dropped to 63 percent.3 Today, according to the World Christian Database, the majority of Christians are found in the area of the world identified by […]

Supporting Article

The Development of the Middle Hues

[…] Chinese society now includes ten occupational categories:  state and social administrators; (enterprise) managers; private business owners; professional and technical personnel; office staff; self-employed business people; commercial and service staff; industrial workers; agricultural workers; and the unemployed and semi-employed. There is a second reason why the CCP is nervous and considers the emerging middle class […]

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Stories You May Have Missed

[…] perennial questions about Christians’ relationship to traditional Chinese culture. The underlying narrative of several of the most-read posts was how Chinese believers are responding to increased political pressure. Another Perspective Contrast these with what Ruth Wang from China Christian Daily identifies as the key trends shaping China’s church over the past year. Wang identifies […]