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Blog Entries

2016: Not “Business as Usual”

[…] a rethink of how expatriate Christians serve in China? I tend to agree with Swells that what we’re experiencing is the latter, particularly in view of the new policy environment and its affect both upon foreigners and upon Chinese Christians whom they seek to serve. Events over the past year suggest that what’s ahead […]

Supporting Article

Toward a Typology of Christian Leaders in China

[…] is an issue of major concern. She may have already ventured into the city to work among migrants, but is finding it difficult to adapt to the new environment (particularly if she steps further out of her comfort zone and seeks to engage with urban youth and intellectuals). While possessing a strong knowledge of […]

Blog Entries

China by the Lists

[…] Christmas carol (which, after the eighth or ninth verse has been known to test the sanity of even the soundest of souls). On the twelfth day of New Year, the Party gave to me: Twelve Socialist Values   Eleven Most Active Cults  Ten-Year Visas  Nine-Dash Line  Eight Shames and Honors  Seven Percent Growth Rate  Six […]

Blog Entries

The Challenge of Contextualization

Another Perspective

[…] a manner that impacts the lives of those around them. For the past decade believers in China have been on the cutting edge as they have pioneered new expressions of their faith in an atmosphere of expanding social openness. Christian publishing, a vibrant online presence, public worship in newly available urban spaces, experiments in […]

Blog Entries

Faces of Christian Leadership in China

[…] God is raising up a variety of Christian leaders in China today. Luis Bush and I look further at this changing face of Christian leadership in China in China’s Next Generation: New China, New Church, New World, available in PDF format from ChinaSource or on Amazon. Image credit: More People, by Mike Beltzner, via Flickr

Blog Entries

The Changing Face of Political Leadership in China

[…] as he brought China out from the shadow of the Cultural Revolution and into the modern world. In a word, Deng focused on peaceful development, experimented with new economic models aimed at incentivizing China’s people, curbed population growth, nurtured a new generation of well-trained bureaucrats, and used China’s competitive advantages to engineer a new […]

Blog Entries

3 Questions: Honor, Shame, and the Gospel

[…] influenced in part by Western values. We have moved away from colonialism in our methods but not our theology. As a catalyst we want to be seeding new teams and collaborations to develop new ministry resources, ways of presenting the gospel, and training for cross-cultural ministry. We’re looking for new case histories, people writing […]

Blog Entries

Collective Misunderstanding

[…] never to have ceased to be primarily the faith of a foreign community…Nestorianism seems to have depended chiefly upon foreign leadership and support.”5 Daniel Bays in his New History of Christianity in China echoes this sentiment, noting there is little evidence that many Han Chinese believed.6 Richard Cook’s Darkest Before the Dawn likewise asserts […]

Blog Entries

In an Ever-Changing China, Some Things Haven’t Changed

[…] This year differs from last year. The only constant in our society is change. In an ever-changing society, many Chinese are puzzled, and many feel at a loss. To speak to the needs of the Chinese people, Christian workers in China must clearly know how to position themselves. Many workers simply say they work […]

ChinaSource Perspective

Viewing the Registered Church through Different Lenses

[…] control of the Communist Party (although it did serve this purpose), but was seen by its leaders as the only way forward for the church in the new era. With the outbreak of the Korean conflict, the stated desire to see a Chinese church independent of missionary control took on a decidedly political dimension. […]