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Why China Celebrates Christmas
[…] in hand, seated in one of the ubiquitous branches of an internationally branded coffee chain. The city is not important. This could be Hong Kong or Beijing, New York or London. The festive holiday decor would be the same anywhere, along with the exhortations to "Create Wonder" and "Share Joy" stenciled on the front […]
7 Trends Impacting Foreign Christians in China
<p>The traditional roles of foreign Christians in China are changing. Foreign believers have traditionally served in one of two ways. They have sought to witness for Christ, or they have served the indigenous church directly, primarily in the field of training. Today the maturing of the church, are giving rise to new modes of engagement. </p>
Love Online, Chinese Style
<p>The explosion of China's online Christian community has not only provided believers with a new platform for expressing their faith, it is also helping to meet practical needs within the Christian community. Recently <a href="http://chinesechurchvoices.com/2014/02/19/chinese-christian-dating-sites/" rel="nofollow"><em>Chinese Church Voices</em></a> featured an article from the online Christian newspaper Gospel Times about Christian dating websites in China.</p>
China’s Church Bells: The Window in the Steeple
<p>As Joann Pittman skillfully conveys in her new book, <em>The Bells are Not Silent</em>, the church bells of China provide a valuable—and until now, largely neglected—window into the life of China’s church.</p>
Don’t Ask Why
<p>Somewhere between my third and fourth trips to the bank to open a new account, it hit me. I realized why I was so frustrated. In my efforts to negotiate a system that seemed, to me, overly complicated, I had made a serious tactical error.</p>
Why Stewardship Matters for China
[…] effects have been jarring. Having been involved with China long enough to remember when ordinary citizens needed ration cards to purchase basic necessities, I can also recall my shock and surprise when I first saw advertisements for a new weight loss program plastered on the side of a bus in a prosperous southern Chinese city.</p>
Can the Chinese Church Say No?
[…] (<em>yong</em>) of Western learning while maintaining the essence (<em>ti</em>) of Chinese culture. The rush toward Westernization that seemed to characterize the 1980s was subsequently replaced by the "China Can Say No" spirit of the 1990s. With China's rise in this century there is a new confidence in China's ability to chart its own unique course.</p>
Tools, Not Solutions, for China’s Church
<p>A previous generation of Chinese Christians, cut off from all outside contact and separated from their leaders, was forced to rely upon the Lord alone as they sought the way forward. This seeking after God was an important part of their maturing process, and their testimonies bear witness to his faithfulness. While acknowledging that […]
China’s Banned Bestseller
[…] scripture apps disappearing from the Internet, or crackdowns on unofficial publishing, what we hear about the Good News in China is often anything but good news. A new book by Cynthia Oh suggests a different narrative. In The Bible in China: From Banned Book to Bestseller, Oh, who has long served as Communications Manager […]
The Ordinary in the Midst of the Extraordinary
<p>David Joannes is a self-proclaimed “missionary,” trailblazer, and ragamuffin whose newly released memoir, <em>The Space Between Memories</em>, chronicles twenty years of pioneering work among the minorities of Southwest China.</p>