
Results for: Call+1800-299-7264++Hawaiian+Airlines+Customer+Service+Number
Showing results for call 1800 299 726 huainan airlines customer service number call 1880 1964 1800 299 726 1880-1964 call 1800 299 726 call 1880 1964 1800 299 726 1800 299 726 1880 1964 1800 299 726
When Less Is More
[…] Their expanding outreach programs spoke of the church’s growing influence. Their well-equipped facilities were a measure of the comparatively higher standard of living enjoyed by an increasing number of Christians in China. Members traveling overseas for conferences or training provided firsthand accounts of life in their churches back home. Eventually shut down by authorities, […]
Is Your Organization a Fit for China?
[…] the wrong reasons. (They may actually be more interested in connections or influence you are perceived to have, or resources you may bring, than in the actual service you intend to provide.) Who else is doing or has tried doing something similar? What have they learned? Discovering what works and what doesn't in China […]
Enduring Friendship
[…] they discern what it means to live as faithful witnesses in cultures that are increasingly hostile to the gospel. In the wake of a pandemic that has called into question basic assumptions about how churches function, there is an opportunity to rethink together the shape of Christian community for this new era. Increasing numbers […]
Learning to Be a Learner
[…] to them. Do they say "I love you?" Do they give you hugs? The answer is almost always no and often goes something like this: "My parents call regularly to remind me to make sure I'm wearing enough when it's cold or to make sure I'm eating proper meals and taking good care of […]
Celebrating Life and Death at Easter
[…] the same way. In 1865, Hudson Taylor completed a work entitled China’s Spiritual Needs and Claims, in which he marveled at the population of China and the number of those dying without a saving faith in Christ. Four hundred millions! What mind can grasp it? Marching in single file one yard apart they would […]
Official Protestant Groups Plan Next Five Years of Sinicization
What Does the TSPM/CCC 5-Year Plan Tell Us about the Direction of Official Protestantism?
[…] that draws on traditional culture and biblical teaching to “correct the negative and one-sided ‘human theory;’ that overemphasizes ‘original sin’ and ‘total depravity.’” In its place, the call is to “build a Christian ‘theory of man’ that combines the tradition of the ecumenical church and the excellent Chinese cultural tradition…in line with the middle […]
Supporting Article
What Is Our Role?
Toward a Set of Shared Considerations for Outside Involvement in Chinese Leadership Development
[…] that the curriculum is appropriate on several levels: it fits the culture (for example, urban or rural, Han or minority), educational level, existing skill level and individual callings of those being trained, and it is financially within their reach to reproduce without outside support. Ask: Does this curriculum promote historically orthodox doctrine, biblical literacy, […]
Editorials
Measuring Change in China
Whose Yardstick?
[…] visitors ventured warily into one of China’s large urban churches, visions of “Potemkin Village” dancing in their heads, only to emerge an hour later remarking that the service was “just like anything you’d experience in a church in America” (or Singapore, or Canada ….)? Of course there are similarities, but to conclude that Chinese […]
Educational Inequality and the Making of a New Urban Underclass
[…] relegated jobs most city dwellers would be unwilling to take themselves. Those who make it a bit higher up the social ladder find employment in the burgeoning service industry, waiting on tables, cooking, cleaning, or working in the homes of China's growing middle class. In the Pearl River and Yangtze delta regions tens of […]
Editorials
A Second Look at China’s Urbanization
[…] planning official in Shanghai’s Pudong area, social change in these new cities takes place in three stages, all three of which have obvious implications for witness and service in urban China. Urbanization itself is the process of creating the environment in which hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of people will live and work. […]