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Blog Entries

When Less Is More

[…] Their expanding outreach programs spoke of the church’s growing influence. Their well-equipped facilities were a measure of the comparatively higher standard of living enjoyed by an increasing number of Christians in China. Members traveling overseas for conferences or training provided firsthand accounts of life in their churches back home. Eventually shut down by authorities, […]

Blog Entries

Reading Tea Leaves from the 2021 National Religious Work Conference

[…] few COVID cases appear. That makes President Xi’s mention of increased restriction on internet religious activities even more consequential. Inside China, congregations have moved to online worship services but any religious activity online that is not officially licensed now appears to be banned; new regulations take effect on March 1, 2022 (in Chinese), that […]

Blog Entries

Educational Inequality and the Making of a New Urban Underclass

[…] relegated jobs most city dwellers would be unwilling to take themselves. Those who make it a bit higher up the social ladder find 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 […]

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Sustainability and Long-Term Effectiveness: the Role of Business

[…] within the government, will quickly see through one's supposed commercial identity. Zhao Xiao, a prominent Beijing economist, believes the "Kingdom enterprise " concept is key to sustainable service and witness in China. In a recent interview Zhao provides valuable food for thought on the role of business in China as a vital expression of […]

Editorials

Transforming Stewardship and Sustainability

[…] ways that have had global implications. Together, these articles provide valuable food for thought on the role of business in China as a vital expression of both kingdom presence and purpose. May they serve to broaden our vision of what faithful service in China should look like amidst Chinas rapidly changing political and economic environment.

Blog Entries

Encouraged by a Chinese Missions Group

[…] sure there are many similar groups around China that I don’t know about, but I know of one particular missions group that has sent out no small number of missionaries. Most of their workers are serving in Muslim countries, even in closed countries where missionaries are not allowed to serve openly. This missions group […]

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Billy Graham’s Legacy of Partnering

[…] As China’s process of reform and opening took shape under Deng Xiaoping, the Institute began convening evangelical leaders to consider how to respond to new opportunities for service in China. Momentum for collaboration built into the 1990s, when a new multi-organizational effort based out of the Institute gave birth to what would eventually become […]

Editorials

Discovering “His Story” in China

[…] Robert Morrison arrived in Macao with a vision to see the Gospel spread to every province of China. He too, never saw his vision realized, and the number of lives he directly impacted was relatively few. Yet today the church is active in every province of China, and its numbers continue to increase exponentially. […]

Editorials

Journeying Together

[…] article on how the expectations of Christian leaders in China have changed over the decades, Steve Z. remarks simply, “They are eager to have ‘company.’” Decades of service to the church in China have brought great blessing both to China’s church and to believers outside China. Today with the maturing of the church has […]

Blog Entries

Collective Misunderstanding

[…] point: “The amount of literature translated and written by the Nestorians and their obvious effort to accommodate the faith to Chinese concepts and practices would have been in vain if most adherents were foreign or if there were not a large number of native priests to use the tools put at their disposal” (Covell, 33).