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Blog Entries

Training Cross-Cultural Workers to Cross Honor-Shame Cultures

[…] illustrate one possible way to train people from one honor-shame culture to minister in another honor-shame culture. Preliminary Suggestions The latter part of the chapter explores a number of possible applications. I raise several questions that we must ask if we want to dig deeper into the prospect of training missionaries from one honor-shame […]

Blog Entries

The 3D Gospel Is Now in Mandarin

[…] Asia Single copies can be ordered online from the Logos bookstore in Hong Kong. Multiple copies (20 or more), are available at a bulk discount. Email [email protected] requesting the number of copies needed and the desired shipping arrangements. Shipping takes place from Hong Kong. In the US 三维福音 (The 3D Gospel) is available online from Ambassadors for […]

Blog Entries

“China Is Not Russia”

[…] Fulton and our excellent board members to shape the ethos, brand, and the values of what has become ChinaSource today.   During those early days we made a number of strategic decisions. The first was to begin holding one meeting a year in Asia preferably in China.  At that time this was rarely done and we […]

Blog Entries

An Invitation from a Friend

[…] for ChinaSource readers. I’d like to invite you to a special multi-day event this August where we’ll explore the engagement between Christianity and Chinese culture from a number of angles, as well as the challenges facing churches in China in our day.  Our Friday opening keynote is free and open to the public. Myron […]

Blog Entries

The Nitty Gritty of China’s Social Credit System

[…] received by individuals. In effect, China’s social credit system is a way of commodifying “face.” The entire project works through public shaming. A Social Credit System with American Characteristics? One article poses a provocative question, “Chinese-Style Social Credits System a Harbinger of US's Future?” The writer states: That is the fundamental reason both the […]

Peoples of China

Strangers in a Strange Land: Expatriates in China

[…] skilled labor pool in China is lacking, and there are great opportunities for skilled foreigners to work and live in China. Beijing’s embassy district boasts the largest number of diplomatic relations with any nation on the planet except for the United Nations. Previously, Hong Kong was the primary port of call, but now, economic […]

Blog Entries

Skills No Longer Needed

[…] that they do not belong in this multicultural society. When in a park, being aware at every moment of who is near my children and whether their phone is pointing at them. At the same time, monitoring the pulse of my children’s stress levels. Do they notice the attention on them and, today, do […]

Book Reviews

The Chinese Church in Transition

Navigating Mission in the Diaspora

[…] this study was conducted in 2013, much of its information likely remains applicable today. One possible weakness of the plenitude of data, however, is that the overwhelming number of charts can sometimes be more distracting than helpful. In my estimation, the most fascinating aspect of this book is Wu’s own reflections on the same-ethnicity […]

Peoples of China

China’s Migrant Children

[…] Global Times, Feb 25, 2010. http://china.globaltimes.cn/society/2010-02/507860.html 3If “left behind” children of migrant workers, who remain in the villages without parental care, are included in these statistics, the number rises to 30 million total migrant children in China, comprising 20% of the compulsory school-aged student population. “Strong Performers and Successful Reformers in Education: Lessons from […]

Blog Entries

6 Approaches to Contextualization in China

[…] Malaysian Chinese theologian, K. K. Yeo, who is quite explicit about his ambition to develop a distinctive Chinese theology. “Synchronistic” approach Third, the “synchronistic” approach draws from a number of cultural concepts to communicate theological meaning. Many of the earliest missionaries to China are characteristic of this view. They and others have taken seriously the importance […]