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Blog Entries

3 Questions: Remembering the Poor

<p>Brother Tom is a grassroots church planter in an Asian city. For the past twenty years he has worked with a global organization on creating access and sustainability for church planting.</p>

Blog Entries

Can the Chinese Church Say No?

[…] (<em>yong</em>) of Western learning while maintaining the essence (<em>ti</em>) of Chinese culture. The rush toward Westernization that seemed to characterize the 1980s was subsequently replaced by the "China Can Say No" spirit of the 1990s. With China's rise in this century there is a new confidence in China's ability to chart its own unique course.</p>

Blog Entries

China’s Banned Bestseller

[…] scripture apps disappearing from the Internet, or crackdowns on unofficial publishing, what we hear about the Good News in China is often anything but good news. A new book by Cynthia Oh suggests a different narrative. In The Bible in China: From Banned Book to Bestseller, Oh, who has long served as Communications Manager […]

Blog Entries

Exploring Member Care for Workers from China

A Preview of the 2022 Autumn Issue of CSQ

It is our prayer that the articles in this issue will raise the profile of this vital service to God’s servants, prompting deeper discussion and sparking new practical efforts to prepare and to come alongside those being sent.

Blog Entries

Love Online, Chinese Style

<p>The explosion of China's online Christian community has not only provided believers with a new platform for expressing their faith, it is also helping to meet practical needs within the Christian community. Recently <a href="http://chinesechurchvoices.com/2014/02/19/chinese-christian-dating-sites/" rel="nofollow"><em>Chinese Church Voices</em></a> featured an article from the online Christian newspaper Gospel Times about Christian dating websites in China.</p>

Blog Entries

China’s Church Bells: The Window in the Steeple

<p>As Joann Pittman skillfully conveys in her new book, <em>The Bells are Not Silent</em>, the church bells of China provide a valuable—and until now, largely neglected—window into the life of China’s church.</p>

Editorials

Urban Migrants

Building the Infrastructure

[…] of the 2008 Beijing Games was erected at unprecedented speed, along with dozens of other Olympic venues, several new subway lines and major beautification projects across the city. None of this would be possible were it not for hundreds of millions of migrant workers streaming into China’s major urban centers. They are the silent, […]

Blog Entries

A Pivotal Decade

[…] fierce competition as the entire world undergoes a restructuring of institutions to accommodate “globalization.”  This term constitutes a shorthand for a historic process involving the spread of new technologies, a new level of economic integration across borders, and an unprecedented speed of change. The global turbulence it produces affects China unevenly and unpredictably.  In […]

Blog Entries

Asking the Right Questions

[…] response. In his 1998 business classic, Who Moved My Cheese, Dr. Spencer Johnson made the observation, “The quicker you let go of old cheese, the sooner you can find new cheese.” If your “cheese” is opportunities for effective service in China, then adapting to the new environment means leaving behind those that are no longer viable […]

Editorials

A Second Look at China’s Urbanization

[…] have traveled or lived in China, the word “urbanization” conjures up familiar images: endless processions of taxis clogging narrow streets, construction cranes towering over centuries-old temples and city gates, peasant migrants swarming around crowded train and bus depots, and quaint hutongs giving way to towering skyscrapers, each one taller and more imposing than the […]

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