CI-GCC are two related ministries. Together, we are very small. Still, we believe that we have a distinct part to play as members of the Body of Christ working among and for the Chinese.
Chinese Theology: Text and Context, Part II - Book Review (Revisited)
This volume contains discussions of Chinese Roman Catholic and Protestant writings from the sixteenth century to the early twenty-first century. In her later chapters, Chloe Starr presents the work of both “Mainline” and “House church” writers, with sections on church and academic publications, popular hymns, and blogs by church leaders.
Chinese Theology: Text and Context, Part I - Book Review (Revisited)
The Church in China, Part II - Book Review (Revisited)
The Church in China - Book Review (Revisited)
[These] articles and reviews span both Roman Catholicism and Protestantism from the sixteenth century to the present, and they touch upon history, theology, evangelism and social action, the impact of Christianity upon Chinese society, and challenges facing the Chinese church today. . . . The result is a rich sampling of voices on a wide variety of issues concerning Christianity in China, and it will be of interest to an equally broad range of readers.
Tibet: The Roof of the World - Book Review
China: Ancient Culture, Modern Society - Book Review (Revisited)
The authors of China: Ancient Culture, Modern Society declare, “China has arrived, big time.” Their work offers a primer for readers who want to be informed about the world’s newest superpower with an accessible yet comprehensive text. As the authors, G. Wright Doyle and Peter Xiaoming Yu, hail from the United States and China respectively, their work is well- qualified to present China to American readers.
Opening China - Book Review (Revisited)
Who said history wasn’t relevant? Though at first glance a biography of a largely-discredited independent German missionary who was born almost two centuries ago might seem to have little to do with our current situation, Jessie Lutz’s masterful narrative and analysis of the life and times of Karl Gützlaff provokes the question, Has anything changed?