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New Report Highlights Roots of Religious Persecution in China
<p>According to China Aid Association’s latest annual report, religious persecution in China more than doubled last year. The increase comes as no surprise, as 2014 was marked by a wave of attacks on church buildings, particularly in the city of Wenzhou and around the eastern coastal province of Zhejiang. The general social tightening that has […]
Americans Drive on the Left and Other Truths I’ve Learned
[…] I don’t think they sell fish that big!” I knew something was fishy (ha ha ha) because I had just seen carp that size swimming around in tubs at the market down the street. We talked a little more, and I eventually realized that while I understood my gesture to mean the length of […]
Peoples of China
Disability and the Three Traditional Chinese Belief Systems
Buddhism, Taoism and Confucianism
[…] “sick” when providing an English translation. Numerous citizens will avoid canfei or canji all together and say “the person who cannot see” or “the person who cannot walk,” which is the Chinese equivalent to “person first language.” At least verbally, the situation in China for individuals with disabilities is improving. However, discrimination is still […]
Supporting Article
What Is Our Role?
Toward a Set of Shared Considerations for Outside Involvement in Chinese Leadership Development
[…] serve the church as it develops leaders for the future. Draft compiled by Dr. Brent Fulton, editor of ChinaSource. Comments are welcome and may be directed to BFultonATwww.chinasource.org. Footnotes ^ John T. Grove, Barry M. Kibel, and Taylor Haas, EvaluLead: A Guide for Shaping and Evaluating Leadership Development Programs. Oakland, CA: Sustainable Leadership Initiative, 2005: 6-10.
Editorials
Serving China Revisited
[…] journal we focus on those who serve cross-culturally in China today. In the second chapter of Philippians, the apostle Paul looks at three critical areas related to service that we would do well to revisit as we consider what it means to serve China. Our Motivation After appealing for unity among the Philippian believers, […]
Why China Needs Two
[…] rapidly being replaced by a barrel-shaped contour featuring a large middle-aged population that is steadily moving into the ranks of the elderly. Today there are more than 200 million senior citizens in China. Of these some 30 million are considered disabled. As of 2012 there were only 3.9 million nursing home beds available in […]
Who’s in Charge?
[…] prove unsatisfactory. Perhaps a better starting point would be, “How shall we lead together?” Joseph W. Handley and Micaela Braithwaite, “What is Polycentric Leadership?” <em>Lausanne Movement, </em>September 20, 2022, accessed May 23, 2024, <a href="https://lausanne.org/about/blog/what-is-polycentric-mission-leadership">https://lausanne.org/about/blog/what-is-polycentric-mission-leadership</a>. Joseph W. Handley, <em>Polycentric Mission Leadership: Toward a New Theoretical Model for Global Leadership </em>(Oxford: Regnum Books International, 2022), […]
Editorials
Journeying Together
[…] borrow a common Chinese idiom, is it a case of “same bed, different dreams,” working together yet having different expectations? These questions led to the formation in 2015 of the China Gospel Research Alliance (CGRA), a consortium of four organizations in Hong Kong, all with a long history of China involvement. The CGRA members […]
Editorials
Measuring Change in China
Whose Yardstick?
[…] visitors ventured warily into one of China’s large urban churches, visions of “Potemkin Village” dancing in their heads, only to emerge an hour later remarking that the service was “just like anything you’d experience in a church in America” (or Singapore, or Canada ….)? Of course there are similarities, but to conclude that Chinese […]
It’s Also about the History
[…] as it were. In an article titled “Is Christianity a ‘Chinese’ Religion”, G. Wright Doyle says ” the Communist “party line” since the early decades of the 20th century has been that Christianity is a noxious foreign imposition carried on European gunboats and opium ships and forced upon an unwilling populace.” So, when Ian […]