Tag: TSPM

Chinese Church Voices

Management Issues in the Rural Church

This article, from the Christian Times, highlights some of the issues facing the rural churches, which have been and are feeling the effects of urbanization.

Chinese Church Voices

China Opens its First Church for the Blind

This article, translated from the website Kuanye, reports on the opening of a church for the blind in the city of Shenyang, in China's northeastern Liaoning Province.

Chinese Church Voices

Testimonies from a Women’s Retreat

These two testimonies are taken from the website of the Quan Nan Church, in Quanzhou, Fujian Province. Quan Nan Church is a registered church, affiliated with the Chinese Christian Council/Three-self Patriotic Movement (CCC/TSPM).

Chinese Church Voices

How to Make the Church Chinese? Three Perspectives

The full title of this article is "How to Make the Church Chinese: Perspectives from the Religious, Academic, and Political Spheres" and is posted on the website of the China Christian Council/Three-Self Patriotic Movement (CCC/TSPM). Originally published in the official China Nationalities News, it examines the question of how Chinese the church is in China. While most Chinese Christians would likely agree that today's church is already Chinese both in character and leadership, many in the larger society have yet to acknowledge Christianity as genuinely a Chinese religion. The process of Sinicization, this writer argues, involves not only Christians themselves, but also China's intellectual and political elites.

Chinese Church Voices

Christianity Brings Western Medicine to Guangdong (Part 2)

The first part of the article on the Fuyinmen (Gospel Door) website focused on western missionary work in the medical field in Guangdong. The second part of the article focuses on education and a missionary's encounter with Hong Xiuquan, who would later lead the Taiping Rebellion.

Chinese Church Voices

Christianity Brings Western Medicine to Guangdong (Part 1)

In recent years it has become more common for political and religious leaders in China to acknowledge some of the positive aspects of early foreign missionary work in China.