
Results for: Tobaccoville%20phone%20number%201-614-647-0039%20Electrical%20service
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
The Church in China Today
It’s Not What You Think
[…] happening in the church in China. True, it is impossible to tell the whole story in a 1.5-hour nutshell. There are too many moving parts, an overwhelming number of juxtapositions, and superfluous realities and misconceptions about the 21st century church in China. Still, Brent Fulton and his team do a wonderful job of clearly […]
Why China Needs Two
[…] the past three decades, severely skewed the country’s normal population pattern: Finally, as China’s birth rates have been brought under control during the past three decades the number of working-age people as a percentage of the total population has begun to plateau and will decrease steadily over the next decade. Meanwhile the proportion of […]
On the China Bookshelf
[…] Hidden, by Brent Fulton The Chinese Puzzle, by Michael Falkenstine The Good Women of China: Hidden Voices, by Xinran Looming Transitions: Starting and Finishing Well in Cross-Cultural Service, by Amy Young Voices from the Past: Historical Reflections on Christian Missions in China, by Andrew Kaiser Survival Chinese Lessons, by Joann Pittman Image credit: Bargain Books […]
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 […]
Towards a New Model for Christian Education in China
With an increasing number of new generation Christians starting to raise children, Christian education has become a hot topic of discussion within Chinese Christians. Jin Li, “A Theology of Family for the Chinese Church,” ChinaSource Quarterly, Summer 2016 Dissatisfied with the current educational system and wanting their children to be taught from a biblical […]
Celebrating Life and Death at Easter
[…] Chinese traditionally return home to tend the graves of deceased relatives. Food and flowers are placed before the gravesites and various paper items such as money, cell phones and clothing are burned as a means to send gifts to the dead. For those unable to return home for the holiday, public sidewalks and traffic […]
A Look in the Mirror
Research and the Indigenous Church
[…] sense of the church in China. The “Christian China” paradigm assumes that, as the church grows, so will its influence on society. Hence the fixation with the number of Christians in China (however “Christian” may be defined). The “Persecution” narrative, which assumes that the church’s biggest concern is its relationship to the state, seeks […]
China’s Church at the Threshold
<p>Over the course of 2016, as I have had the opportunity to participate in various gatherings of Chinese Christians, I have heard two conversations going on simultaneously.</p>
Sustainability and Long-Term Effectiveness: the Role of Business
[…] within the government, will quickly see through one's supposed commercial identity. Zhao Xiao, a prominent Beijing economist, believes the "Kingdom enterprise " concept is key to sustainable service and witness in China. In a recent interview Zhao provides valuable food for thought on the role of business in China as a vital expression of […]
Billy Graham’s Legacy of Partnering
[…] As China’s process of reform and opening took shape under Deng Xiaoping, the Institute began convening evangelical leaders to consider how to respond to new opportunities for service in China. Momentum for collaboration built into the 1990s, when a new multi-organizational effort based out of the Institute gave birth to what would eventually become […]