Results for: Little%20Rock%20garage%20doors%20&%20openers%20phone%20number%201-888-294-4160

Showing results for little rock garage doors 20 openers phone number 201 888 294 460 little rock garage doors 20 openers phone number 888 999 7959 20 201 888 294 460 1-888-999-7959 doors 20 number 201 888 294 doors 20 number 1 7959 20 201 888 294 460 20 201 888 294 460 20 888 999 7959 20 201 888 294 460

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | May 2, 2019

<p><strong>Chiang Mai’s Chinese Transfer Stu</strong>dents  (April 26, 2019, <em>China File</em>)<br /> In search of an affordable alternative to Chinese education, a growing number of Chinese parents are moving their children to international schools in Thailand.</p>

ResearchShare

Social Service Ministry in China

[…] mainland China, today a host of different factors are driving Chinese Christians to explore for themselves the place of humanitarian concerns within gospel ministry. For a growing number of local Christians, loving one’s neighbor through acts of service is rapidly becoming an indispensable aspect of Christian witness. This essay will first explore the role […]

Peoples of China

Global Snapshots

A Look at the Chinese Diaspora around the World

<p>From New Zealand to Canada, from professionals to laborers, we are given brief glimpses of the third Chinese diaspora in a variety of countries. A number of diaspora workers give us glimpses into the lives of the people they work with and how they are presenting them with the Gospel.</p>

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | September 22, 2022

Temple excursions booming among Chinese youth (September 21, 2022, The China Project) According to government data, there are currently more than 33,000 Buddhist temples in China. An increasing number of them find themselves hosting urban youth who seek an escape from the rat race.

Chinese Christian Voices

A Life that Belongs in Heaven

[…] resources and training for the Chinese church in this area is great.</p> <p>One man who is speaking to this need is Yuan Datong (Andrew Yuan), a Christian marriage counselor who conducts marriage workshops in churches all over the country. He has also authored a number of books on the subject, including <em>Marriage: A Covenant for Life</em>.</p>

Supporting Article

Mainland Chinese on the African Continent

<p>Every year, China does $10 billion worth of trade with Africaand this continues to increase. Thus, the continent, and especially South Africa, is drawing a large number of Mainland Chinese. Who are these Chinese and what are their situations? Who is trying to reach them with the Gospel and what challenges do they face […]

Book Reviews

Listening to the Heart

A Book Review

<p><em>Factory Girls: Voices from the Heart of Modern China </em>by Leslie T. Chang. Picador, 2010, ISBN-10: 033044736X, ISBN-13: 978-0330447362; 320 pages; paper $10.88; Kindle edition $11.99 at Amazon. (Note: Various editions are available with a slightly different title, dates of publication and number of pages.)</p> <p><em>Reviewed by Andrea Klopper</em></p>

Chinese Christian Voices

Evangelism, Reformed Theology, and Church Life, Part 1

<p>A growing movement of churches attracted to the Reformed faith is gaining steam in China. Although still comparatively small in number, these churches and several of their prominent leaders are gaining influence among Christians across China. This article, originally published in the journal <em>ChurchChina</em>, provides hard data on how Reformed theology has impacted the evangelistic efforts […]

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | March 19, 2015

<p></p> <p> </p> <p><strong>Hot Pot or Pizza: Chinese Students in the U.S. Aim to Bridge the Cultural Divide</strong> (March 18, 2015, China Real Time)<br /> “My ‘Foreign’ Roommate: Muge & Katherine,” is an 11-minute video produced by Ms. Miao and a few other Wisconsin students showing an imaginary but realistic first week in the […]

ZGBriefs

March 14, 2013

[…] and opening began. Im talking here of the urban middle class, who dominate Chinese media both as purchasers and consumers. The raft of criticisms being levelled has very little to do with the actual failings of the young, but is a symptom of the yawning, and unprecedented gulf between young urban Chinese and their parents.</p>