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Blog Entries

International Students in China—an Opportunity?

[…] Africans. Of the top 15 countries sending students to China, eight of them are “unreached” or “minimally reached” and comprise almost 120,000 students. There is a tremendous openness with all the worldview exploration and reassessment that young adults do. Is this an opportunity to reach the unreached? It appears that there is a greater […]

Supporting Article

International Student Ministry in China

Is There Still Hope?

[…] into the mission of the local church. Pray for Chinese students returning from abroad to strengthen ISM in China. Pray that in God’s time China’s borders will open again to international students, and the Chinese and international churches there will receive them with the practical love of Jesus and the liberating news of the […]

Blog Entries

ISM in Reverse in China?

[…] master’s degree at a world-ranked university, sharing the gospel and reading God’s word with students from all over the globe. Could that be you? To know more, contact the author at  [email protected]. Notes ^ Ministry of Education, "Growing number of foreign students choosing to study in China for a degree across multiple disciplines,” 3 April […]

Editorials

More than a Label

From "Back to Jerusalem" to "Indigenous Mission Movement from China"

Back to Jerusalem (BTJ) has raised the expectation that China can be a significant missionary-sending country. With an exciting slogan, a clear target and a specific number of missionaries, it claims China is to take up the last baton of the Great Commission and bless the nations. This optimistic projection assumes: The baptism of […]

Supporting Article

Views from the Classroom

[…] way of answering queries, addressing problems, and helping students develop into mature and responsible adults but also gave me defined boundaries. In many of these meetings, students opened up and shared personal problems, not just academic issues, giving opportunities for us to talk in a deeper way. Students valued my time and asked why […]

Blog Entries

Thoughts on Theological Education for Chinese Believers

[…] rather than in other countries. It’s cheaper for Chinese believers to study in China, plus everything can be done in Chinese, their heart language. But as the number of official seminaries is inadequate to train all the leaders needed for the church in China and none of the house church seminaries are legal, theological […]

Blog Entries

Who Will Be China’s Issachar Tribe?

[…] from the Holy Spirit. The most urgent question facing today’s Chinese missiologist is “what kind of missiology does China need today?” Western missiology has developed from an Open Access Nation (OAN) approach to a Creative Access Nation (CAN, 創啓宣教) approach in the 1990s. In 2010, Lausanne II in Cape Town brought up the idea […]

Blog Entries

Reverse Culture Shock

[…] plunged down on the reverse culture shock curve (see also this link). This is the stage where lots of things are irritating, like . . . The number of mosquitoes and sand flies that bit us on holidays. December and January are hot, not cold as we have become accustomed to. Complaining Australians (ironically […]

Blog Entries

Reflections on China 2014: The Growing Environmental Crisis

[…] my second blog reflecting back on six days I spent in China recently with Brent Fulton where we met with pastors, seminary leaders and academics in Shanghai and Beijing. I shared in the first blog about my amazement at the growth of the church and the window that seems to be opening for the gospel.</p>

Editorials

The Nuts and Bolts of IMM from China

[…] interviews with frontline workers telling of their hard-learned lessons brings the mission movement much closer to home. This is probably the first time such a frank and open sharing of their struggles is documented.  These first four articles, which comprise over two-thirds of the issue, are all contributed by indigenous sources. This is a […]