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Chinese Christian Voices

Learning to Care for the Elderly

Churches across varied regions are providing diverse elderly care services to their local communities… However, they still face challenges such as difficulties in management and operations, insufficient professionalism among service personnel, and overall low service levels.

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | October 6, 2016

<p></p> <p>How China got its name, and what Chinese call the country (October 5, 2016, <em>South China Morning Post</em>)<br /> During periods when the Chinese nation was unified under one ruling house, the name of the dynasty was also the name of the nation, thus “the Great Tang”, “the Great Qing” and so on. The […]

Chinese Christian Voices

The Impact of the Coronavirus Outbreak on a Christian Official

A Testimony

<p>The coronavirus situation is like a wake-up call. I don’t know when my life will end; I don’t want to squander it any more.</p>

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | October 3, 2024

[…] Are Hiring Personal Cheerleaders (September 29, 2024, Sixth Tone) The service is part of a broader trend across the country, where young Chinese are increasingly seeking dazi, or “companions,” to counteract feelings of isolation. This emerging market—which includes services like gaming buddies and online chatting partners—is expected to be worth over $7 billion by 2025.

Blog Entries

Chinese Theology: Text and Context

A Book Review

<p>Most books on Chinese Christianity try to trace its history, focusing on key people, events, and movements. While Chloë Starr does not neglect these, she highlights something that most historians neglect: the theology that arose from different contexts expressed the thought and struggles of influential leaders, and shaped the ways that Christians responded to […]

Blog Entries

Reading Tea Leaves from the 2021 National Religious Work Conference

What can we learn from the recent conference on religious work? A comparison with the 2018 conference helps tease out key points.

Blog Entries

Christmas Crowds in China | Part 3

Crowds of New Believers

[…] numbers of people who flow through China’s churches every year at Christmas. I know of one urban church that hosts over 10,000 visitors during its six Christmas services. Each year I see the church building bursting at its seams, bodies crammed along every aisle and stairway. Each year I watch as the area around […]

ZGBriefs

January 17, 2013

<p>Next Made-in-China Boom: College Graduates (January 16, 2013, The New York Times)</p> <p>China is making a $250 billion-a-year investment in what economists call human capital. Just as the United States helped build a white-collar middle class in the late 1940s and early 1950s by using the G.I. Bill to help educate millions of World War […]

Chinese Christian Voices

As Churches Reopen in China (2)

[…] two parts. Part one is here; this is part two. Viewing the Fiery Faith of the Church: Five Highs (continued) IV. High Commitment to Ministry When church services resumed, pastors and preachers were mobilized and gave everything they had. In some churches, from the chairmen and presidents of the China Christian Council, to the […]

Blog Entries

The Midwives of Egypt

I had never mentioned the account of the midwives in Egypt, nor did I have plans to do so. As the day unfolded, the woman’s story spread and the call was repeated, “Let us be like the midwives of Egypt.”