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Blog Entries

Chinese Migrants in the Stew Pot of Dubai

A Book Review of Chinese in Dubai

[…] ISBN-13 978-9004437715. Available from Brill and Amazon. Wang Yuting published Chinese in Dubai: Money, Pride, and Soul-Searching when China was the third largest trading partner of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and the UAE’s fourth largest tourist source market. Confucian Institutes offered lessons in Mandarin, Mandarin was being promoted in schools, Mandarin-speakers were employed […]

Blog Entries

“I Always Knew He Was There”

Discovering Faith Across Cultures

[…] a friend and leader as he learned to engage with people of different backgrounds in our faith community. We were a picture of the body of Christ, united in him but beautifully different in our cultural identity. So rewarding! Many of us have had similar encounters as we bridge cultures. I’ve been blessed to […]

Supporting Article

China’s Youth and Christianity

An Interview

[…] internet in China is a major problem. We do have some outreaches to youth through the internet, like with QQ (www.qq.com). That is the most popular youth site in China. People of all ages are using it but youth the most. The internet has become one of the main avenues to reaching the youth […]

Blog Entries

Reverse Culture Shock

[…] plunged down on the reverse culture shock curve (see also this link). This is the stage where lots of things are irritating, like . . . The number of mosquitoes and sand flies that bit us on holidays. December and January are hot, not cold as we have become accustomed to. Complaining Australians (ironically […]

Chinese Christian Voices

How Should Chinese Urban Churches Confront Anxieties in Today’s Era

[…] use Christian principles to lead the society. This tension between ideals and reality has plunged many Christian intellectuals in China into deep anxiety. Some even view the United States as a “lighthouse” of Christian society, which makes it even harder for them to endure their own circumstances. As a result, some Christians in China […]

Supporting Article

The Pentecostal Legacy of the Indigenous Churches in China

[…] that were not Pentecostal in character, such as the Little Flock (Xiao Qun) established by Watchman Nee (Ni Tuosheng) in the mid-1920s. There were also, certainly, a number of non-Pentecostal Chinese church leaders of stature. Wang Mingdao, for example, apparently had a Pentecostal experience in 1920, but later “backed away from full Pentecostalism.”6 Nevertheless, […]

Blog Entries

Stories of Christian Women in China

A Book Review

[…] to get close to God” (p. 164). Reasons given for conversion naturally varied but there were some recurrent themes too. They were pushed by disillusionment with the official ideology of atheism; cynicism of the Communist Party, trauma within their family, reaction to the burdensome family expectations of success and achievement, awareness of personal sin. […]

Supporting Article

Denominationalism—A Double-edged Sword

In recent years, there has been an increase in the number of intellectuals among Christian communities. The traditional emphasis of the Chinese church on a believer’s spiritual life no longer satisfies the intellectual desires of this entirely new faith community. Naturally, as people’s desire for the systematic study of theology grows stronger and stronger, […]

Blog Entries

A Conversation with the Authors of Children of the Massacre

[…] to a Chinese amateur historian of mission, whom they had first met online, led to a minibus journey for several hours out of Fuzhou to the village site of the Gutian massacre about which they’d learned. It was this that moved them to tell the Stewarts’ story and that of their children. Asked about […]

Blog Entries

Out of China: How the Chinese Ended the Era of Domination

A Book Review

[…] “humiliation” remained a backdrop. Some Japanese admitted to their atrocities in China while others whitewashed them. More foreign visitors came as the country opened up, and many sites of pilgrimage and commemoration were established (as has been happening in recent years) to refresh the historical memory of the people. Bickers concludes with an acknowledgement […]