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Blog Entries

China’s Church at the Threshold

<p>Over the course of 2016, as I have had the opportunity to participate in various gatherings of Chinese Christians, I have heard two conversations going on simultaneously.</p>

Blog Entries

7 Trends: Why You Need to Pay Attention

[…] primarily on the growth of the indigenous Christian community, both in numbers and in influence. Chinese believers are leading in ways that would not have been possible 20 or 30 years ago. As a result, some contributions that foreigners made in past decades are no longer as critical today. Expatriate workers may still have […]

Blog Entries

The Elusive Path to Religious Freedom

[…] Freedom by H. Knox Thames. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 2024, 416 pages. ISBN-10: 0268208670, ISBN-13: 978-0268208677. Available from Press and Amazon.  Reflecting on 20 years of service as a diplomat and advisor to multiple US administrations, international human rights lawyer Knox Thames lays out a vision for how governments, legislatures, […]

Blog Entries

On the China Bookshelf

[…] Chau, who offers a very different take on Chinese religion, and May Fong and Kay Ann Johnson, both of whom have written recent critiques of China’s one-child policy. As all three are working with individuals or teams engaged in China, they touched on books, not necessarily China-specific, they’ve found useful in helping people make […]

Editorials

More than a Label

From "Back to Jerusalem" to "Indigenous Mission Movement from China"

<p><em>Editor's Note: This editorial originally appeared in "China's Indigenous Mission Movement" (CS Quarterly, 2013 Spring).</em></p>

Blog Entries

Will History Repeat Itself?

Whether a century ago or today, whatever our China stories may purport to tell us about being apolitical, of “leaving our politics at the door” or “staying out of politics,” one of the hard lessons of history is that foreign Christian involvement in China is unavoidably political.

Blog Entries

The Chinese Church’s Shifting Battleground

[…] of the church. In the words of one pastor, “At present the main problem facing the church is not government persecution; in fact, this is unimportant to the church. No, the main problem is holiness. If the church is not holy, its witness is destroyed.” Image Credit: Shanghai February 2011 by Remko Tanis, on Flickr

Editorials

The Changing Chinese Family

<p>Editor's Note: This editorial originally appeared in "The Family in China" (<em>ChinaSource Quarterly</em>, 2008 Fall).</p>

Blog Entries

From Here to There

The Straight-Line Fallacy

[…] not only friendly to the West, but also more similar politically and culturally. Former Los Angeles Times Beijing Bureau Chief James Mann dissected this narrative in his 2007 book, The China Fantasy (New York: Viking). As his book title suggests, Mann viewed the engagement myth as fundamentally flawed in its straight-line view of the […]

Blog Entries

China and the House Church

Breaking the Stalemate

[…] serving society through active participation in China’s growing local charity sector. Professor Liu Peng of Pushi Institute for Social Sciences in Beijing, long an advocate of religious policy reform, earlier this year published a lengthy proposal on the We Chat public account Religious Law in which he offers a way forward for both the […]