
Results for: Delta%20Airlines%20%20%20800-299-7264%20Pet%20Policy
Showing results for delta airlines 20 20 2800 299 726 pet policy delta airlines 20 20 202009 28 20 20 2800 299 726 202009-2-28 airlines 20 20 2800 299 726 airlines 20 20 202009 28 20 20 2800 299 726 20 20 2800 299 726 20 20 202009 28 20 20 2800 299 726
2016: Not “Business as Usual”
[…] Christians serving in China are facing the most challenging environment in decades. These developments are not entirely unexpected, given the overall tightening that has characterized China since 2012. Nevertheless they do suggest that those serving in China need to seriously rethink their approach. Hence the urgency in Swells’ encouragement to consider seriously the process […]
Worship in China
Why Place Matters
[…] of its population." Footnotes ^ Jennifer E. Walsh, “The Importance of Gathering Together: Religious Land Use in the United States and China,” in Joel A. Carpenter and Kevin R. den Dulk, ed., Christianity in Chinese Public Life: Religion, Society, and the Rule of Law. (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014), p. 59. ^ Ibid. ^ Ibid., p. 65.
Editorials
Chinese Education
From Hallowed to Hollow
<p>Editor's Note: This editorial originally appeared in "Christians and Education in China" (CS Quarterly, 2011 Summer).</p>
China’s Church and Its Future
[…] further background on youth in China, read "Towards More Effective Youth Ministry" and the July 2017 edition of The Lantern. Notes ^ An overview of this study can be found in “Journeying with the Church in China” edited by Brent Fulton, ChinaSource Quarterly, Vol. 19, No. 1, March 20, 2017, https://www.chinasource.org/resource-library/chinasource-quarterlies/journeying-with-the-church-in-china. Image credit: PICT2412a by maxxum via Flickr.
China’s Crisis of Faith
[…] “The Achilles’ Heel of China’s Rise: Belief,” Liu Peng, a researcher in the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences and founder of a Beijing-based think tank on religious policy, writes that China’s current “crisis of faith” is the result of more than three decades of rapid economic development divorced from any underlying ideology. Absent a […]
A Generation of One
Why China's most privileged youth generation ever is still looking for more. China's one-child policy has created, for the first time in history, an entire generation that has not known what it is like to have brothers, sisters, or cousins. China's most privileged generation to date, the youth of today have grown up with […]
Religion and Control in Chinese History
[…] society. 1 Daniel Bays, "A Tradition of State Dominance," in Jason Kindopp and Carol Lee Hamrin, Eds., God and Caesar in China: Policy Implications of Church-State Tensions, 2003, pp. 26-27. 2 Bays, p. 35. (Excerpted from Brent Fulton, "A Tale of Two Churches," in Bruce P. Baugus, ed., China's Reforming Churches: Mission, Polity, and […]
China and the Church: 5 Trends to Watch in 2018
[…] that sees both the church’s domestic impact and foreign connections as problematic. While many developments within the church itself would seem to bode well for the future, 2018 finds China’s church potentially on a collision course with the current regime, as China’s leaders tighten their grip on all sectors of society, including religion. How […]
Marriage and the Church in Urban China
[…] entire Territory article in English, please see “Do Chinese Men and Women Deserve Each Other?” “Are Chinese Men Good Enough for Chinese Women?” eChinacities, www.echinacities.com, July 29, 2014. “Do Chinese Men and Women Deserve Each Other?” Chinese Church Voices, https://www.chinasource.org/resource-library/chinese-church-voices/do-chinese-men-and-women-deserve-each-other, November 4, 2014. “Do Chinese Men and Women Deserve Each Other?” Image Credit: Red couple in […]
Coming to Terms with the Church
[…] it instead portrays a church that is finding its way within that society even as the society and state itself are coming to terms with the church's role. For more on the church's evolving role and the Chinese government's official policy toward the church, see the latest issue of ChinaSource Quarterly. Photo by Joann Pittman