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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

Beyond the Standard Narrative

[…] more likely to draw official attention. The size and perceived influence of unregistered groups is another factor. After several high-profile congregations were shut down in the late 2010s, other groups began proactively moving to a decentralized church model, a transition that was hastened by pandemic restrictions beginning in 2020. Finally, the church’s historical relationship […]

Blog Entries

“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 […]

Blog Entries

An Effective Bridge

[…] contributors to ChinaSource’s publications and conferences over the years have helped provide this rootedness and connectivity. In the coming years we look forward to greatly expanding this number as our “bridge traffic” increases. To build this bridge we also rely on the prayer and financial support of those who value the opportunity for greater […]

Blog Entries

China Ministry and Transformational Development (2)

The End of an Era?

[…] their parents. One of the last to be legally registered as a local non-profit in Shanxi (the province has not processed any applications since the end of 2018), NPA began its life as a project within a foreign Christian ministry organization. Incubated and spun off from the foreign organization in response to China’s restrictive […]

Blog Entries

Will China Become Generous?

[…] translating into greater generosity. In a worldwide survey, the London-based Charities Aid Foundation ranked China last among 140 countries. China’s neighbor to the south, Myanmar, came out number one in the survey, which took into account giving, volunteering, and helping strangers in need. Recently I talked with Dr. Scott Rodin, former ChinaSource board chair […]

Blog Entries

Scattered to Sow

[…] what God is doing in the hearts of their new neighbors. This might mean, for example, structuring their business or professional pursuits to allow for witness and service opportunities within their spheres of influence, proactively engaging with teachers and other parents in the new schools their children will be attending, or seeking out likeminded […]

Editorials

Measuring Change in China

Whose Yardstick?

[…] economic change seem to be pulling the country inexorably forward. To the Western observer, it may appear that the Chinese are becoming “more like us” as cellular phones, business suits and McDonald’s signs proliferate on the crowded streets of China’s cities. Yet, as China’s leaders cautiously navigate their way down an uncharted path of […]

Blog Entries

Looking Ahead: Which China?

[…] middle class plays a key role, as does China's economic transition from a strong growth orientation, heavily dependent on manufacturing, to a more sustainable economy emphasizing the service and information sectors. For this scenario to play out the systemic urban/rural inequality enforced by China's household registration (hukou) system would need to be addressed. Chaos […]

Editorials

Twenty-five and Counting

[…] Studies, took on the challenge of managing the new publication and has served faithfully in that role ever since. Dona Diehl of the Evangelical Missions and Information Service (EMIS) designed the first issue and continues to lend her artistic touch to each one. During the past six years we have witnessed China’s entry into […]

Peoples of China

China’s Migrant Children

[…] Global Times, Feb 25, 2010. http://china.globaltimes.cn/society/2010-02/507860.html 3If “left behind” children of migrant workers, who remain in the villages without parental care, are included in these statistics, the number rises to 30 million total migrant children in China, comprising 20% of the compulsory school-aged student population. “Strong Performers and Successful Reformers in Education: Lessons from […]