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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 […]
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 | November 5, 2015
[…] on a 72 hour visa in Beijing, you are not supposed to go even to Tianjin. The rules are now clear that you are required to have “a ticket proving an onward flight from the same China city to a ‘third country or region’ (not the originating country and not in Mainland China) with a […]
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 | June 11, 2015
<p></p> <p><strong>Mao As Church Father</strong> (June 1, 2015, <em>First Things</em>)<br /> In a brief review of recent Asian Church history (From Every Tribe and Nation), Mark Noll makes the arresting comment that “Mao Zedong counts as one of the most significant figures in modern church history.” Noll hastens to add this was not Mao's intention; rather, […]
Chinese Christianity Endures, Part 2
Learning from the 18th-Century Church Under Authoritarian Rule
[…] 1724 proscription are highlighted, revealing some important lessons for China workers striving to serve faithfully in New Era China. First, as Mungello makes quite clear, when the number of ordained expatriate priests and missionaries working in China decreased, Chinese Catholics stepped into the gap. In Sichuan this shift was undeniable: by 1800 there remained […]
The Tricolor Religious Market and the Growth of Christianity
The Great Awakening in China (3)
[…] in the red market. They are legally allowed and tolerated but are also colored red, the Chinese Communist color, and have to follow the party-state instructions. The number of officially approved churches has increased. Because these officially approved churches are not allowed to spread their religion outside the church, many churches have tried to […]
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 […]
ZGBriefs | June 16, 2016
<p></p> <p>Video: Sichuan Cuisine, Imperiled by Success (June 14, 2016, <em>The New York Times</em>)<br /> “Sichuanese cuisine really faces a crisis,” said Wang Kaifa, a 71-year-old chef who has been leading a campaign against what he sees as the creeping debasement of the region’s celebrated cooking. “The scene feels like it’s booming, but this is […]
Supporting Article
Teaching in China—the Early Years
<p>Ms. Anderson, who began teaching in China in the early 1980s, reflects on how different—and often difficult—it was for English teachers during those early years.</p>