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10 Months after Leaving China
It has been 308 days since we left China and landed in the good ol’ USA. You would think that would be plenty of time to have made the transition back to our home state of Indiana, but we’re still definitely in transition mode.
Sober Optimism
Opposition and Opportunity
This conversation did raise for me, two important questions. How do we view the world around us, and particularly its political and social institutions? And how will God’s redemptive plan, God’s kingdom, be ushered in in all of its fullness?
Uncovering a Hidden Need in China
One Expat Family’s Adoption Story
Like many others who have heard about Chinese adoption, we thought the orphanages would be teeming with unwanted baby girls.
Americans Drive on the Left and Other Truths I’ve Learned
[…] you can come to China and impress everyone by saying you caught a fish THIS BIG. “Americans Drive on the Left and Other Truths I’ve Learned” was originally published at small town laowai on May 8, 2015. Header image courtesy of Traffic (are you ready?) by Marianna, on Flickr Text images courtesy of small town laowai
The Appeal of the Pentecostal Movement in Hong Kong
The Kaleidoscopic City: A Book Review
Mayfield highlights…the essential continuity that bound the early Pentecostal missionaries together with their evangelical contemporaries; the way in which the “heat and noise” of Pentecostal worship, which often repelled Europeans, actually served to attract the Chinese masses; and the strategic role that women played in the founding of Pentecostal churches.
Approaching the Christian Tradition in Chinese Academic Settings
<p>A reflection on the paradox of teaching in an officially atheistic state and yet having the opportunity to teach Christian and religious material.</p>
Domestic Abuse Is Coming Your Way
Are You Ready?
My first glimpse into the world of domestic abuse China-side came in 2005.
Skills No Longer Needed
Re-entering a country that is “home” can be confusing. There is an unlearning—a releasing of some of the strategies that were only needed in a place with different rules and ways of living. We do not return as people who have stayed as we were before we left. There are things to shed; there are things to keep.
Mending the Fractures
Celebrating and Grieving the TCK Story
A TCK responds with three ways she's learned to respond to feeling like "everybody leaves" and "no one understands."
Supporting Article
Urban Churches in China
A Pentecostal Case Study
[…] the church in 1988. Two Christian brothers were released from prison after spending 15 years in a labor camp. Zheng noted that the earlier generation (1950s to 70s) of evangelists spent many years in labor camps; his generation (1980s and 90s) represented the “short-term” generation, because they only spent a few years in prison. […]