Results for: when+to+buy+overseas+airline+tickets+cheap+phone+number+1-800-299-7264

Showing results for buy overseas airline tickets cheap phone number 800 299 726 buy overseas airline tickets cheap phone number 888 999 7959 800 299 726 1-888-999-7959 number 800 299 726 number 1 7959 800 299 726 800 299 726 888 999 7959 800 299 726

Blog Entries

Wahhabi-Inspired Islam in China

Know Thy Hui Neighbor (3)

[…] This is part three of the series “Know Thy Hui Neighbor” based on the Know Thy Hui Neighbor (KTHN) training. This course is to train local and overseas Christians to share Christ’s love with the Hui. Having learned a little about Islam with Chinese characteristics, you might wonder if there is any point in […]

Blog Entries

Working out a Chinese Public Theology

Three Preliminary Guidelines, Part 2

[…] addressing. During the past few decades the church has largely been marginalized in its relationship to the state. The church has failed to realize that as the number of Christians has grown, so has its influence. Christianity has become a public institution and can no longer be ignored. Since there has been no change […]

Blog Entries

Two Key Lessons from a TCK Childhood

[…] and come to understand their perspective. We all can. We can share the work of bridging the gap between our experiences. * All statistics and quotes come from Misunderstood: The Impact of Growing Up Overseas in the 21st Century by Tanya Crossman, Summertime Publishing, 2016.           Image credit: Amine Rock Hoovr on Unsplash.

Blog Entries

Official Protestant Groups Plan Next Five Years of Sinicization

What Does the TSPM/CCC 5-Year Plan Tell Us about the Direction of Official Protestantism?

[…] and instead “strengthen the belief that Christians and the Communist Party share one heart and one mind and move in the same direction.” Much of the concern overseas has been that the official church is rewriting the Bible or changing traditional theological concepts. In fact, in more than 20 years of studying the church […]

Blog Entries

Hui Disciples of Jesus

Know Thy Hui Neighbor (8)

This is part eight of the series “Know Thy Hui Neighbor” based on the Know Thy Hui Neighbor (KTHN) training. This course is to train local and overseas Christians to share Christ’s love with the Hui. A decade or so ago I saw a video12 claiming “there are only 50 known believers” among the Hui. Since then, I […]

Blog Entries

Americans Drive on the Left and Other Truths I’ve Learned

[…] and that sort of thing is liable to trip a person up when dealing cross-culturally. Just a few weeks ago, I was asking my house helper to buy potatoes at the market. “What size do you want?” she asked. I responded like this to show her: “About this big.” She laughed with eyes wide […]

Blog Entries

The Impact of School Culture

[…] follow-up post, I will look at cross-cultural schooling in the Chinese context: how international schooling affects Chinese students (and their families) and how Chinese schooling affects international students (and their families). Notes ^ Misunderstood: The Impact of Growing Up Overseas in the 21st Century by Tanya Crossman. Summertime Publishing, 2016, p. 268-269. Image credit: wave new from Pixabay

Blog Entries

Chinese Muslim Mystics

Know Thy Hui Neighbor (2)

[…] (or with) God. This is part two of the series “Know Thy Hui Neighbor” based on the the Know Thy Hui Neighbor (KTHN) training. This course trains local and overseas Christians to share Christ’s love with the Hui. It’s a beautifully rhythmic creed: “万物非主 唯有真主” (Wàn wù fēi zhǔ, wéi yǒu Zhēn Zhǔ). What does it […]

Blog Entries

When the Gates Close and the Church Is Called to Care

[…] and social time. Pray! Notes ^ In this article the terms "global families," "global workers," and other similar terms are used to refer to those involved in overseas, cross-cultural ministry.  ^ A Barnabas support team at our church is a group of 5-10 people selected by the global partner who agree to meet monthly […]

Blog Entries

From the Middle East to the Middle Kingdom (3)

Mass Migration under the Khan (AD1271–1367)

[…] the ancestors of the Hui all over China, giving them prestige and opportunity to prosper. The period that followed, which part four of this series will address, brought much shame. The Ming rulers stripped away their status and diluted their bloodlines. Nevertheless, the Hui grew in number and cemented their identity as Chinese Muslims.