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Blog Entries

The Space between Policy, Practice, and Persecution

<p>Mention the church in China and the conversation invariably turns toward China's religious policy, the underlying assumption being that the Chinese government is bent on suppressing Christianity. In the most recent issue of <em>ChinaSource Quarterly</em> we take a closer look at this question. As with most things in China, both the stated policy and […]

Articles

Policy, Implementation, and Shifting Official Perceptions of the Church in China

[…] in China being harassed, fined, detained and oppressed through discriminatory policies often lead outside observers to conclude that the Chinese government is pursuing a concerted and consistent policy to restrict Christian activity and stem the growth of Christianity. While these troubling incidents remain a reality of life in China, a survey of the larger […]

Blog Entries

China’s Religious Policy: The Unfinished Mandate

<p>China's current policy on religion is spelled out in Central Party Document no. 19, "The Basic Viewpoint and Policy on the Religious Question during Our Country's Socialist Period," issued in March of 1982.</p>

Blog Entries

Religious Policy Development in the PRC since 1949–An Overview

<p>In today's blog, Dr. Timothy Conkling discusses the influence of PRC religious policy on the church in China.</p>

Chinese Christian Voices

20 Things a New Chinese Pastor Needs to Learn About Ministry

Christians in China today are able to share relatively easily about ministry on social media. Pastors’ personal blogs are one unique vantage point into church life in China. In this article, Chen Fengsheng, a Three-Self pastor in Wenzhou, provides budding pastors with timely advice on how to prepare for a healthy pastoral ministry. He gives “twenty realities” of ministry life that will help set up fresh seminary graduates for the pastorate.  

Blog Entries

China’s Schizophrenic NGO Policy

[…] years of research, advocacy, and experiments by governments at various levels to accommodate China's growing NGO sector, numerous bumps remain on the road to a comprehensive NGO policy. Here is a brief look at the main obstacles: Control is, not surprisingly, the main issue for the Communist Party. Despite decades of economic reform China […]

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 […]

Chinese Christian Voices

The Next Decade of the Church in China

[…] from international organizations like Gallup and Pew have shown that the proportion of Christians in China is around 2%. A survey by Renmin University about 10 to 20 years ago found that the proportion of Christians on campus was around 3%. Through various research and observations, I personally tend to believe that the number […]

Blog Entries

Which Chinese Bible Should I Recommend People Read?

[…] In Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Retrieved from https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Pastoral_Bible_(Chinese)&oldid=637046232 Wikipedia. (2015, June 18). Chinese Union Version. In Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Retrieved from https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Chinese_Union_Version&oldid=667447748 Which Chinese Bible Should I Recommend People Read? was originally published on Thriving Turtles on June 20, 2016. It was subsequently updated, most recently on August 17, 2018. It is reprinted here with permission.

Blog Entries

It Starts with “Nǐ Hǎo”

Cross-Cultural Ministry in the Most Unexpected Place

This experience reminds me that God often uses the ordinary to do the extraordinary. Ministry doesn't require a pulpit. Sometimes it begins with a simple “Nǐ hǎo.”