Results for: Helena%20Window%20Restoration%20repair%20&%20service%20phone%20number%201-888-294-4160

Showing results for helena 40window restoration repair 20 service phone number 201 888 294 460 helena 40window restoration repair 20 service phone number 888 999 7959 20 201 888 294 460 1-888-999-7959 helena 40window repair 20 number 201 888 294 helena 40window repair 20 number 1 7959 20 201 888 294 460 20 201 888 294 460 20 888 999 7959 20 201 888 294 460

Blog Entries

Collective Misunderstanding

[…] Chinese </em>(Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books, 1986), 27. A.J. Broomhall, <em>The Shaping of Modern China: Hudson Taylor’s Life and Legacy, Vol. 1 </em>(Carlisle, United Kingdom: Piquant Editions, Ltd., 2005), 10-11. Ibid. Broomhall, 11. Kenneth Scott Latourette,<em> A History of Christian Missions in China</em> (New York: The Macmillan Company, 1929), 58-59, quoted in G. Thompson Brown, […]

Blog Entries

A Chinese Christian Observes Ramadan

[…] whom he has been called to serve, Pastor Mark joined in the Muslim celebration of Ramadan. He recorded his reflections in an article he wrote for the 2016 winter issue of ChinaSource Quarterly. For Pastor Mark, his one-month experience of an annual ritual observed by millions around the world proved to be a life […]

Blog Entries

How Not to End Persecution

[…] which all believers, along with those who have no religious beliefs, can thrive. Having served under several administrations prior to his retirement from the State Department in 2020, Thames is hopeful that the current president will give the same attention to the issue as he did during his first term, which many evangelicals saw […]

Blog Entries

Urbanization and the Future of China’s Church

<p>Along with the massive urbanization that has forever reshaped the social and cultural landscape of China, the church in China has itself undergone a major transformation. From a largely rural, peasant-led movement in the 1980s the church is now very much an urban phenomenon.</p>

Editorials

China by the Numbers

[…] still hard to come by. Nonetheless, this church growth has already placed China squarely on the map when it comes to the global Christian population. As China moves steadily toward becoming the nation with the largest number of Christians, its church will increasingly be in a position to leave a lasting mark on Christianity worldwide.

Blog Entries

Bridging the Divide in Asian American Churches

A Book Review

[…] who do not measure up, feelings of failure and inadequacy. Not dealing with shame, the authors assert, prevents Asian American believers from accessing the grace, forgiveness, and restoration available in Christ. For their understanding of grace the authors likewise reach back into first century Roman culture, using the concept of patronage to differentiate between […]

Blog Entries

China’s Church in an Age of Pluralism

[…] of China’s online world have erected an increasingly advanced digital ecosystem with applications that rival the capabilities of systems in use elsewhere. For China’s Christians, pervasive cell phone coverage and the connectivity of the internet have fostered a new kind of community, enabling believers to communicate across geographical boundaries and to bypass limitations that […]

Blog Entries

Communism’s Questions, Christianity’s Answers

[…] provides further evidence that it is long outdated. Looking at age, the largest group of respondents in Steve’s sample was those in their 50s, with a sizeable number of respondents in their 40s or 30s as well. Only 31% were illiterate or had only a primary school education. While experiencing a miraculous healing may […]

Editorials

Facing Transitions

[…] to be faced alone. A wealth of resources is available for those who find themselves facing change. Amy Young’s Looming Transitions: Starting and Finishing Well in Cross-Cultural Service is accompanied by an activity book for families and a workbook for those in transition. In her review, Cassie Cahill echoes the sentiments of many who […]

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, […]