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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 […]

Editorials

The Changing Chinese Family

[…] family was the social safety net for those who, having passed working age, could count on the support of multiple offspring in their later years. China’s one-child policy has turned the traditional family on its head. Instead of multiple offspring caring for a proportionally smaller set of older relatives, young families comprised of only […]

Blog Entries

Taking Ourselves (and the Gospel) Seriously

[…] currently facing. According to Dr. Russell Jeung, professor of Asian American Studies at San Francisco State University and founder of the group Stop AAPI Hate, some 3, 800 Asian Americans reported being the victims of racial abuse or violence during the first year of the pandemic. Most of these were women. Over 500 incidents […]

Blog Entries

Beyond “Two Camps”: The Complex Relationship between Official and Unregistered Church in China

[…] accurate in previous decades, the current situation is far less clear-cut. With China's reform and opening have come significant changes in the TSPM's role, in China's religious policy, and in the unregistered church community, all of which have brought, and continue to bring, a new level of complexity to the relationship between China's official […]

Blog Entries

4 Takeaways from Xi’s Speech on Religion

At a long-awaited national conference on religion, held in Beijing April 22-23, CPC General Secretary Xi Jinping outlined his vision for “helping religions adapt to the socialist society” under the direction of the Party. Here are a few prominent themes from Xi’s speech.

Blog Entries

Whither Chinese NGOs?

[…] where it might be headed: Draft NGO Law: A Roundup of Reactions A New Day for Foreign NGOs? One Step Closer to an NGO Law Law and Policy Trends that Affect NGOs and Social Enterprises in China China’s Schizophrenic NGO Policy Under the Microscope? How Many NGOs does China Really Have? Image courtesy of […]

Blog Entries

New Report Highlights Roots of Religious Persecution in China

[…] militarizing and posing a threat to the regime (the Taiping Rebellion being a prime example), the need for social stability has been a central feature of religious policy even since dynastic times. Under Xi Jinping this emphasis has taken on a new intensity. Another factor is the regime’s crackdown on dissent. Human rights lawyers, […]

Blog Entries

Towards a New Model for Christian Education in China

[…] holistic education in a Christian environment. Tracing the development of private education in China, Dr. Charlie Brainer of Taylor University examines the current tensions within Chinese educational policy. This podcast surveys indigenous efforts in Christian education and answers these questions: What is possible within the educational policy environment in China? What are the advantages […]

Blog Entries

From Here to There

The Straight-Line Fallacy

[…] In many ways, the divergence between China and much of the international community is sharper now than it was in the 1980s when China’s reform and opening policy began to take shape. Western narratives about the church in China tend to take a similar straight-line approach. They anticipate a linear relationship between certain types […]

Blog Entries

You Can’t Do That in China!

[…] my afternoon meeting. Stuck in a persecuted church narrative, I was unable to comprehend that things were changing dramatically all around me. My careful study of religious policy had convinced me that the government’s firmly drawn lines excluded the kind of activities that my eyes and ears now found hard to believe.  Religious policy […]