Dana Robert has given us a slim volume that tells the thrilling story of the spread of Christianity from its beginnings as a tiny minority in Palestine to today, when, as the “largest religion in the world,” “[t]he geographic range, cultural diversity, and organizational variety of Christianity surpass those of the other great world religions.”
Understanding Christian Mission: Participation in Suffering and Glory - Book Review (Revisited)
Witnesses to Power: Stories of God's Quiet Work in a Changing China - Book Review (Revisited)
Confronting Confucian Understandings of the Christian Doctrine of Salvation - Book Review (Revisited)
Christians in China, A.D. 600 to 2000 - Book Review (Revisited)
This is a marvelous book, and it represents the learned Sinology of a long line of French Roman Catholic scholars, going back for hundreds of years. Though he devotes most of his attention to the story of Roman Catholicism, the author does give fair and generous summaries of important aspects of Protestantism in China.
Confucius, the Buddha, and Christ - Book Review
Through the Valley of the Shadow - Book Review
Voices from the Past: Historical Reflections on Christian Missions in China - Book Review (Revisited)
This selection of thirty short excerpts from the letters, diaries, and writings of outstanding missionaries and leaders is meant to be read one at a time. “Readers are expected to linger over each quotation, perhaps reading only one quotation a day, and to spend time afterward in prayer, reflecting on them in light of their own experiences,” explains the author, a veteran Christian worker in China.







