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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 […]
Crossing the Lines in Wenzhou
The latest episode in the government’s attack on Christian churches in Wenzhou is the drafting of regulations outlining precise limits on the size and location of religious buildings and the size and placement of crosses.
Is China Persecuting More Christians for their Faith?
<p>According to the China Aid 13.8% more Christians in China were persecuted last year as compared with 2011, continuing a trend of increasing persecution that goes back to at least 2007.</p>
The Changing Face of Political Leadership in China
[…] changed in Chinese politics. Looking “under the hood” at the complex process by which policies are made and implemented, Lampton again provides abundant examples from various internal policy areas as well as China’s relations with various countries. In a chapter called “Nightmares,” Lampton contrasts Chinese leaders’ conception of the “China dream” with their need […]
Resistance, not Revolution:
How China’s Christians Respond to Persecution
[…] to this persecution. In the process of answering these questions Conkling offers valuable insights into the growth of China's house church movement, the state of China's religious policy, and the role of international actors in supporting Christians in China who face persecution. His chapter on the South China Church and its leader Gong Shingling […]
What Triggers Persecution of Christians in China?
[…] likely provoke a negative response; hence the recurring crackdowns on Christian human rights lawyers who take up such cases. Openly challenging the government on issues of religious policy, which may be justified, is nonetheless also deemed a political act and, predictably, results in official reprisals. The size and scope of unofficial Christian groups is […]
Editorials
A Church on the Move
[…] migrants like them98selves who work on construction sites, in the homes of urban families or in the factory towns that have sprung up in the Pearl River Delta and elsewhere. Separated from family and the familiar surroundings of the countryside, these peasants are particularly open to the Gospel at this transitional stage in their […]
Marriage and the Church in Urban China
[…] an apartment a single man in the city has little chance of finding a spouse. With the gender imbalance brought about as a result of China’s one-child policy, more Chinese men run the risk of not being able to meet the economic requirements for marriage and ending up as “bare branches,” a slang term […]
Consumerism and the Church in China
[…] the current culture of ostentation. Early evidence from China’s nascent philanthropy sector suggests that the church is already playing a significant role in education, capacity building, and policy development. China’s lack of coherent legal support for NGOs currently hampers the growth of the philanthropy sector. However, the maturing of civil society, including the emergence […]
Flying against the Wind
[…] the jail cell for the Lord Until its bottom breaks Than to bend down! Zhou was finally exonerated and released in 1981 as China’s reform and opening policy brought a new official stance toward religion. In Zhou’s words, “I didn’t change my attitude; they changed their position.” He later discovered that his missionary brothers […]