Results for: airline%20tickets%20from%20san%20jose%20california%20to%20las%20vegas%20cheap%20phone%20number%201-800-299-7264

Showing results for airline tickets 20from susan jose california 20to las vegas cheap phone number 201 800 299 726 airline tickets 20from susan jose california 20to las vegas cheap phone number 2019 201 800 299 726 2019-02-26 2019-02-26 tickets 20from california 20to number 201 800 299 tickets 20from california 20to number 2019 26 201 800 299 201 800 299 726 2019 201 800 299 726

Editorials

The Spirit of the Enterprise

Perusing the pages of an in-flight magazine on a Chinese airline, I came across an editorial on the “faith” or “belief system” of the enterprise (qiye xinyang). With the explosion of private entrepreneurship in China, there is no shortage of new companies seeking to grab their share of the action in China’s booming economy. […]

Editorials

China by the Numbers

[…] numbers began a slow decline as China’s one-child policy took hold with dramatic effect into the early 1980s. China Tips the Scales This simple graph in an airline magazine was yet another example of how China, by virtue of its sheer size, changes the face of the world as the dynamics affecting life in […]

Book Reviews

Closing a Perception/Reality Gap

A Book Review

Chan, Kim-kwong, and Carlson, Eric R. Religious Freedom in China: Policy, Administration, and Regulation; a Research Handbook. Santa Barbara, California: Institute for the Study of American Religion, and Hong Kong: Hong Kong Institute for Culture, Commerce, and Religion, 2005. ISBN-10: 0915051036; ISBN-13: 978-0915051038; 108 pages, paperback, $9.45 at Amazon.com. To some extent, Western perceptions […]

Blog Entries

Coming to Terms with the Church

An article that appeared last month in China's official press raises interesting questions about how the church in China is viewed by both the Chinese state and society.

Blog Entries

Theological Chinese for Non-native Speakers

[…] formation, cross-cultural service and other subjects, taught in Mandarin by highly qualified faculty. In addition, participants in the program take part in service opportunities in the southern California area, which boasts a large Chinese population. Courses taken for Logos credit are ATS accredited, and thus can be transferred into or out of any seminary […]

Blog Entries

The Changing Face of Political Leadership in China

David M. Lampton, Following the Leader: Ruling China, from Deng Xiaoping to Xi Jinping. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2014. Since rising to power three years ago, President Xi Jinping has frequently been called the most powerful Chinese leader since Mao Zedong. Such comments often refer to the way Xi has consolidated power by […]

The Lantern

Toward a Flourishing Society

Last month ChinaSource co-sponsored The Intellectual and Ethical Foundations of the Flourishing Society, a conference hosted by Acton Institute in Grand Rapids, Michigan.

Blog Entries

A Forgotten People

[…] society tends to devalue such people and either segregates or congregates them in ways that are demeaning. McNair, a professor of special education and disability studies at California Baptist University, argues that Christians are uniquely positioned to counter this trend, both through their practice of community and by redefining the meaning of disability. True […]

Blog Entries

China and Africa: An Eternal Imprint

On an unseasonably cool September afternoon I managed to find a warm spot underneath a skylight at Great Mall, a sprawling suburban shopping complex in California’s Silicon Valley, and opened up my laptop to read the latest ChinaSource Quarterly. Guest edited by Senior Vice President Joann Pittman, this issue takes a deep dive into […]

Blog Entries

Bridging the Divide in Asian American Churches

A Book Review

[…] to Chinese congregations; immigrant Korean and Japanese churches face similar struggles. Shin and Takagi Silzer, both professors of Asian American ministry at Talbot School of Theology in California, approach their topic by examining the cultural roots, both Asian and Western, underlying the conflict between what they call “Americanized Asians” and “Asianized Americans.” These two […]