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Blog Entries

Calvinism on the Ground in China

[…] been driven by intellectuals within China who are drawn to the transformational potential of the Kuyperian model of cultural engagement for contemporary Chinese society. For a smaller number of scholars, interest in Reformed theology reflects a broader interest in exploring the potential of strengthened denominational identities for enabling the church in China to politically, […]

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),1 Charity Law2 (governing Chinese domestic charities and NGOs), Foreign NGO Law3 (governing international NGOs in China), […]

Blog Entries

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

ZGBriefs | March 26, 2015

<h3></h3> <p>How a Rock Musician from China Brought Uyghur Food to Boston (March 20, 2015, <em>Munchies</em>)<br /> Payzulla Polat doesn’t want to talk about politics. And who can blame him? If his homeland of Xinjiang—a massive frontier province in northwest China—is ever in the news, it’s for terrorist attacks and human rights violations. He prefers […]

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Transpacific Transposition: 1965 to Present

History of Chinese Christianity in North America (3)

[…] and History</em> XXIII:1 (Winter/Spring, 1991), 69–77. Daniel Chirot and Anthony Reid,<em> Essential Outsiders: Chinese and Jews in the Modern Transformation of Southeast Asia and Central Europe</em> ( Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1997); Wang Ling-chi and Wang Gungwu, eds., <em>The Chinese Diaspora: Selected Essays,</em> vol. 1 (Singapore: Times Academic Press, 1998). Ibid., 81–82. Between […]

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | October 1, 2015

<p></p> <p>“Masters of the People”: China’s New Urban Poor (September 23, 2015, Dissent)<br /> The ranks of the poor in China today also include people who have lived in cities all their lives, and, as members of the industrial proletariat, were once considered “the masters of the people.”</p>

ZGBriefs

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>

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | February 1, 2018

<p><strong>China’s Rise and the Church’s Call</strong> (January 30, 2018, <em>The Gospel Coalition</em>)<br /> We need to welcome a newfound interdependence with the global church—including brothers and sisters in China.</p>

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

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 […]