I once had a discussion with my Chinese professor about the influences of Confucianism and Daoism (Taoism) in the worldview of Chinese people. “You have to understand,” he told me, “that we are Confucian when things are going well, when we have position and authority, and when life is hard for us and we are ‘down and out,’ we are Daoists.”
Joann Pittman
•
August 22, 2016
•
Ideas
Throughout history as various attempts have been made to introduce the gospel to China, a series of “perennial questions” have arisen regarding the relationship between the Christian faith and Chinese culture.
Brent Fulton
•
August 10, 2016
•
Ideas
In August, First Things published an article penned by the Chinese Christian intellectual Yu Jie titled “China’s Christian Future.”
ChinaSource Team
•
August 9, 2016
•
Ideas
The gospel is advancing in the workplaces of China. Learn more in the August episode of ChinaSource Conversations.
Brent Fulton
•
August 3, 2016
•
Ideas
It’s become an almost tiring cliché to say that China is changing. In the last century alone, the changes have been staggering.
Joann Pittman
•
August 1, 2016
•
Ideas
Having read Wang Jun’s article “The Preeminence of Love in Chinese Families” in the most recent ChinaSource Quarterly (18.2), “Christian Ethics and Family Living in China,” I would like to respond with a few thoughts that I trust will be helpful, and that might open further dialogue on this important topic.
Peregrine de Vigo
•
July 27, 2016
•
Ideas
Article 11 of the new Foreign NGO Management Law that is due to go into effect on January 1, 2017, will require foreign NGOs operating in China to “obtain consent of a professional supervisory unit.” The list of the approved supervisory units has yet to be released.
Joann Pittman
•
July 25, 2016
•
Ideas
Police actions against several house churches in Guangdong province in recent weeks again point up the fragile state of China’s vast unregistered Christian community.
Brent Fulton
•
July 20, 2016
•
Ideas
Young Christian families in China face pressure both from long-held traditional beliefs about family structure and from China’s contemporary materialistic society. As most of these Christians are first-generation believers, they have no frame of reference for understanding the biblical basis for family life. ChinaSource seeks to bring to light the issues facing these families so that those who come alongside Christians in China may better understand their needs.
ChinaSource Team
•
•
Ideas
Last week we posted part 1 of a proposal to resolve the status of house churches in China. In part 2, Professor Liu gets more specific as to how a house church documentation system could be set up and what would be gained by doing so.
ChinaSource Team
•
July 19, 2016
•
Ideas
In his book, China Airborne, James Fallows takes a look at modern China through the lens of the country’s growing aviation industry. He writes in the introduction about what he calls “the many countries of China,” (p. 6) explaining the diversity and complexity of a country that we tend to (wrongly) view as a monolith.
Joann Pittman
•
July 18, 2016
•
Ideas
The latest issue of ChinaSource Quarterly takes an in-depth look at the pressures facing young Christian families in urban China.
Brent Fulton
•
July 13, 2016
•
Ideas