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Blog Entries

Post-Conference Reflections on Expatriate Ministry in China

[…] was especially welcome. As I caught up with coworkers I had not seen for several years, I observed a number of trends. In the wake of the 2008 Beijing Olympics, the China ministry world was in a panic. Many expatriates had lost their visas. We will never know just how many were affected, but […]

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | October 31, 2024

The Viral Success of Chinese Village Basketball (October 29, 2024, Made in China Journal) As China’s economy struggles in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic, young people have been leaving cities and returning to the countryside. In Southeast Guizhou Miao and Dong Autonomous Prefecture, the CunBA (村BA), or Village Basketball Association, has offered some […]

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | July 13, 2023

New Musical Honors Shanghai’s Legacy of Welcoming Jewish Refugees (July 11, 2023, Sixth Tone) A compelling new performance is set to debut in November at Shanghai’s Jewish Refugees Museum, shedding light on how the city welcomed Jewish refugees in World War II. Conducted by award-winning musicians, the oratorio narrates the story of two Jewish […]

Blog Entries

Chinese Christianity Endures, Part 2

Learning from the 18th-Century Church Under Authoritarian Rule

[…] in Eighteenth-Century China by D. E. Mungello for this review. Mungello, <em>This Suffering</em>, 114. Mungello, <em>This Suffering</em>, 111–12. Mungello, <em>This Suffering</em>, 37, 78. Mungello, <em>This Suffering</em>, 119­– 20, 133. Mungello, <em>This Suffering</em>, 127. For more on the Church’s late nineteenth-century drift away from Chinese cultural accommodation, see Henrietta Harrison, <em>The Missionary’s Curse and Other […]

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | May 9, 2019

<p><strong>The Hermit Culture Living On in China’s Misty Mountains</strong>  (May 4, 2019, <em>Sixth Tone</em>)<br /> Disillusioned recluses have come to the Zhongnan Mountains for centuries. Now, a government campaign threatens their way of life.</p>

Supporting Article

Life in the Underground Catholic Church

[…] compromise to protect and maintain faith. 2. The second challenge is the “betrayal” from the church. After underground Bishop Guo Xijin of Mindong Diocese voluntarily retired (in 2019 or 2020) , most of the underground believers were disgusted and even resented the priests who had joined the Patriotic Association. The faithful refused to receive […]

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | June 11, 2015

<p></p> <p><strong>Mao As Church Father</strong> (June 1, 2015, <em>First Things</em>)<br /> In a brief review of recent Asian Church history (From Every Tribe and Nation), Mark Noll makes the arresting comment that “Mao Zedong counts as one of the most significant figures in modern church history.” Noll hastens to add this was not Mao's intention; rather, […]

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs Newsletter for May 24, 2012

[…] on Twitter @ZG_Briefs. To make a contribution to ZGBriefs, please click here and then select Donate Through Paypal. FEATURED ARTICLES Talking with Christians in rural China (May 20, 2012, Seeing Red in China) They monitor our phones and email talking with a provincial church leader (May 21, 2012, Seeing Red in China) Chinese Christians […]

Chinese Christian Voices

The Wenzhou Church Reborn from the Ashes

[…] now, instead of competing to see who can build the best building, the focus has shifted to the spiritual construction of believers. Training programs have increased, the number of people studying theology (but not necessarily in full-time ministry) has increased, and spiritual formation is once again being valued. I believe that the experiences of […]

Blog Entries

A Tour of Three-Self Churches

Kunming—Trinity International Church

<p>In the summer of 2011 I spent about two months traversing China from Kunming in the south to Hegang near the Russian border in the north visiting registered churches and interviewing the pastors.</p>