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Showing results for lake orion phone number 201 614 647 0039 electrical repair services lake orion phone number 2018 04 09 201 614 647 0039 2018-04-09 2018-04-09 number 201 614 647 number 2018 09 201 614 647 201 614 647 0039 2018 04 09 201 614 647 0039

Blog Entries

Post-Conference Reflections on Expatriate Ministry in China

[…] years of meetings, this time of restored fellowship was especially welcome. As I caught up with coworkers I had not seen for several years, I observed a number of trends. In the wake of the 2008 Beijing Olympics, the China ministry world was in a panic. Many expatriates had lost their visas. We will […]

Blog Entries

Hearing from the Church in China, Part 2

Trying to “Keep the Flies Out”

[…] recent position paper by the EU Chamber of Commerce in China reported that there were currently more foreigners living in Luxemburg than in China and concluded: “The number is diminishing. COVID-19 in some ways has come as a boon to Chinese leaders who tend towards xenophobia: It provides an excuse to keep foreigners out […]

ZGBriefs

September 26, 2013

[…] have ever visited. Of course, the size of the Chinese population does help London, but the local shop owners had their stuff pretty well organized. Tour Erhai Lake by Bicycle (September 25, 2013, Wild China Blog) After exploring the bustling streets of Dalizhen in Yunnan Province, we needed an escape to mother nature. With […]

ZGBriefs

July 17, 2014

[…] out state-sanctioned bulletins, has become a target for a new rectification campaign. Zhang Zhi'an, who produced a comprehensive survey of investigative reporting in 2011, estimates that the number of journalists responsible for "independent, public-interest, negative or sensitive" reports has fallen by 66 per cent in the last three years. Lord of the Flies (July […]

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs Newsletter for April 26, 2012

[…] Beijing has been plagued by droughts for 13 consecutive years, with its fast-paced economic development and ever-growing population exacerbating the water shortage, according to Cheng. Chinas mobile phone users increased to 1.02 billion in Q1 (April 24, 2012, China Times) The number of mobile phone users in China increased by 32.57 million to 1.02 […]

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The Tricolor Religious Market and the Growth of Christianity

The Great Awakening in China (3)

[…] in the red market. They are legally allowed and tolerated but are also colored red, the Chinese Communist color, and have to follow the party-state instructions. The number of officially approved churches has increased. Because these officially approved churches are not allowed to spread their religion outside the church, many churches have tried to […]

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | November 8, 2018

<p><strong>China's middle class: We're being picked like leeks by the government</strong>  (November 4, 2018, <em>CNN</em>) Wang is one of millions of Chinese middle-class men and women who grew up in a roaring economy… but the past year has been especially tough.</p>

Blog Entries

Come and See: Welcoming 50,000 Youth

[…] At the meeting President Xi invited 50,000 young Americans to come and see China on exchange and study programs in the next five years.10 To put this number in context, consider that before COVID-19, there were about 11,000 American students in China in 2019.11 During COVID-19 this number fell drastically. When the current US […]

ZGBriefs

ZGBriefs | August 20, 2020

[…] discovered her mother was forcibly sterilized soon after her birth. Ever since, the young artist has been exploring how China’s birth-control policies have affected the country’s women. Phone number full of lucky ‘eights’ sells for 2 million yuan (August 17, 2020, China Daily) A cellphone number that ends with five “eights” was offered 2.25 million […]

Blog Entries

Chinese Christianity Endures, Part 2

Learning from the 18th-Century Church Under Authoritarian Rule

[…] 1724 proscription are highlighted, revealing some important lessons for China workers striving to serve faithfully in New Era China. First, as Mungello makes quite clear, when the number of ordained expatriate priests and missionaries working in China decreased, Chinese Catholics stepped into the gap. In Sichuan this shift was undeniable: by 1800 there remained […]