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Blog Entries

Beyond the Crosses

Wealth, Stewardship and the Wenzhou Church

[…] of one observer, because of the favorable social and political conditions, Competition to build churches had almost become the order of the day. As soon as a new church was built, it was torn down and rebuilt again! Before the new building was even filled with people, they began to build an even bigger […]

Blog Entries

Defying Western Expectations

[…] and every indication is that this history—which is about far more than numerical growth—has not yet run its course. China’s reforming churches are not drowning in the new tide but rising on it. They are embracing the opportunities they see in the new challenges they face and finding creative ways to meet the needs […]

Blog Entries

Does China’s Constitution Guarantee Freedom of Religion?

[…] the Protection of Religious Freedom: A Jurisprudential Reading of Article 36 of the Chinese Constitution,” in Joel A. Carpenter and Kevin R. den Dulk, Eds. Christianity in Chinese Public Life: Religion, Society, and the Rule of Law. ( New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014): 90. Image credit: China Winter 2010 – 0373 by Spiffy0777, on Flickr 

Editorials

China by the Numbers

[…] numbers began a slow decline as China’s one-child policy took hold with dramatic effect into the early 1980s. China Tips the Scales This simple graph in an airline magazine was yet another example of how China, by virtue of its sheer size, changes the face of the world as the dynamics affecting life in […]

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Some Additions to the Summer Bookshelf

The latest issue of The China Journal is out and features a host of reviews of new books that should be of interest to those concerned with developments in China. Here is a sampling of some of the latest scholarship touching on current issues affecting Chinese society and culture. Xinjiang and the Modern Chinese […]

Blog Entries

A Chinese Christian Observes Ramadan

[…] people whom they seek to serve. Along with experiencing these very tangible physical, emotional and spiritual effects of his fast, Mark also took from his month-long sojourn new insights into how cross-cultural workers from China need to prepare for their own lifetime journeys of service. He pondered new questions about what qualifications are needed […]

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How Many NGOs does China Really Have?

[…] of civil society, these numbers are quite impressive. However, as is often the case in China, the numbers tell only part of the story. In reality the number of functioning, truly independent non-profit organizations focused on serving society is considerably smaller. Those of sufficient scale to make a difference beyond just their own local […]

Blog Entries

Pray for China in 2018

[…] Major Cities. These items cover the national municipalities and provincial capitals. Poor and Outcasts. These items cover marginalized people. January’s prayer items highlight the contributions of a number of foreign and Chinese Christians over the past century. These include Beijing pastor Wang Mingdao, evangelist Stephen Tong, Olympian Eric Liddell, British missionary Gladys Aylward, who […]

Blog Entries

A Journey Toward a Chinese Theology

[…] imagination of some in the theological community overseas but was roundly rejected at home. In the years since, with the rise of civil society has come a new theological stream that seeks to position the church constructively within society, yet with a prophetic voice toward social and political institutions. It is against this backdrop […]

Editorials

Whose Agenda

[…] his best-selling book that sparked the current interest in the BTJ movement, Paul Hattaway was careful to identify 100,000 workers as a vision. However, since the only number given in the whole book is 100,000, many among the Western Christian public assumed 100,000 missionaries are ready to be commissioned or have already been sent. […]