Results for: Brussels+Airlines+Contact+Number+800-299-7264+Phone+Support

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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 […]

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 […]

ResearchShare

China’s Ambassadors of Christ—Chinese Version

[…] local culture. The second research question analyzes factors that have contributed to the Chinese missionaries remaining on the mission field. This included how pre-field preparation and on-field support contributed to their retention. Also analyzed were other challenges and needs the missionaries had on the field. The interviewees were serving in countries in Central Asia, […]

Blog Entries

How My International Fellowship Trained Me

An International Student’s Maturing in China

This is the last in a series of three blog posts based on an interview with “Tim,” an international student from Zimbabwe in China.

Blog Entries

Reflections on China 2014: Two Ships &#8211; Different Directions

This is my third blog reflecting back on six days I spent in China recently with Brent Fulton where we met with pastors, seminary leaders and academics in Shanghai and Beijing. I shared in the first blog about my amazement at the growth of the church and the window that seems to be opening for the gospel, and in my second I raised concerns about the environmental disaster that is overtaking China and the key role of the church in calling people to care for God's creation.

Blog Entries

Ocean Heaven

A Film Review

A story of the realities of living with autism in China. 

Book Reviews

A Framework for Digital Evangelism

Dr. Harris and Reed’s relational approach applies for individuals to begin relationships with Chinese people in various online spaces and understand their needs. The content of the book needs to be further contextualized for a local Chinese audience, where relationship building will have more nuances in both cultural and digital landscapes.

Blog Entries

Is It Time for a New Approach to Leadership?

To whatever extent the leadership forms taught by the west, and our approach to church polity have done a disservice to the church in China, we should ask for forgiveness.

Blog Entries

Three Names of Me

A Book Review

Three Names of Me by Mary Cummings.

Reviewed by Mark Wickersham.