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Six Trends Shaping China (and What They Mean for the Church)
[…] Towson and Jonathan Woetzel, both professors at Peking University's Guanghua School of Management in Beijing, claim you can understand China in an hour. An excerpt from their new book on the McKinsey and Company website says getting a handle on China is a lot less about politics and a lot more about a handful […]
Four Freedoms, Three Observations: Stephen Lam Reflects on Deng’s Pragmatism
[…] Kong Chief Secretary Stephen Lam has a unique understanding of "One Country, Two Systems," the policy whereby Hong Kong returned to Chinese sovereignty in 1997. As director of the office that oversaw the Handover ceremony and related events, Lam worked with both British and Chinese officials to write a significant chapter in China's contemporary history.</p>
Why Stewardship Matters for China
[…] effects have been jarring. Having been involved with China long enough to remember when ordinary citizens needed ration cards to purchase basic necessities, I can also recall my shock and surprise when I first saw advertisements for a new weight loss program plastered on the side of a bus in a prosperous southern Chinese city.</p>
Can the Chinese Church Say No?
[…] (<em>yong</em>) of Western learning while maintaining the essence (<em>ti</em>) of Chinese culture. The rush toward Westernization that seemed to characterize the 1980s was subsequently replaced by the "China Can Say No" spirit of the 1990s. With China's rise in this century there is a new confidence in China's ability to chart its own unique course.</p>
Confrontation or Conversation? The Church and Confucianism in China
<p>The Spring 2014 issue of <em>ChinaSource Quarterly</em> takes up the topic of Confucianism'S resurgence in China and its implications for the church. Certainly not a new topic, the relationship between China's dominant worldview and the Christian gospel has been a perennial subject of discussion since at least the days of Matteo Ricci. Successive generations […]
7 Trends Impacting Foreign Christians in China
<p>The traditional roles of foreign Christians in China are changing. Foreign believers have traditionally served in one of two ways. They have sought to witness for Christ, or they have served the indigenous church directly, primarily in the field of training. Today the maturing of the church, are giving rise to new modes of engagement. </p>
Book Reviews
When East Meets West in the Market Place
<p><em>One Billion Customers: Lessons from the Front Lines of Doing Business in China</em> by James McGregor. New York: Free Press, 2005, 312 pp., ISBN: 0743258398, US$27.00.</p><p><em>Reviewed by Brent Fulton</em></p>
A Pivotal Decade
<p>Writing in 2001, Dr. Carol Lee Hamrin anticipated the major milestones in a decade—the 2000s— that in many ways served as a defining period for China.</p>
Anticipating Urban China
<p>As ChinaSource celebrates 20 years of service we are digging into our archives for articles chronicling the myriad far-reaching changes in China during the past two decades. Here we look at urbanization.</p>
Asking the Right Questions
[…] response. In his 1998 business classic, Who Moved My Cheese, Dr. Spencer Johnson made the observation, “The quicker you let go of old cheese, the sooner you can find new cheese.” If your “cheese” is opportunities for effective service in China, then adapting to the new environment means leaving behind those that are no longer viable […]