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Supporting Article
Europe: A Missionary Field or Mission Force?
Europe's Chinese churches need ministers just as much as each European country needs them. Although Europe was once one of the most active regions for sending missionaries, even as recently as the early twentieth century, it has now become a mission field requiring support and prayer from various missionary organizations and churches worldwide.
Americans Drive on the Left and Other Truths I’ve Learned
Years ago, I was having a conversation with my Malaysian friend, and we started talking about how Malaysia has a lot of British influence. “We drive on the right like they do,” my friend explained.
“Wait, what?” I thought I had heard her wrong, or that she had misspoken. “You mean you drive on the left like they do.”
Be A Better Dad Today
A Book Review
[…] 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 in his early teens, then taken in by a Chinese immigrant family who had moved in next door, […]
Lead Article
Missiological Implications of Chinese Christians in Europe
<p>The author tells us where Mainland Chinese are found in Europe, what they are involved in and their relationships to Christianity. He discusses their ties with established European Chinese churches, their impact upon the church in China as many return to their homeland and the outreach of European churches to the Chinese diaspora among them.</p>
ZGBriefs | June 15, 2023
Marriages in China drop to record low despite government push (June 13, 2023, The Guardian) The number of marriages in China last year dropped to 6.83 million, the lowest since records began in 1986. Data released by the Ministry of Civil Affairs showed the number of couples tying the knot in 2022 fell by […]
Being Chinese, Staying Christian in Europe
[…] a plethora of benefits that their parents did not—such as having legal status, getting a stronger grasp of European language skills, and being well-fed and clothed—many still find it challenging to leave their small circle of Chinese immigrant relationships and enter mainstream European society due to their lack of educational qualifications. In Germany, conversely, […]
God Has Not Forgotten England and Europe
<p>While many in the west are concerned about the condition of the church in China, Christians in China are often concerned about the state of the church in the west. In this article, published in the <em>Christian Times</em>, a pastor expresses his confidence that the church in England and Europe will once again experience revival.</p>
ZGBriefs | December 15, 2022
Facing Challenges, Chinese Churches in Europe Look to the Future (December 9, 2022, Christianity Today) The lack of churches to worship at isn’t the only problem that Chinese Christians are facing. Many Chinese churches in Europe are also trying to overcome challenges such as a “hometown association” mentality, a commercialist attitude toward church life, […]
ZGBriefs | August 27, 2020
[…] the Bible itself cuts to the heart of evangelical sensibilities. Society / Life Changes to China’s hukou system are creating new divides (August 19, 2020, The Economist) The rich find it easier to move to big cities; the poor are being pushed towards small ones. Mukbang: Why is China clamping down on eating influencers? (August 20, 2020, BBC) […]
ZGBriefs | April 4, 2024
[…] 2, 2024, NPR) In a new book, Made in China, historian Elizabeth O'Brien Ingleson explains how corporate America began reconceptualizing trade with China in the 1970s, the factors that led to this change and how "what had once been a fantasy of 400 million customers slowly started to become one of 800 million workers instead."