Results for: Customer+Serivce+1888-857-2589+United+Airlines+Phone+Number

Showing results for customer service 1888 857 589 united airlines phone number customer service 18889997959 1888 857 589 service 1888 857 589 service 18889997959 1888 857 1888 857 589 18889997959 1888 857 589

Editorials

A Look Back to Look Forward

A Decade of ChinaSource

[…] the new ChinaSource website and recommend the 2010 Prayer Calendar. Throughout the years, ChinaSource has provided a variety of resources designed to aid and enhance your China service. As one of those resources, the ChinaSource journal, now available in print format, as a pdf file or an online edition, is committed to continuing to […]

ResearchShare

Social Service Ministry in China

While social service has long been part of missionary work in mainland China, today a host of different factors are driving Chinese Christians to explore for themselves the place of humanitarian concerns within gospel ministry. For a growing number of local Christians, loving one’s neighbor through acts of service is rapidly becoming an indispensable […]

Supporting Article

Keys to Effective Service in China

<p>Four essentials for effective service in China.</p>

Editorials

Effective China Service in the Era of WTO

[…] greater openness and prosperity, but it is also accentuating social inequality and exacerbating economic problems. Both the positive and negative consequences of WTO bring new opportunities for service. No one can predict what these opportunities may look like in five or ten years. However, recent discussions among ministry leaders elicited a number of “best […]

Blog Entries

China’s NGO Policy: Iron Cage or Ladder to Success?

The implementation of the domestic Charity Law in 2016 and the Overseas NGO Law in 2017 marked the end of an era in social service in China. Accustomed to working in a large grey area in which much was allowed but little was legally defined, local and foreign-run nonprofit organizations were suddenly faced with […]

Blog Entries

3 Questions: Kerry Schottelkorb

A Home for the Forgotten in Qinghai

[…] the past 18 years nearly 200 children have been adopted overseas, all of whom have disabilities. In addition, the rehabilitation center in Xining is drawing a growing number of families in the community who are bringing children for treatment, suggesting an increase in the number of families choosing to keep their children who have […]

Blog Entries

A Forgotten People

[…] Of course disability is no respecter of ethnicity, age, or gender. People with disabilities are found across the spectrum throughout society. As China’s population grows older, the number of people with age-related disability will increase proportionally. Steve Bundy, guest editor for this issue of the Quarterly, points out disability is more than simply a […]

Blog Entries

Be A Better Dad Today

A Book Review

[…] Better Dad Today: Ten Tools Every Father Needs, Slayton emphatically states: “being a good dad is the most important job any of us—from the President of the United States to the CEO of a major corporation to the guy taking out the garbage—will ever have” (p.14).  Raised by a dysfunctional father who abandoned him […]

Blog Entries

The Key to Chinese Missionary Service—Calling

<p>The Chinese church is vibrant and has growing passion to participate in missionary sending through undertakings like the Back to Jerusalem (BTJ) movement and the Indigenous Mission Movement from China (IMM China). Chinese Christians feel God calling them to long-term mission service. The principal factor encouraging them to long-term sustainable service is <strong><em>calling</em></strong>.</p>

Blog Entries

Cults in China

Last year members of the Almighty God sect savagely attacked a customer in a McDonald’s in northeast China after she refused to give them her cell phone number. Formerly known as Eastern Lightning, the Almighty God sect has emerged as one of the most active cults in China.