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Blog Entries

Partnering in China

A new resource from visionSynergy and ChinaSource

[…] Where do Chinese believers see the greatest opportunities for partnering in the future? Why is mentoring becoming an increasingly important area of partnership? How is the changing policy environment affecting overseas partnerships? How can Western Christians partner with China’s emerging missions-sending movement? As Joann reminds us in her opening remarks, “Partnerships take place in […]

Editorials

Chinas Youth in Perspective

Youth in China today undoubtedly represent the most privileged generation of any in China’s history. Globalization has brought iPods and McDonald’s, and the legacy of China’s one-child policy is that these “one and only” children are the sole recipients of the affection of multiple sets of grandparents, aunts and uncles. Previous generations of youth […]

Blog Entries

China’s Church and Its Future

[…] them first-generation Christians themselves, do not have the experience or resources to devote to serving youth, even if they do acknowledge it as a critical need. Government policy discourages children and youth from believing in religion, and the realities of China’s education system require that young people spend long hours preparing for tests as […]

Blog Entries

Chinese Culture and Christian Stewardship

[…] you get success. Confucius’ writings say work hard, you get the golden house, the beautiful wife, you will be an official, you will be in government. Government policy encourages people to develop, to start up companies, to cooperate to make money. This is allowed. That’s why all the people, they believe the only way […]

Blog Entries

Practical or Political?

Key Challenges Facing China’s Urban Church

[…] can do often, but yet I think when we get below that we realize that there are issues the church is facing today that, even if religious policy were changed tomorrow, some of those issues will still be there. So what problem is the church in China facing? One of the biggest ones that […]

Blog Entries

Educational Inequality and the Making of a New Urban Underclass

[…] 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 floor, making the goods that have fueled China's meteoric economic growth for the past […]

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

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

Changing Culture

[…] hybrid vocabulary as foreign ideas are adopted into Chinese. These along with many other cultural changes too numerous to list here suggest that China’s reform and opening policy has, in fact, succeeded in permanently altering what could rightfully be called the most enduring culture in the history of human civilization. Yet, as Jerry Yu […]

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