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Supporting Article

Teaching in China—the Early Years

[…] to foreign currency, they had to have receipts showing they had exchanged that much foreign currency for FEC. In the very early 1980s most things were very cheap. For example, to park one’s bicycle in a lot with an attendant to watch the bicycles cost only two fen (100 fen = 1 yuan). No […]

Chinese Christian Voices

The Next Decade of the Church in China

[…] in China and presented their views, stating that: Since 2010, the development of Christianity in China has tended to be stable, even showing signs of stagnation. The number of Chinese Christians experienced rapid growth in the 1980s and 1990s but has seemingly stopped growing in the past decade. The proportion of Christians in China […]

Blog Entries

Anticipating Urban China

[…] of relationships. In office buildings, if conversations have important content, people will meet in hallways or outdoors to talk. The Falungong organizers made extensive use of cell phones and the internet, but the security organs are working overtime to master ways of controlling and monitoring these advanced means of communication. This type of atmosphere […]

Blog Entries

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 […]

Articles

Financial Considerations in Chinese Missionary Sending

Sources of Support and Difficulties in Raising Finances

Chinese Christians feel God calling them to long-term mission service. Attrition rates of Chinese missionaries are high, however, and a number of difficulties (including finances) hinder Chinese missionary sending. As part of a study examining causes of Chinese missionary attrition, I recently interviewed eleven Chinese long-term missionaries using a questionnaire developed by the World Evangelical Fellowship. In […]

Articles

Difficulties with Church-Based Models in Chinese Missionary Sending

Understanding the Need for Mission-Sending-Organizational Development in China

[…] mission sending organization is just in the beginning stages of development in China and is currently difficult to find by missionary candidates. There are now reportedly a number of such working models. Though most are linked with house church associations, there at least three mission-sending organizations functioning independently. Field research underlined the necessity of developing mission-sending […]

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 […]

Blog Entries

My Problem with Progress

[…] of following the general letter of the law (passport photocopy? long-time customer? correctly-chopped police receipt?), or even a verbal okay from the Public Security official over the phone would have been sufficient to grease the wheels of the bureaucracy enough for me to get my money—perhaps with a promise to return with my passport […]

Blog Entries

How Many Christians Are There in China? It’s Complicated

[…] illustrate, I reached out to three individuals in the China academic and ministry communities and posed these two questions: 1) What is your preferred estimate on the number of Christians in China? 2) How do you arrive at that estimate? Professor Fenggang Yang of Purdue University responded in Part 1. Dr. Carsten Vala of […]

ZGBriefs

November 22, 2012

[…] and Religious Regulations in China (Pacific Institute for Social Sciences)The development of Christianity in China over the past thirty years has been extraordinary, both in terms of number of followers and influence. The official figure for number of Christians in China is 18 million; however many scholars believe that this figure is under-estimated. Outside […]