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Book Reviews

Listening to the Heart

A Book Review

[…] all paths to success led away from the village” (131)just as her grandfather left his lo ja and a strand of the family ended up in the United States. The book throws up a number of questions. To what extent does the loosening of roots that seems to inevitably occur in migration lead to […]

Supporting Article

Urban Churches in China

A Pentecostal Case Study

[…] particularly appealing to indigenous Chinese Christians in the 1920s and 30s. Many Chinese were attracted to this new form of the Christian faith, “which preached good conduct, promised fellowship with divinity, afforded healing and exorcism and offered forms of worship that could be corporate or individual according to the circumstances.”  And, as Hunter and […]

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 […]

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Supporting Children in Cross-Cultural Transition

[…] actually converse with others and hopefully discuss deeper matters. Mr. Sark goes on to provide five points that his family learned in their transition back to the United States. 1. Connect to a church. Definitely. Our home church was absolutely instrumental in helping us in our transition to Indiana. My children saw the church […]

Supporting Article

Views from the Classroom

[…] school principal at Evansville Christian School in southern Indiana, U.S. He taught in Indiana and South Korea before serving as a coach, teacher, or principal in China for 13 years. Find Mark’s latest posts at http://mkwick.blogspot.com or contact him by LinkedIn. Notes ^ In the United States, a BLT is a bacon, lettuce, and tomato sandwich.

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 […]

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Getting to Know China’s Pentecostal Churches

A Sneak Peek at the Summer 2023 ChinaSource Quarterly

If the last seven decades in China have taught us anything, they have surely taught us never to underestimate the power of the Holy Spirit. I am confident that you will be encouraged as you read these eye-witness accounts of the story of Pentecost in China.

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Another Look at the Life of Eric Liddell

A Book Review

A number of books have been written about Eric Liddell, but this one is different.

Blog Entries

Seeing Trees for the First Time

My good friend and former student's father drove. The dirt road, only forged in the last year or so, made the ride tremendously bumpy and kept travel slow. The road wound through scores of vast, grassy valleys, each curve bringing my wife, me, and our friend to an area that looked so similar to the last we wondered if we were driving in circles.

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Display and Declare Christ Together in a Broken World—Not Easy

From the first evening, Lausanne Chairman, Pastor Michael Oh, set the tone for the event in his address by quoting the Lausanne Covenant. He called us to humility, repentance, and a renewed commitment to the unfinished mission. His desire was to set a tone of unity, listening, and collaboration. He warned that the global church’s greatest danger lies in this phrase: “I don’t need you.”