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ZGBriefs The Weeks Top Picks, June 26 Issue
[…] type, 3.cn. Check out 4399.com to see one of China’s first and largest online gaming websites. Buy and sell used cars at 92.com. Want to purchase train tickets? It’s as easy as 12306.cn. Why the preference for digits over letters? It mostly has to do with ease of memorization. To a native English-speaker, remembering […]
October 18, 2012
[…] of the Chinese police, and the still-debilitating aftereffects of Maos Cultural Revolution.Changing China seen from the ‘hard seats’ of a train (October 12, 2012, BBC)Travelling with a cheap rail ticket provides a snapshot of any country’s underbelly. Doing it twice at an interval of 26 years, in a country like China, provides a fascinating […]
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 […]
December 20, 2012
<p>China to Speed Up Hukou System Reform (December 18, 2012, China Digital Times)</p> <p>The National Development and Reform Commission announced Tuesday that the government will speed up reform of Chinas household registration or hukou system, following up on pledges by incoming leaders to emphasize urbanization and improve opportunities for rural citizens.</p>
Supporting Article
Life in the Underground Catholic Church
[…] have been detained by authorities multiple times. More information about them is available in the Political Prisoner Database of the Congressional-Executive Commission on China: Jia Zhiguo, record number 2004-05304, accessed July 5, 2024: <a href="https://www.ppdcecc.gov/ppd?id=result&number=2004-05304" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://www.ppdcecc.gov/ppd?id=result&number=2004-05304</a>. Shao Zhumin, record number 2005-00232, accessed July 5, 2024, <a href="https://www.ppdcecc.gov/ppd?id=result&number=2005-00232" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://www.ppdcecc.gov/ppd?id=result&number=2005-00232. </a>See also, […]
The Tricolor Religious Market and the Growth of Christianity
The Great Awakening in China (3)
[…] big to meet at people’s apartments. Therefore, they rented large halls at hotels or office buildings. Some congregations even purchased commercial real estate and renovated them into sanctuaries. They continued to be called jiating churches because they refused to join the official Christian association that is in the religious red market. Some of the […]
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 […]
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, […]
Supporting Article
Saving China, Saving Ourselves: 1911–1965
History of Chinese Christianity in North America (2)
[…] moved to California in 1881 and started as a domestic servant. He quickly mastered English, adopted Western dress, and became a Christian. After completing his studies at San Francisco Theological Seminary in 1892, he became the first Chinese Presbyterian minister in America and pastored a Chinese church in Los Angeles. He soon decided to […]
August 8, 2014
[…] that one also be willing to think the unthinkable. Although one can point to many continuities in China's long history, it has also been marked by a number of jarring discontinuities. Identifying current trends and assuming that they will continue to play out in a linear fashion may provide some sense of reassurance about […]