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Blog Entries

Beyond the Standard Narrative

[…] is going on in the Chinese church today. For members of the global church trying to better understand their brothers and sisters in China, this fixation on policy can have two unfortunate results. We can become “frozen with apprehension,” concluding that China is “off-limits” instead of recognizing that adversity can also bring new opportunities […]

Blog Entries

Stories You May Have Missed

[…] outside China, these familiar narratives can obscure our understanding of God’s deeper work among Christians in China. Wang explains: Since the implementation of the reform and opening-up policy in 1980, which reinstated the foundational principle of religious freedom, Christianity in China has journeyed through phases of restoration, growth, and eventual revival. Over this time, […]

Blog Entries

Stewarding the Environment

China’s Energy Future

[…] solar panels and wind turbines. So far, however, capacity to produce such equipment has outstripped the country’s ability to use the resulting clean energy due to piecemeal policy implementation and an emphasis on manufacturing over adapting existing energy infrastructure such as power grids. For the foreseeable future China’s need for imported fuel will continue […]

Editorials

Urban Migrants

Building the Infrastructure

[…] employment in the burgeoning service industry, waiting on tables, cooking, cleaning or working in the homes of China’s growing middle class. In the Pearl River and Yangtze delta regions tens of millions of young migrants labor on the world’s factory floors, making the goods that have fueled China’s meteoric economic growth for the past […]

Blog Entries

A Bottom-Up Faith in a Top-Down Country

[…] is not a priority for China's leaders, who have a long list of other issues to work on. As a result China has long outgrown its religious policy, which lags far behind the reality of where the church is today. Christians are having an impact in their society, in business, even in politics, as […]

Editorials

Chinese Education

From Hallowed to Hollow

[…] has dropped. Analysts trace the decline to a corresponding drop in the number of children born at the beginning of the last decade due to China’s one-child policy. However, the decrease also suggests two realities facing young people in China today. The promise of college education is not what it used to be. Whereas […]

Blog Entries

2016: Not “Business as Usual”

[…] rethink of how expatriate Christians serve in China? I tend to agree with Swells that what we’re experiencing is the latter, particularly in view of the new policy environment and its affect both upon foreigners and upon Chinese Christians whom they seek to serve. Events over the past year suggest that what’s ahead may […]

Blog Entries

Who Will Be China’s Issachar Tribe?

[…] is not in the same league as CAN and OAN; it is not a receptor-based missiology but a mobilization-based missiology. China is creative access due to government policy, so any sending from China is under creative access restrictions. Mission mobilization and sending cannot be openly discussed and presented in the churches as in the […]

Supporting Article

The “Wenzhou Model” and Missions from China

[…] suggests another potential drawback of the “Wenzhou Model.” What if business opportunities in a given locale dry up due to changes in the local economy or government policy, even as the gospel ministry is yielding fruitful results? How will future mission efforts be sustained? This would be particularly problematic in the case of cross-cultural […]

Supporting Article

East-West Exchange Promotes Nonprofit Development in China

[…] doing what is best for the people in China whom they serve.” The group learned much about internal organization, discipline and management of NGOs, along with government policy and regulations toward NGOs and how government and nongovernment relate to each other. Delegation members felt these issues were especially relevant to China and asked whether […]