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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

Urbanization and the Future of China’s Church

[…] use of the internet and social media, particularly involving believers who are well-known figures in the society, as well as ventures into areas such as education, social service, philanthropy, publishing, entrepreneurship, and community leadership will raise the profile of Christians and provide new avenues for outreach. Intellectual and financial resources will undergird the development […]

Blog Entries

New Wineskins for Cross-Cultural Workers from China

[…] workers, make it difficult to work in the same organization even if all agree upon the end goal. Chang concludes: “The revival of Chinese churches, the growing number of mature, mission-minded local Chinese Christians, the large population of unreached people groups (UPGs), and the difficulties that international agencies in China face all call for […]

Lead Article

Greater China’s Great Transformation

[…] term more acceptable than “Confucian” in Asia’s multi-ethnic context) imparted through “moral education” in the schools to complement the growth of a “Research and Development” culture. A number of these themes are echoed in China under Hu Jintao: populist slogans calling on officials to serve the public benefit a strategy of balanced development to […]

Blog Entries

Rediscovering the Plot

[…] resurrection of the Chinese church. Over the years a deeper, more nuanced understanding of the Chinese church has further embellished this original portrait, giving rise to a number of prominent China church narratives that speak not only to the state of the church but also its relationship to the Christian community outside China. These, […]

The Lantern

Toward a Flourishing Society

[…] Christian publisher and member of Beijing’s Shouwang Church, passed away two days later. As the co-founder of Oak Tree Press, Xu had been instrumental in making a number of significant Christian classics available to readers in China. Xu came to Christ while in university and became an early member of Shouwang Church. Both he […]

Blog Entries

The Evolving Narratives

[…] resourcing China’s growing church. The Sichuan earthquake in 2008 signaled a turning point in the church’s relationship to society. For the first time believers turned out in large numbers to help their fellow Chinese in need and were recognized by the government for the role that they played. As the Christian China narrative gained currency, […]

Blog Entries

Collective Misunderstanding

[…] point: “The amount of literature translated and written by the Nestorians and their obvious effort to accommodate the faith to Chinese concepts and practices would have been in vain if most adherents were foreign or if there were not a large number of native priests to use the tools put at their disposal” (Covell, 33).

Blog Entries

Sharing Eternal Truth on Shortwave Radio

Old-School Tech Beats Modern Monitoring

[…] ago. Due to the restrictions online, he shared that it is increasingly difficult for people in China to access Christian content on the internet or on mobile phones, and he said that radio is still the best way to reach the Chinese people. As you know, media outlets in China are controlled by the […]

Blog Entries

When Less Is More

[…] Their expanding outreach programs spoke of the church’s growing influence. Their well-equipped facilities were a measure of the comparatively higher standard of living enjoyed by an increasing number of Christians in China. Members traveling overseas for conferences or training provided firsthand accounts of life in their churches back home. Eventually shut down by authorities, […]

Blog Entries

3 Questions: A New Look at Chinese Christians

[…] tell stories spanning from the 1950s to the current day. Today the presence of Christians in China is embedded in what we term a "paradoxical reality." The number of Christians has been growing but, due to media censorship, the average citizens' perception of their presence is limited. Unless they have access to global news […]