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

Developing and Modeling a Biblical Worldview

[…] IL: Crossway, 2013), 30.</a> Samuel Ling and Clarence Cheuk, <em>The “Chinese” Way of Doing Things: Perspectives on American-Born Chinese and the Chinese Church in North America</em> ( New Jersey: P & R Publishing, 1999), 60-61. “A Day in the Life,” (2016) ; available from <em>US Department of Health and Human Services</em>, <a href="http://www.hhs.gov/ash/oah/adolescent-health-topics/americas-adolescents/day.html">http://www.hhs.gov/ash/oah/adolescent-health-topics/americas-adolescents/day.html#</a>. Ibid, […]

Blog Entries

Variations on a Theme

[…] In the eyes of some observers, China’s standalone urban churches represent the seeds of civil society. A hunger for leadership training from the West hints that a new kind of Christian leader is being formed in China. Our narratives envision a linear relationship between our China involvement and the church’s—and the nation’s—trajectory toward progress. […]

Editorials

Chinas Youth in Perspective

<p>Editor's Note: This editorial originally appeared in "China's Youth" (<em>ChinaSource</em>, 2010 Summer).</p>

Blog Entries

Consumerism and the Church in China

[…] wholesale and even endorsing the culture’s emphasis on material acquisition, the church will be challenged to demonstrate what it means to be stewards in God’s kingdom. China’s new generation of urban consumers, overwhelmed by a never-ending onslaught of commercial advertising and perplexing financial decisions, would likely welcome sound stewardship teaching were the church to […]

Blog Entries

Does Christianity Have a Future in China?

[…] mode. Revival and explosive growth, especially among house churches in the countryside, highlighted the acute need for Bibles and trained leaders. (During the previous 30 years no new leaders had been trained, nor had any Bibles or other resources been produced.) Many outside the officially recognized church faced persecution. The church's challenges at this […]

Blog Entries

Some Additions to the Summer Bookshelf

The latest issue of The China Journal is out and features a host of reviews of new books that should be of interest to those concerned with developments in China. Here is a sampling of some of the latest scholarship touching on current issues affecting Chinese society and culture. Xinjiang and the Modern Chinese […]

Blog Entries

Beyond the Crosses

Wealth, Stewardship and the Wenzhou Church

[…] of one observer, because of the favorable social and political conditions, Competition to build churches had almost become the order of the day. As soon as a new church was built, it was torn down and rebuilt again! Before the new building was even filled with people, they began to build an even bigger […]

ChinaSource Perspective

More Blessed to Receive

[…] they received much more than they contributed. As one long-time China worker put it, “They may have left China, but China has not left them.” They gained new friendships. They left with cherished memories and with new perspectives on themselves and what it means to be a follower of Christ in a land not […]

Articles

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

[…] do, would likely attract government attention and provoke a negative response. Leaders, even in the official church, although enjoying a somewhat protected status, risk quick censure and loss of position should they become involved in any unsanctioned political activities. The size and scope of the unofficial group and its activities is also a factor. […]

Blog Entries

Defying Western Expectations

[…] and every indication is that this history—which is about far more than numerical growth—has not yet run its course. China’s reforming churches are not drowning in the new tide but rising on it. They are embracing the opportunities they see in the new challenges they face and finding creative ways to meet the needs […]