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Showing results for toovisible phone number 201 614 647 0039 electrical service toovisible phone number 2018 04 09 201 614 647 0039 2018-04-09 2018-04-09 number 201 614 647 number 2018 09 201 614 647 201 614 647 0039 2018 04 09 201 614 647 0039

Blog Entries

A Meeting of Minds

20 Years of Publishing ChinaSource

[…] and family life. Originally produced as a limited-circulation print publication for a few hundred readers, ChinaSource eventually went digital, with the last print issue being produced in 2011. When subscription fees were dropped, readership quickly doubled and has continued to grow steadily. Managed by a small in-house team, the publication of ChinaSource has only […]

Supporting Article

Dynamics of Mainland Chinese Ministry in North America

[…] professors or mentors and speak in other churches or at conferences. They do training in the PRC in partnership with churches and agencies in Asia. The growing number of Mainland Chinese fellowships and churches has a strong burden for missions, including to the Mainland. In this, they are following in the footsteps of the […]

Blog Entries

Fervent Faith and Audacious Hope

Reflections on China Today and God’s Purpose

[…] note that this is a sign of CCP insecurity despite seeming strength. The weak legitimacy of Princeling leaders not appointed by Deng has been challenged by a number of crises in recent years. 2003: SARS 2004-5: Color Revolutions in Europe 2008: Earthquake in Sichuan, violent protests in Xinjiang and Tibet, and the Great Recession […]

Blog Entries

From Leading to Modeling

[…] factors have stood in the way of moving forward with the process. Now, however, the new Overseas NGO Law has suddenly speeded up the timetable for a number of organizations whose leaders have decided it is not viable to continue operating in China. They may have realized that their current activities would not fit […]

Blog Entries

Mao’s Black Box: Resilience and Religious Revival in Wenzhou

A Book Review

[…] communities and the state. Wang’s concluding chapter sums up the lasting effects of Maoism in terms of the revitalization of sacred spaces, seen today in the massive number of churches and temples that dot the Wenzhou landscape; the rearticulation of communal religion with local elites and politics; and the accession of localized Christianity, pointing […]

Blog Entries

The Challenge of China’s Shifting Labor Market

<p>The new year is upon us, and McKinsey China has come out with a new set of predictions for 2014. A key theme running through these predictions is a significantly changing labor market, particularly as a result of advances in technology and the way it is being utilized both in the workplace and by consumers.</p>

Editorials

A Larger Purpose

[…] those in their midst. China offers no shortage of opportunities to follow Christ’s example in ministering to the whole person. Figures from the early 1990s put the number of people with disabilities in China at 60 million; the total is probably much greater today. A growing elderly population and a shrinking number of younger […]

Supporting Article

Combating the Cult Almighty God Church

[…] 2002 kidnapping event, house churches have emerged stronger than previously in combating AGC. Over the past decade, full-time theological training became readily available to house-church pastors. New phone technologies such as texting and WeChat have helped to connect church members with their pastors, and pastors with their theological professors. They can respond quickly to […]

Book Reviews

Exploring New Zealand’s Rich Christian Heritage

Bible & Treaty: Missionaries among the Māori—A New Perspective: A Book Review

[…] balance the interests of two cultures (biculturalism), the Māori and the Pākehā (i.e., non-Māori, European) cultures. The New Zealand of today is increasingly “multicultural,” and a significant number of more recent immigrants are from Asia, including Chinese immigrants. In a sense, the Māori today still see all immigrants (not just European ones) as Pākehā […]

Editorials

What if We’re Out Tomorrow

[…] his or her status is by no means guaranteed. The point of raising this issue here is not to send a chill through organizations that have significant numbers of workers in China. Rather, it is to ask, as several of the authors in this issue of ChinaSource also ask, “What is our role?” Long-term […]