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ZGBriefs | August 31, 2023
Measuring Religion in China: Christianity (August 30, 2023, Pew Research Center) There is a range of estimates for the number of Christians in China, partly because different researchers use varying sources and methods, and partly because some analyses make adjustments to account for limitations in survey and government data.
What Not to Say When Disaster Strikes
<p>How should Christians respond when others face disaster? What should they say? What shouldn't they say?</p>
Supporting Article
Problems and Proposed Solutions for Medical Missionaries Coming from China
Navigating a Pathway to Sustainable Chinese Medical Mission Participation
<p>Chinese physicians who want to be missionaries outside of China face significant challenges. One of these is maintaining a Chinese medical license once outside the country. Another is obtaining the required continuing medical education units required by law. In addition, obtaining a license to practice medicine in another country is a difficult process. The […]
Supporting Article
Ministering to Chinese International High Schoolers in the U.S.
Guarding Their Souls
<p>When teens move to a new country, going from east to west and from the familiar to the unfamiliar, they face tremendous pressures in addition to the challenges of their young lives. Who will care for and guide them during the days of transition? Chen examines how schools, host parents, churches and Christian organizations […]
ZGBriefs | March 30, 2017
<p></p> <p>Young, Restless, and Reformed in China (March 27, 2017, <em>The Gospel Coalition</em>)<br /> Chinese church leaders are writing books of church order. They’re organizing into networks. They’re starting Christian grade schools and seminaries. They’re reading everything they can get their hands on, buying out Reformed authors at bookstores and heading to Reformed websites. And […]
Worshiping in Chinese
Why Cross-Cultural Workers Don't Go to Chinese Church
[…] to the expat workers as well) are such that it would be irresponsible to participate regularly in unregistered church services. Part one deals with some of the common objections to attending Chinese church services. In part two some of the main reasons why I have chosen to attend Chinese church services will be given. […]
ZGBriefs | December 3, 2015
[…] Potent Symbol of Beijing’s Pollution (December 1, 2015, <em>The New York Times</em>)<br /> For 100 days, Brother Nut dragged a roaring, industrial-strength vacuum cleaner around the Chinese capital’s landmarks, sucking up dust from the atmosphere. He has mixed the accumulated gray gunk with red clay to create a small but potent symbol of the city’s air problems.</p>
CSQ Article
Might Christians and Confucians Actually Agree about Human Nature?
Theological Contextualization in China
<p>For centuries, both Christianity and Confucianism have each sought to reconcile two families of ideas within their belief systems. The author suggests that these two ideologies may have a great deal in common.</p>
ZGBriefs | November 12, 2015
<h2></h2> <p><strong>NGOs in China: Seeing through a Law, Darkly</strong> (November 11, 2015, <em>LinkedIn Pulse</em>)<br /> International NGOs operating in China not only need to understand how the law will regulate their operations in China, but also how the exigencies of their China operation may compel them to alter their behavior abroad. At some […]
Supporting Article
The Heart Cries of Frontline Workers in Muslim Countries
Interviews by the Guest Editor
WU Xi candidly speaks of difficulties China’s frontline missionaries face as they move into cultures different from their own. Churches and sending agencies need to address these issues if the work of their missionaries is to be effective.