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ZGBriefs

December 19, 2013

[…] beliefs but consumption. Economic factors have brought Christmas into the lives of millions of Chinese people.However, with the rapid development of Christianity in China over the past 20 years, especially with the new phenomenon of worship services held in houses, office buildings and commercial spaces emerging in major cities like Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and […]

Chinese Christian Voices

Do You Have a Message for Your 18-Year-Old Self?

<p>Why at the end of 2017 was there a sudden flood of people posting photos of themselves when they were 18-years-old on Chinese social media? And what were the captions they were writing?</p>

Chinese Christian Voices

From the Global Times: “Estranged Brethren”

On October 10, 2013, the Global Times, one of China's English language daily newspapers published an article titled "Estranged Brethren," about the division between the official Three-Self church and the House Church movement. Articles about religion in general, and Christianity in particular, are far and few between in the Chinese media, and articles that […]

Blog Entries

Religious Policy Development in the PRC since 1949–An Overview

[…] its realm. Religion in and under the sovereign Communist state becomes politicized and politics assumes a religious character and role. It is in this historical context of official Chinese state control over all matters, including religious affairs, stretching back through imperial dynasties, and evidenced in the modern-day political context of a Party-State which emerged […]

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | June 30, 2016

<p></p> <p>China’s Great Wall of Confrontation (June 28, 2016, <em>Wall Street Journal</em>)<br /> Although the Great Wall has become China’s pre-eminent national symbol of pride and strength, the construction of its soaring watchtowers and crenelated parapets actually reflected a moment of dynastic weakness.</p>

ZGBriefs

April 18, 2013

<p>Chinese Church Voices: 10 Observed Trends on Chinese Christian Media (April 17, 2013, ChinaSource)</p> <p>In June of 2012, ChinaSource launched a blog called Chinese Church Voices where we have been posting translations of content taken from Mainland Christian online sources websites, blogs, and micro-blogs. Our goal is to help give outsiders a chance to "listen in on […]

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs Newsletter for June 7, 2012

[…] nor does it necessarily endorse the perspectives presented.Get daily updates from ZGBriefs on Twitter @ZG_Briefs. FEATURED ARTICLETiananmen Square, A Watershed For Chinese Conversions To Christianity (June 4, 2012, WBUR, byMonday marks the 23rd anniversary of Chinas 1989 crackdown on pro-democracy protesters in Beijings Tiananmen Square. And Professor Fenggang Yang of Purdue University has an […]

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | July 30, 2015

<p></p> <p>Not ‘Leftover Women’ but ‘Leftover Men’ Are China’s Real Problem (July 29, 2015, What’s on Weibo)<br /> China’s single young women have been put in the spotlight by Chinese media for years. But according to the state-run Xinhua News, it is not the women, but the single men that are China’s real problem.</p>

ZGBriefs

April 04, 2013

<p>Current Ideological Trends in China How Should The Church Respond? (March 27, 2013, Lausanne Global Conversation)</p> <p>In discussion of the social and political status of Christianity in China, the relationship of the churches and the government naturally takes centre stage. Nonetheless, how the faith and its growing influence are viewed in China is caught up […]

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | October 1, 2015

<p></p> <p>“Masters of the People”: China’s New Urban Poor (September 23, 2015, Dissent)<br /> The ranks of the poor in China today also include people who have lived in cities all their lives, and, as members of the industrial proletariat, were once considered “the masters of the people.”</p>