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Blog Entries

Who Moved My Church?

[…] Evangelicals today may well be asking, “Who moved my church?” In the year 1910, 93 percent of Christians lived in North American and Europe. By 2013 that number had dropped to 63 percent.3 Today, according to the World Christian Database, the majority of Christians are found in the area of the world identified by […]

View From the Wall

China in 2020

Vol. 9, No. 3

[…] world, there are Chinese people energetically pursuing their various activities. China is no longer synonymous just with Chinese restaurants featuring all kinds of tasty delicacies, or with cheap consumer goods sold in discount stores. China already possesses the power to seriously influence world markets; to affect the decisions of the United Nations; even to […]

Blog Entries

How Not to End Persecution

[…] believers in war-torn areas abroad, but it also hamstrings their decades-long mission of partnering with local churches and governments to resettle religious refugees who have been promised sanctuary in the US. Research and advocacy organizations that have kept the world informed of rights violations in China and other countries are now laying off staff, […]

Editorials

A Larger Purpose

[…] those in their midst. China offers no shortage of opportunities to follow Christ’s example in ministering to the whole person. Figures from the early 1990s put the number of people with disabilities in China at 60 million; the total is probably much greater today. A growing elderly population and a shrinking number of younger […]

Editorials

The Spirit of the Enterprise

Perusing the pages of an in-flight magazine on a Chinese airline, I came across an editorial on the “faith” or “belief system” of the enterprise (qiye xinyang). With the explosion of private entrepreneurship in China, there is no shortage of new companies seeking to grab their share of the action in China’s booming economy. […]

Editorials

Whose Agenda

[…] his best-selling book that sparked the current interest in the BTJ movement, Paul Hattaway was careful to identify 100,000 workers as a vision. However, since the only number given in the whole book is 100,000, many among the Western Christian public assumed 100,000 missionaries are ready to be commissioned or have already been sent. […]

Blog Entries

Mao’s Black Box: Resilience and Religious Revival in Wenzhou

A Book Review

[…] communities and the state. Wang’s concluding chapter sums up the lasting effects of Maoism in terms of the revitalization of sacred spaces, seen today in the massive number of churches and temples that dot the Wenzhou landscape; the rearticulation of communal religion with local elites and politics; and the accession of localized Christianity, pointing […]

Editorials

China by the Numbers

[…] numbers began a slow decline as China’s one-child policy took hold with dramatic effect into the early 1980s. China Tips the Scales This simple graph in an airline magazine was yet another example of how China, by virtue of its sheer size, changes the face of the world as the dynamics affecting life in […]

Blog Entries

Supporting China’s Indigenous Missions Movement

[…] emerging movement is: “don't.” This advice comes from the latest issue of ChinaSource Quarterly, which is devoted to cross-cultural missions sending from China. Featuring articles by a number of Chinese believers along with expatriates who work closely with them, this issue delves into a number of the practicalities now emerging as more believers in […]

Blog Entries

3 Questions: Kerry Schottelkorb

A Home for the Forgotten in Qinghai

[…] the home and in the community are playing a unique and vital role in the lives of the children. For more on the challenges faced by people with disabilities in China and those who seek to serve them, read "Disabilities in China," the 2016 spring issue of ChinaSource Quarterly. Image credit: STC_3177 by Jason Sanders via Flickr.