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Supporting Article

“Kiwis” in the Middle Kingdom

New Zealanders Serving God’s Mission in China from 1877 to 1953 and Beyond

[…] years, New Zealand sent at least 255 missionaries to China. The CIM was the biggest and earliest recruiter of all, followed by the Presbyterian Church. Table 1: Number and percentage of China missionaries from NZ of the top five mission organizations2   Year of the first China missionary Total number of China missionaries % […]

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs Newsletter for May 3, 2012

[…] cities in 2011, with 10.5 million new migrant workers last year, up 4.4 percent from the previous year, according to the report. Teen commits suicide over dress code (April 29, 2012, China Daily) The suicide of a 14-year-old girl who jumped to her death in mid-April to protest her school’s dress code has triggered […]

ZGBriefs

August 8, 2014

[…] 2014, AsiaNews.it) As news about churches being demolished in Zhejiang (and elsewhere) and Christians arrested and tortured makes global headlines, the Beijing government vows to continue to promote the development of a Chinese Christian theology according to the national policy on religion. This was stated by Wang Zuoan, head of the State Religious Affairs […]

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | July 23, 2015

<p></p> <p>Married Without Children in China: Dealing With the Pressure in a Baby-Centric Country (July 21, 2015, <em>China Real Time</em>)<br /> In China, “Are you married?” and “Do you have children?” can be the equivalent of asking, “How are you?” An American who met my husband while working at an Internet company in China, […]

Blog Entries

Online Meeting Platforms

[…] determine which platform is most suitable. Vhall This platform allows for up to 1000 participants, with three speakers for a per-event fee. Charges are based on the number of participants and the length of time. There is also a yearly contract with unlimited participants. The English interface is “not ideal.” Vzan This platform allows […]

Articles

Policy, Implementation, and Shifting Official Perceptions of the Church in China

The Chinese Communist Party’s basic stance toward religion has not changed since it was spelled out in Document number 19 in 1982. Commonly referred to as the “three designates” formula, this policy restricts religious activities to approved locations, requires that they be conducted by approved clergy and limits their scope to the geographic sphere […]

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs

March 5, 2015

[…] those public accounts set up by everyone from news organizations to activists to brands like Nike and Sprite and forward the content their onto their contacts. China promotes mixed marriages in Tibet as way to achieve unity (August 16, 2014, Washington Post) In recent weeks, Chinese officials in charge of the Tibetan Autonomous Region […]

ZGBriefs

October 11, 2012

<p><strong>FEATURED ARTICLE</strong></p> <p><strong>The Chinese Church and the Global Body of Christ</strong> (October 5, 2012, <em>ChinaSource Quarterly</em>, via <em>Chinese Church Voices</em>)I believe these phenomena point to the dawning of a new era beginning in 2009. I believe that in the next 30 years, whether in breadth or in depth, the global body of Christ will connect […]

Supporting Article

Bibles in China

A Question of Availability

[…] country. Although quite common, this was never legal and in the spring of 2018, the Chinese government ordered the practice to cease. The advent of the smart phone has also impacted the availability and distribution of the Bible in China. Consider the numbers. As of January 2018, the Chinese Internet Network Information Center reported […]

ZGBriefs

April 04, 2013

<p>Current Ideological Trends in China How Should The Church Respond? (March 27, 2013, Lausanne Global Conversation)</p> <p>In discussion of the social and political status of Christianity in China, the relationship of the churches and the government naturally takes centre stage. Nonetheless, how the faith and its growing influence are viewed in China is caught up […]