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The COVID-Era Preflight Checklist
[…] longer flight time or the total length but the ongoing uncertainty and inability to plan much beyond the next step. Pre-COVID international travel involved finding and booking cheap, convenient flights and making sure our passports and visas were in order. Currently there are only 18 flights per week between China and the United States […]
May 1, 2014
[…] find to the local Bureau of Cultural Relics. Why some English words are controversial in China (April 30, 2014, BBC) Nowadays, if you eavesdrop on Chinese people's phone conversations, it is commonplace to hear English phrases popping up here and there, like "Okay", "Cool" and "Bye bye". In today's Chinese publications, English abbreviations and […]
Evangelism, Reformed Theology, and Church Life, Part 2
[…] time. Following on Packer's view, it's not difficult to explain why only 13.4% of Y Church members said they feel a sense of gospel urgency. Yet, the number of Y Church members did not lessen but actually substantially increased. In five years, the number of members increased from 30 to 300-400 people. This shows […]
Supporting Article
The Formation of a New City-to-City Partnership
An Interview by ChinaSource
[…] creatively capture our churches’ interests, while meeting needs overseas and in our community. We began to kick around ideas and discovered a shared interest in China. A number of our churches were seeking ways to get involved in China. We had a prominent Chinese house church leader visit the area. He really challenged and […]
January 24, 2013
<p>In China, Widening Discontent Among the Communist Party Faithful (January 19, 2013, The New York Times) </p> <p>For years, many China observers have asserted that the partys authoritarian system endures because ordinary Chinese buy into a grand bargain: the party guarantees economic growth, and in exchange the people do not question the way the party rules. […]
October 17, 2013
<p>From the Global Times: Estranged Brethren (October 16, 2013, Chinese Church Voices)</p> <p>On October 10, 2013, the Global Times, one of Chinas English language daily newspapers published an article titled Estranged Brethren, about the division between the official Three-Self church and the House Church movement. Articles about religion in general, and Christianity in particular, are […]
ZGBriefs | January 14, 2016
<p></p> <p>What Is Disappearing from Hong Kong (January 7, 2016, China File)<br /> The recent disappearance of publisher Lee Po—allegedly kidnapped from Hong Kong and rendered to Mainland China—has prompted widespread alarm about the state of Hong Kong’s autonomy, both within the city and internationally.</p>
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),6 Charity Law7 (governing Chinese domestic charities and NGOs), Foreign NGO Law8 (governing international NGOs in China), […]
National Religion Surveys of China
[…] for less than 15%. Buddhism is the largest religion in China. Eighteen percent of Chinese claim to believe in Buddhism, while only 3.2% believe in Christianity. The number of Protestant Christians has increased significantly in China, but the number of Catholics may have declined. This survey, in addition to proving that, after 50 years […]
ZGBriefs | June 22, 2017
<p>China, Where the Pressure to Marry Is Strong, and the Advice Flows Online (June 18, 2017, The New York Times)<br /> Although women in their 20s are greatly outnumbered by men in the same age group in China, a product in part of the since-abandoned one-child family policy and a cultural preference for sons, they face enormous pressure to marry. […]