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ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs Newsletter for May 10, 2012

[…] use an e-passport that is lost or stolen,” said Tang Lei, head of e-passport management for Beijing Public Security Bureau’s exit-entry administration. Price of some high-speed train tickets to be cut (May 9, 2012, China Daily) Passengers will soon enjoy discounts when buying business class tickets and premium seats on high-speed trains operating on […]

Chinese Christian Voices

Praying the Ten Commandments for China

[…] same level as the United States, the country in which divorce is the most common in the world. Moreover, China is now one of the easiest and cheapest places in the world to divorce one's spouse.—The Economist You shall not steal.  (Exodus 20: 15 ESV) ‪Nationwide, in 2011, there were 27,000 cases of corruption, […]

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | June 11, 2015

<p></p> <p><strong>Mao As Church Father</strong> (June 1, 2015, <em>First Things</em>)<br /> In a brief review of recent Asian Church history (From Every Tribe and Nation), Mark Noll makes the arresting comment that “Mao Zedong counts as one of the most significant figures in modern church history.” Noll hastens to add this was not Mao's intention; rather, […]

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | August 8, 2024

[…] are hundreds of wet markets all over Shanghai, and they have proved remarkably resilient. Though they’re hardly relaxing places to shop, they offer customers access to fresh, cheap produce within a few minutes’ walk of their homes. But the city is now giving the markets a much-needed upgrade, aiming not only to improve hygiene […]

Chinese Christian Voices

As Church Growth Slows

[…] Churches sprang up all over the nation like bamboo shoots after spring showers. Church development became even more rapid after our country joined the WTO, and the number of Christians soared to the tens of millions.    Churches in my area also experienced these three sweet periods of highspeed development. Especially in the third period, the number of Christians […]

View From the Wall

Email and Confucius

During the 1980s, color televisions were targets of envy. A work unit PC had to be “heavily guarded”—no ordinary man was allowed to access it. A cell phone was the ultimate symbol of the superiority of the owner’s social status and wealth in contrast to that of everyday people—even though at that time a […]

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

December 12, 2013

[…] first stripped of its connection in 2008, after riots in Tibet led to unrest in this place known for its wide grasslands and Buddhist monasteries. Both mobile phone signals and the Web have been erratic ever since, coming back for months at a time only to disappear again, usually after a Tibetan monk sets […]

Chinese Christian Voices

Top Christian News Stories in China in 2014 (# 6-10)‬

<p>Last week we posted part one of a translated article “Top Ten Christian News Stories in China in 2014”, highlighting stories #1-5. This week, we are posting the translation of the second half of the original article (from <em>The Christian Times</em>), with items #6-10: The Almighty God cult murders, the rise of ISIS and […]

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 […]