Results for: Brussels%20Airlines%20Contact%20Number%20800-299-7264%20Phone%20Support

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Blog Entries

Filling a Gap

[…] currently sending out cross-cultural workers, they are not able to share in this awesome blessing. And often if a church has sent out such workers, a good number of them are floundering and not seeing any fruit. This is an area in which their faith is lacking. Any way that we can help the […]

Blog Entries

Chinese Christians in the New Era—Hope and Overcoming

[…] the Japanese invasion in the 1930s to protect their congregations and lost their lives as a result.  Swells is right, of course, that a focus on the numbers of converts was always misplaced; the focus should always be on the faithfulness and integrity of those who do convert, not on whether they are numerous […]

Blog Entries

Plastic China

A Film Review

[…] a dirty job but it’s not bad given he otherwise would be a farmer and that he is trying to make as much money as possible to support his family. He is serious about his son’s education and goes to great lengths to buy his family a new car. Kun also suffers from health […]

Blog Entries

Christian Evangelism in the Digital Age

Preview of the Autumn 2023 CSQ

[…] in new pathways. Digital engagement is making the gospel available and accessible to anyone, anytime, anywhere. Christians now have the opportunity to contribute their digital skills to support and supplement the greatest needs of the Great Commission. I hope you find that this issue of CSQ helps to paint a better picture of various […]

Blog Entries

Back to the North (向北方)

A Film Review

[…] former one-child policy and as the country navigates the aftermath there appears to be more to show than to tell. One of the ramifications is the growing number of lost families (estimated 1 million families)—Chinese parents who experience the death of their only son or daughter. Thirty years—a generation’s worth of time—after the policy was […]

Peoples of China

Strangers in a Strange Land: Expatriates in China

[…] skilled labor pool in China is lacking, and there are great opportunities for skilled foreigners to work and live in China. Beijing’s embassy district boasts the largest number of diplomatic relations with any nation on the planet except for the United Nations. Previously, Hong Kong was the primary port of call, but now, economic […]

Blog Entries

Bitter Money

A Film Review

[…] for capturing the raw realities of life in China. In this particular film, Wang Bing introduces us to the city of Huzhou, in Zhejiang province. Through a number of story lines and characters, he gives us snapshots of the kinds of lives that are lived and issues that exist in a city with supposedly […]

Blog Entries

Web Junkie

A Film Review

<p>Daxing Bootcamp, located in the suburbs of Beijing, is probably a place you've never heard of. But growing numbers of parents in China who are at wits’ end have heard of it or of the 400 rehabilitation camps like it. The government has set up the centers to treat teenagers with internet addiction disorder. <em>Web […]

Blog Entries

Beijing Taxi

A Film Review

[…] there are flowers everywhere, new buildings, and road restrictions. The new “odd/even rule” has been implemented—depending on whether a car’s license plate is an odd or even number, it can only be driven on designated days to reduce traffic. I started this project with a mission to illuminate the humor, heart, and the humanity […]

Blog Entries

Reverse Culture Shock

[…] plunged down on the reverse culture shock curve (see also this link). This is the stage where lots of things are irritating, like . . . The number of mosquitoes and sand flies that bit us on holidays. December and January are hot, not cold as we have become accustomed to. Complaining Australians (ironically […]