Results for: cheap%20airline%20tickets%20from%20los%20angeles%20to%20new%20orleans%20phone%20number%201-800-299-7264

Showing results for cheap airline tickets 20from los angeles 20to new orleans phone number 201 800 299 726 cheap airline tickets 20from los angeles 20to new orleans phone number 2019 02 26 201 800 299 726 2019-02-26 2019-02-26 tickets 20from angeles 20to number 201 800 299 tickets 20from angeles 20to number 2019 26 201 800 299 201 800 299 726 2019 02 26 201 800 299 726

Blog Entries

Going Glocal in the Age of COVID-19

[…] they could have never envisioned, much less dreamed possible in China’s repressive political environment. Asian participants listened with empathy as their new friends in America related the loss and disorientation they were experiencing with the sudden onslaught of COVID-19. All sensed the Lord’s presence as they humbled themselves before him and before one another, […]

Editorials

Changing Culture

<p>Editor's Note: This editorial originally appeared in "Chinese Culture: Continuity or Discontinuity?" (<em>ChinaSource</em>, 2010 Spring).</p>

Blog Entries

From Sending to Receiving

[…] the Chinese church in this area as a priority, compared to 69 percent of China respondents. Both sides need to ask whether they are prepared to assume new roles. While many in China strongly promote sending workers abroad, others caution that, at present, the Chinese church still lacks sufficient infrastructure, experience, training, and grassroots […]

Blog Entries

China in Africa: Clues to the Future of “Belt and Road?”

[…] the host nation is in dealing with Chinese companies. Local companies in some sectors will need to significantly increase their productivity if they are going to compete with new Chinese entrants to the market. In addition to the need to strengthen the role of African managers, the Chinese-African economic partnership faces three particular “pain points,” […]

Blog Entries

Reformed Theology and China’s Urban Church

[…] of the Reformed “package,” components of which have deep European or American roots and, in their opinion, are ill-suited to China’s unique historical and cultural situation. A new series of posts on Chinese Church Voices details the growth of Reformed theology in China and seeks to answer some of these objections. Taken from an […]

Blog Entries

A Story Well Lived

[…] who, at that time, were part of a rapidly growing peasant movement. Rudolf went on to serve with Rev. Thomas Wang at the Great Commission Center in Los Angeles before joining the Overseas Missionary Fellowship (OMF) as Director of Chinese Church Mobilization. A decade later, Rudolf became a founding board member of ChinaSource. In […]

Blog Entries

The TSPM—Seeing Beyond History

[…] today are often shaped by our own rigid categories. In the case of the TSPM, seeing the movement only in terms of its history causes us to lose sight of the genuine faith of believers within the movement and the fruitful ministry flowing from China’s “official” church today. In the pages of the 2020 […]

Blog Entries

Going Global

When ChinaSource first launched, the focus was very much on serving the church in China. The immediate needs were many, and new opportunities were rapidly developing for foreign Christians to engage with believers in country. Today we recognize that “the church in China” is no longer just in China. This reality is captured in […]

Blog Entries

A Chinese Christian Observes Ramadan

[…] heat but also to set foot in the autumn harvest. Those thirty days were a particularly emotional journey for me…. During the thirty days, I not only lost nearly five kilograms but also gave birth to the words on this page. I also experienced some things I had never experienced in the past. Pastor […]

Blog Entries

On the China Bookshelf

[…] Vice President of ChinaSource, and Amy, who serves with the online community Velvet Ashes, have spent decades in China, where their work included helping those who were new to China to make sense of life in the Middle Kingdom. Their conversation starts with the question, “Why read books on China?” In an age of […]