Results for: Delta%20Airlines%20%20%20800-299-7264%20Reservation%20Policy

Showing results for delta airlines 20 20 2800 299 726 reservation 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

Blog Entries

How Not to End Persecution

[…] which all believers, along with those who have no religious beliefs, can thrive. Having served under several administrations prior to his retirement from the State Department in 2020, Thames is hopeful that the current president will give the same attention to the issue as he did during his first term, which many evangelicals saw […]

Blog Entries

Filling the Void

Church and Society in China

[…] the Civic Space: The Rise of Unregistered Protestantism and Civic Engagement in Urban China,” pp. 2-3. Published in Christianity and Public Life: Religion, Society and the Rule of Law (Palgrave Studies in Religion, Politics, and Policy), Joel Carpenter and Kevin den Dulk (eds.), Palgrave Pivot, January 2014. Photo Credit: Old Church, by Christopher, via Flickr

Editorials

A Church on the Move

<p>Editor's Note: This editorial originally appeared in "Urban Migration" (CS Quarterly, 2004 Winter).</p>

Blog Entries

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 […]

Blog Entries

Flying against the Wind

[…] wrote an open letter that was circulated to Catholics around China. For his refusal to join the patriotic church, Zhou was arrested in 1955 and received a 20-year sentence. Zhou’s sentence was extended twice due to his refusal to repent of his crimes. During one episode of intense interrogation in 1970, he was handcuffed […]

Blog Entries

China by the Lists

[…] has placed his indelible stamp on Chinese history by unveiling the Four Comprehensives. In so doing, Xi continues a long tradition of Chinese leaders wrapping up complex policy packages into concise numbered lists with catchy names. The list of lists continues to grow. In case you are having a hard time keeping them straight, […]

Blog Entries

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

Blog Entries

Beyond the Standard Narrative

[…] more likely to draw official attention. The size and perceived influence of unregistered groups is another factor. After several high-profile congregations were shut down in the late 2010s, other groups began proactively moving to a decentralized church model, a transition that was hastened by pandemic restrictions beginning in 2020. Finally, the church’s historical relationship […]

Blog Entries

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 […]

Blog Entries

Who Will Be China’s Issachar Tribe?

[…] does China need today?” Western missiology has developed from an Open Access Nation (OAN) approach to a Creative Access Nation (CAN, 創啓宣教) approach in the 1990s. In 2010, Lausanne II in Cape Town brought up the idea that mission sending is no longer monopolized by the West but is “from everywhere to everywhere” (從全地到萬邦). […]