Results for: Topeka%20Dryer%20Vent%20Cleaning%20repair%20&%20service%20phone%20number%201-888-294-4160

Showing results for topeka dryer vent cleaning repair 20 service phone number 201 888 294 460 topeka dryer vent cleaning repair 20 service phone number 888 999 7959 20 201 888 294 460 1-888-999-7959 repair 20 number 201 888 294 repair 20 number 1 7959 20 201 888 294 460 20 201 888 294 460 20 888 999 7959 20 201 888 294 460

Blog Entries

Strengthening Marriages in the Chinese Church

[…] we see that today’s era of individualism and misconceptions regarding marriage deserves our attention and reflection. Image Credit: Wedding napkins by Caitriana Nicholson, on Flickr. Notes ^ "Why Marriage Retreats are Important." ChinaSource. October 13, 2013. https://www.chinasource.org/resource-library/chinese-church-voices/why-marriage-retreats-are-important (accessed October 31, 2014). ^ “A Discussion of the Divorce Rate.” ChinaSource. July 14, 2015. https://www.chinasource.org/resource-library/chinese-church-voices/a-discussion-of-the-divorce-rate (accessed August 5, 2015).

Blog Entries

End of an Era?

[…] years. How believers outside China choose to respond in this transition will determine in part the nature of these stories.  A few years ago I explored a number of possible responses to this new season in the e-book 7 Trends Impacting Foreign Christians in China. The situation has continued to evolve in the years since, but […]

Blog Entries

Urbanization and the Future of China’s Church

<p>Along with the massive urbanization that has forever reshaped the social and cultural landscape of China, the church in China has itself undergone a major transformation. From a largely rural, peasant-led movement in the 1980s the church is now very much an urban phenomenon.</p>

Blog Entries

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 […]

Blog Entries

Bringing the Gospel to Guangxi

Arthur Lin, The History of Christian Missions in Guangxi, China. Eugene, OR: Pickwick Publications, 2019. While Guilin is often considered a “must see” tourist site, with its mandatory Li River cruise offering stunning views of mountain peaks straight out of a classic Chinese painting, Guangxi province itself remains, for many, a relatively unknown corner […]

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 […]

Blog Entries

China and the House Church

Breaking the Stalemate

[…] in addition to proposing immediate steps out of the current stalemate, Liu strongly advocates for urgent action on a religious law for China. Liu’s proposal raises a number of questions, including how existing Party, religious, and security organs would respond to such a move and whether they would be willing to cooperate. On the […]

Blog Entries

Billy Graham’s Legacy of Partnering

[…] he was referred to at the BGC—did not personally visit during those years, his influence was keenly felt. ChinaSource, like many other evangelical institutions born in the 20th century, owes much to the legacy of partnering left by Billy Graham. His vision was not simply the proclamation of the gospel, but Christians proclaiming and […]

Book Reviews

Redeemed by Fire

The Rise of Popular Christianity in Modern China

Lian Xi, Redeemed by Fire: The Rise of Popular Christianity in Modern China. New Haven, Yale University Press, 2010. Available on Amazon. Reviewed by Brent Fulton Years ago a Western teacher was having a conversation with one of her students in China about their respective cultures. “You know what the difference is between you […]

Blog Entries

Six Trends Shaping China (and What They Mean for the Church)

[…] little track record in establishing globally recognized brands that can fuel ongoing demand into the future. As the workforce ages and as China moves toward a more services- and information-oriented economy, the church will find itself ministering to those who are moving out of factory life and into more stable jobs in the cities. […]