Related Topics:
Cambodia
- Born Again and Again: Cambodian Evangelicals Celebrate 100 YearsIn the century since the arrival of Protestant missionaries, the church has been wiped out by genocide and forced to rebuild. Now “it’s time for the gospel to shine.”James Thompson|
- Cambodians Usher in a Miraculous Moment for ChristianityHow the Southeast Asian country went from an underground church to a church-planting boom.Kate Shellnutt in Phnom Penh|
- Cambodian Spies Were Watching Me. So Was Someone Else.After escaping the Khmer Rouge with my siblings, I learned who had been protecting me all along.Sida Lei with Monica Boothe|
- Cambodian Christians’ Government Endorsement Represents a ‘Modern-Day Miracle’With major gatherings and promises of continued religious freedom protections, evangelists are eager to see the gospel keep spreading in the Buddhist nation.Bob Craft|
- Making Missions Count: How a Major Database Tracked Thailand’s Church-Planting RevivalA movement in Southeast Asia shows how real-time reporting is building Great Commission connections.Kate Shellnutt|
- Grace Amid GenocideHow Cambodia's Killing Fields became an extraordinary ex-Communist's mission field.Tim Stafford|
- Self-Proclaimed Messiahs and Other Southeast Asian HeresiesMisconceptions about the Trinity and the exclusivity of Christ prevail.Compiled by Angela Lu Fulton|简体中文繁體中文
- Cambodia’s Child Sex Industry Is Dwindling—And They Have Christians to ThankFrom rescues to legal reform, a faithful minority changed the country’s criminal landscape.Kate Shellnutt in Phnom Penh|
- The World’s Biggest Trafficking Problem Remains in the BackgroundHow Christians in Cambodia are drawing attention to labor trafficking and the quiet power of prevention.Kate Shellnutt in Phnom Penh|
