Outreach

Chinese Articles

改变国家民族的宽广宏范的世界观

A Holistic Perspective on Transforming Nations

当国家受影响而要转型, 那么我们要做什么呢?

Lead Article

A Big Piece of the Puzzle

Among all debates and controversies about the Back to Jerusalem (BTJ) phenomenon, the issue of training Chinese missionaries seems to have fallen on the sidelines. More attention has been given to issues such as the controversial number of 100,000 missionaries, abuse of the genuine grass-root missionary spirit, and who has the right to represent BTJ. Despite the legitimacy of all these concerns, traininga critical component that determines the outcome of missionshas not been given enough attention.

ChinaSource Quarterlies

The 2008 Beijing Olympics

Vol. 10, No. 2

2008 Summer Issue

Supporting Article

Dreams of a Chinese Sports Outreach

Sports events can become a means to encourage Christian service.

Peoples of China

The 4/14 Window

The "4/14 Window" refers to children and young people between the ages of four and fourteen. What does the 4/14 Window look like in a Chinese context? What are the needs and is the church responding?

Editorials

Back to Jerusalem

A Difficult Subject

From the guest editor's desk.

View From the Wall

The Present and Future of the BTJ Movement

A View from the Church in China

In the following article, I affirm Back to Jerusalem's (BTJ) significance and commend these principles to the people of the twenty-first century. BTJ is a missionary vision received by Chinese pastors in the 1940s.

Supporting Article

Chinese Christianity and Global Mission

With the enthusiasm of China's global ambition and the rapid growth of the Chinese Christian community one of the fastest growing churches in modern times with unofficial figures ranging from 35 million to 80 million, one may easily speculate on a merging of these two elements into a new missiological movement. These three emerging issues of Chinese Christianity may have a bearing on contemporary global mission: the diasporic Chinese community, Chinese Christian merchants the Wenzhou Christians, and the Back to Jerusalem Movement (BTJ).

Lead Article

Beyond “Back to Jerusalem”

An overview and assessment of the "Back to Jerusalem" movement.

Supporting Article

A Piece of the Puzzle

Training Mainland Chinese to be Cross-Cultural Missionaries

Among all debates and controversies about the Back to Jerusalem (BTJ) phenomenon, the issue of training Chinese missionaries seems to have fallen on the sidelines. More attention has been given to issues such as the controversial number of 100,000 missionaries, abuse of the genuine grass-root missionary spirit, and who has the right to represent BTJ. Despite the legitimacy of all these concerns, traininga critical component that determines the outcome of missionshas not been given enough attention.