A Village with My Name
Without being a heavy historical text, this book provides something for everyone interested in China.
Without being a heavy historical text, this book provides something for everyone interested in China.
The last decade has seen an increase in the number of young Chinese scholars choosing to make Christianity part of their academic studies. Who are these young scholars?
An account of one family's service in Hong Kong and China.
This atlas provides a detailed examination of the religious landscape in China. In addition to its helpful maps, it includes detailed descriptions and analysis along with photographs depicting the religious life of China.
If you enjoy a hot cup of tea and historical fiction, then this book is for you!
Christian intellectuals, especially those in ministry or missions, will find the book very useful in understanding issues of poverty and alienation in China. Indeed, any concerned Christian will be moved by the stories and descriptions of the plight of the migrant workers.
A discussion of From Christ to Confucius: German Missionaries, Chinese Christians, and the Globalization of Christianity, 1860-1950.
After reviewing each of the three parts of this book, Ms. Jones suggests that while it would be beneficial for anyone, this book will be especially useful for people heading to a foreign country to teach and for those preparing them for this.
A fast-moving and fascinating survey of missionary stories that doesn’t just tell what happened but also why it happened.
. . . available now in China.
Wuxia novelist Louis Cha died at the end of October. One of his readers remembers the influence his writings.
Beware of reading Paul Hattaway’s Shandong: The Revival Province . . . it will rock your rational, modern, stoic, predictable, boring Christian faith and turn it upside down.