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Editorials

Education: For Whom? And Why?

[…] the 1980s signaled a radical shift, as “key point” schools were reopened and thousands of the finest students sent abroad for study. With the dawn of the new millennium comes a third alternative—market-driven education. The marketization of education conveniently answers both the government’s desire to cease being the sole underwriter of education in China […]

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).

Editorials

Urban Migrants

Building the Infrastructure

[…] Yet according to the McKinsey consulting firm, the growth of China’s cities to date will pale in comparison to what is yet to come. By the year 2030 it is estimated that China’s urban population will reach one billion. Visitors to China often remark at the speed with which cities, or large portions of […]

Blog Entries

Seeing Things Differently

[…] and their context primarily through the lens of politics and ideology, we risk forgetting our top priority: the kingdom of God, which unites us from different contexts together. Brent Fulton, “Chinese Christians Deserve a Better Label Than ‘Persecuted.’” <em>Christianity Today</em>, October 9, 2020, <a href="https://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2020/october-web-only/chinese-christians-persecuted-narrative-church-xi-jinping.html">Chinese Christians Deshttps://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2020/october-web-only/chinese-christians-persecuted-narrative-church-xi-jinping.htmlerve a Better Label Than ‘Persecuted’ | Christianity Today</a>.

Blog Entries

In an Ever-Changing China, Some Things Haven’t Changed

<p>As ChinaSource celebrates 20 years of service we are digging into our archives for articles chronicling the myriad far-reaching changes in China during the past two decades.</p>

Blog Entries

Faces of Christian Leadership in China

<p>The 2006 China Church Leadership Study, conducted jointly by ChinaSource and Geneva Global Research, identified seven types of Christian leaders in China. While three of these are in traditional church roles at various levels, the other four function largely outside the bounds of the local church and represent the growing role of Christians in […]

Blog Entries

China’s Urbanization: Three Things You Should Know

[…] a rapidly growing middle class, eager to get their hands on the latest consumer or even luxury goods, other urban cities are still serving as magnets for new migrants. The contrast between these, and the opportunities each affords, can be huge. Environmental Impact? The jury is still out. Seto says, "It's not that China […]

Lead Article

Welcome to the City

[…] is true globally is true also in China, only in larger numbers. Already there are more than 180 cities in China of one million or more. That number is increasing by three to five each year. It takes nothing away from the glorious story of the house church movement to note that it is […]

Editorials

Thinking with Their Hearts

Postmodernism in China

[…] and other postmodern luminaries, this nevertheless did not deter them from engaging in animated discussions about power relationships or from deconstructing literary classics in order to discover new meanings, found not in the context of the literature itself but in the interaction between it and its modern critics. “Why do we spend all our […]

Blog Entries

From Doing to Paving the Way

In part two of this series we looked at the transition from leading to modeling. For many foreign organizations, China’s new Overseas NGO Law is hastening this transition. Duties that had been the responsibility of foreign workers must be passed to local colleagues as the role of foreign leaders is redefined. On the other […]