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Supporting Article
Chinese Christianity and Global Mission
[…] merchant-migrants, numbering about half a million with at least fifteen percent who are Christians, there are perhaps 75,000 Wenzhou Christian merchant-cum-missionaries currently carrying the good news of cheap Chinese products as well as the Good News of Christianity to all corners of the world. This includes those countries which forbid any missionary activity or […]
ZGBriefs | August 8, 2024
[…] are hundreds of wet markets all over Shanghai, and they have proved remarkably resilient. Though they’re hardly relaxing places to shop, they offer customers access to fresh, cheap produce within a few minutes’ walk of their homes. But the city is now giving the markets a much-needed upgrade, aiming not only to improve hygiene […]
Lead Article
Chinese Children at Risk
[…] have laid a foundation and set a precedent. Orphanage management, leery of allowing outside assistance into their sites, can be pointed back to successful teamwork at a number of high- profile Chinese orphanages. More Western and Chinese workers are needed to help meet the needs in the vast rural areas of China. Chinese persons […]
ZGBriefs Newsletter for April 26, 2012
[…] demography. An upside-down pyramid (April 23, 2012, The Economist) OUR correspondents discuss the impact that China’s ageing population could have on its economy. ‘The service sucks’: Chinese airlines under fire (April 23, 2012, Sydney Morning Herald) Chinese airlines are struggling to stick with schedules as they contend with military restrictions on airspace, bad weather […]
Come and See: Welcoming 50,000 Youth
[…] At the meeting President Xi invited 50,000 young Americans to come and see China on exchange and study programs in the next five years.12 To put this number in context, consider that before COVID-19, there were about 11,000 American students in China in 2019.13 During COVID-19 this number fell drastically. When the current US […]
As Church Growth Slows
[…] Churches sprang up all over the nation like bamboo shoots after spring showers. Church development became even more rapid after our country joined the WTO, and the number of Christians soared to the tens of millions. Churches in my area also experienced these three sweet periods of highspeed development. Especially in the third period, the number of Christians […]
Hearing from the Church in China, Part 2
Trying to “Keep the Flies Out”
[…] recent position paper by the EU Chamber of Commerce in China reported that there were currently more foreigners living in Luxemburg than in China and concluded: “The number is diminishing. COVID-19 in some ways has come as a boon to Chinese leaders who tend towards xenophobia: It provides an excuse to keep foreigners out […]
December 5, 2013
[…] policymakers call capture, a condition in which economic or security dependence of one country on another allows the more powerful to drive the others policy making. US airlines warned to stay out of China's new air defense zone (+video) (November 30, 2013, Christian Science Monitor) The US and Japan are defying China by sending […]
Supporting Article
The Future of Business as Mission in China
[…] do this for more than two years. However, with China building miles and miles of high-speed trains crisscrossing hundreds of cities across China, the increasing availability of cheap local flights, national phone calls becoming cheaper and the increase of Internet access (now approaching one-third of Chinese homes), many people are more willing to live […]
January 24, 2013
<p>In China, Widening Discontent Among the Communist Party Faithful (January 19, 2013, The New York Times) </p> <p>For years, many China observers have asserted that the partys authoritarian system endures because ordinary Chinese buy into a grand bargain: the party guarantees economic growth, and in exchange the people do not question the way the party rules. […]