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ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | January 28, 2016

<p></p> <p>China’s Search for the Secrets of Jewish Success (January 25, 2016, Tablet)<br /> In their quest to understand Jews better, popular Chinese authors and bloggers offer up facts and myths about everything from the Talmud to anti-Semitism.</p>

Lead Article

The Hidden China

[…] been appreciated by minority peoples. The Miao, for example, who use an abundance of silver in their traditional costume, are allowed to purchase silver at a much cheaper rate than other Chinese citizens. As Ralph Covell notes, “Efforts are being made to remove tensions that have existed for centuries between Han Chinese and minority […]

Lead Article

History of Student Ministry in China

[…] at university campuses in Chongqing, the students responded enthusiastically. In the auditorium of National Central University, every night students streamed in to hear the sermons, and the number of students believing in God grew every day. Amidst this atmosphere, the first Chinese Christian University Students Conference was held in Nanshan, Chongqing in the summer […]

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | April 23, 2015

<h3></h3> <p><strong>With an Influx of Newcomers, Little Chinatowns Dot a Changing Brooklyn</strong> (April 15, 2015, <em>The New York Times</em>)<br /> With Chinese immigrants now the second largest foreign-born group in the city and soon to overtake Dominicans for the top spot, they are reshaping neighborhoods far beyond their traditional enclaves. Nowhere is the rapid growth […]

ZGBriefs

March 21, 2013

<p> For Many in China, the One Child Policy is Already Irrelevant (March 19, 2013, China File)</p> <p>Before getting pregnant with her second child, Lu Qingmin went to the family-planning office to apply for a birth permit. Officials in her husbands Hunan village where she was living turned her down, but she had the baby anyway. […]

Articles

The Impact of Family Issues on Chinese Missionaries

Thinking Through an Approach to Spouse- and Children-Needs of Chinese Missionaries

[…] ReMAP study, the only area where member care and support for the missionary showed a clear positive effect was in the area of supportive letter writing and phone calls. In light of short-term realities and long-term considerations, perhaps the most that can be said at the present time is that the Chinese church, and […]

Blog Entries

The Vital Role of Chinese Women in Evangelism

[…] on managing the household. In the Ming (1368–1644) and Qing (1644–1912) dynasties, positive changes in female literacy rates and economic roles improved the status of a growing number of learned and influential women. But the most dramatic changes didn’t occur until the May Fourth Movement in the early 1920s. At that time, reformers rallied […]

Chinese Christian Voices

A Prayer of Thanks before the Gaokao

[…] because I cannot be there with him. However, in order not to let my son feel my guilt, I deliberately spoke cheerfully to encourage him over the phone. We talked about some casual topics, and I tried not to mention the exam, because my son has always been sensitive and also very self-disciplined in […]

Blog Entries

How to Learn a Language, Part 2

How to Work Hard

[…] 2, in which case er (two) changes to liang+measure word when it’s a quantity of two. Thus liangzhang (NOT erzhang) can refer to something like two bus tickets. We had been in language school about six months when my wife and I wanted to visit some friends one evening. At the bus stop, I […]

Supporting Article

Missions with Chinese Characteristics

[…] government policy, law, regulation, organization, and implementation that have resulted in a more restrictive environment for Chinese churches and Christians. These have been covered previously in a number of posts and papers: Revised Religious Regulations (implemented since 2/1/2018),5 Charity Law6 (governing Chinese domestic charities and NGOs), Foreign NGO Law7 (governing international NGOs in China), […]