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Bringing the Gospel to Guangxi

[…] the hands of bandits were common. Following several chapters in which he chronicles the entrance and subsequent work of both Catholic and Protestant missions, Lin highlights a number of prominent missionaries, looks at how various groups related to one another, and analyzes their methods, including how the missionaries reached out to various segments of […]

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Stopping the Spread

[…] mission vision to a sustainable missions ecosystem. Which brings to mind the book Changing the Mind of Missions, a sharp critique of the contemporary missions scene written 20 years ago by James Engel and William Dyrness. While the two did not address China specifically, their observations provide insight into the origin of the narratives […]

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Partnering with Churches in China

Toward a New Paradigm

[…] ways as the believers outside China know that their Chinese brothers and sisters are praying for them as well. Sharing Experiences Christians in China are launching into new areas such as education, marriage and family ministry, service to their communities, and reaching non-Chinese both domestically and beyond China’s borders. In many cases there are […]

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Changing Dynamics of Church Growth in China

[…] has experienced two pronounced growth spurts in recent history. The first occurred in the 1970s and 80s in the countryside; the second, in the 1990s and early 2000s in the cities. The countryside revival was marked by signs and wonders. Rapid evangelism took place largely along kinship lines. Later in the cities church growth […]

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A Message from the Church in China

[…] factors many of us in the West consider necessary for church growth are supremely irrelevant to the growing church in China.” Correction: The original post misstated the year that the number of evangelicals in China is projected to surpass the number of evangelicals in America. We regret the error.  Image credit: Dalian Skyscape by egorgrebnev via Flickr.

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A Chinese Christian Observes Ramadan

[…] whom he has been called to serve, Pastor Mark joined in the Muslim celebration of Ramadan. He recorded his reflections in an article he wrote for the 2016 winter issue of ChinaSource Quarterly. For Pastor Mark, his one-month experience of an annual ritual observed by millions around the world proved to be a life […]

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“Passive” Church Planting in China

[…] have become a Chinese mega church, this pastor encountered two obstacles. The first was relational. Early on he emphasized personal decisions for Christ and expected the increasing numbers of new believers to step immediately into positions of service in the church. As a result he found himself alienated from the very people he intended […]

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Are China’s Churches Too Much Alike?

[…] situation in China appears particularly acute, perhaps due to the impact of rapid urbanization on the church’s development. As Christians have clustered in the cities and spawned new churches, urbanization has had a concentrating effect, bringing together a critical mass of people, ideas, and resources to create a new Christian culture. Meanwhile, pervasive social […]

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Counting China’s Christians

[…] million are Protestant Christians, accounting for just over five percent of the population. Counting Chinese Christians has always been a less than exact science. Estimates of the number of Protestant Christians vary from the official TSPM estimate of 23 million (which includes only those in the registered church) to 105 million, the figure put […]

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When Less Is More

[…] Their expanding outreach programs spoke of the church’s growing influence. Their well-equipped facilities were a measure of the comparatively higher standard of living enjoyed by an increasing number of Christians in China. Members traveling overseas for conferences or training provided firsthand accounts of life in their churches back home. Eventually shut down by authorities, […]