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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 […]

Lead Article

How China’s Christians Can Heal China’s Environment

Vol. 11, No. 2

[…] ecosystems include forests, grasslands, deserts, wet-lands, seas and coastal areas, and agricultural ecosystems. However, China also has the world’s worst pollution. In recent years, lists of the 20 cities whose air is most polluted typically contain 16 or 17 cities in China. I experienced that one morning in March 2002 when I left my […]

Blog Entries

Who’s at the Table?

[…] discerning what God has put before them to do and how he has uniquely gifted them to serve. Making this shift requires slowing down. It requires a new mindset. It is humbling—particularly if one’s work has been seen as successful—to recognize that this assistance may not be appropriate in the long term, and that […]

Book Reviews

Redeemed by Fire

The Rise of Popular Christianity in Modern China

[…] indigenous tradition Lian has described, it is possible that a new chapter is being written and that the role of the indigenous Chinese church in the 21st century may be very different from that of the previous hundred years. Image credit: Rae Fire. Blowing flames. by U.S. Forest Service, Southwestern Region, Kaibab National Forest, on Flickr

Editorials

Chinas Youth in Perspective

<p>Editor's Note: This editorial originally appeared in "China's Youth" (<em>ChinaSource</em>, 2010 Summer).</p>

Blog Entries

Will History Repeat Itself?

[…] has happened with the government’s full knowledge, but not its full consent, making the foreign Christians a potential liability to any locals with whom they come in contact, be they friends, coworkers, employers, or the officials charged with keeping tabs on them. Their message, even when (as it has been, for the most part) […]

Blog Entries

From Here to There

The Straight-Line Fallacy

[…] different from what they had originally envisioned doing when they first arrived. The “Christian China” narrative promises that China will become a different place once a significant number of Christians have assumed positions of influence. Historically as well as in contemporary China there are those who have served in the mold of Daniel or […]

Blog Entries

The Pilgrim Principle

Remembering Andrew Walls

[…] the possibility that we may be able to read them together. Never before has the Church looked so much like the great multitude whom no man can number out of every nation and tribe and people and tongue. Never before, therefore, has there been so much potential for mutual enrichment and self-criticism, as God […]

Blog Entries

The Chinese Church’s Shifting Battleground

[…] of the church. In the words of one pastor, “At present the main problem facing the church is not government persecution; in fact, this is unimportant to the church. No, the main problem is holiness. If the church is not holy, its witness is destroyed.” Image Credit: Shanghai February 2011 by Remko Tanis, on Flickr

Blog Entries

A Look at China’s Registered Church

From the 2020 Autumn Issue of CSQ

[…] for understanding how Christians in China view the TSPM, and for assessing the validity of those views. Born out of the very real struggles in the early 20th century to define China’s national identity, the TSPM represented one theological answer to the cultural and social questions of the day. It was not simply a […]