Sunday, November 18, 2012

While thinking about turkey, stuffing and being thankful...


It might be tempting, even fitting, to say something bland or non-confrontationally pleasant about a turkey and some stuffing and something vague about being thankful, since we are entering the Thanksgiving season this week.  But, a Sunday in November has been dedicated to a prayer effort for the Persecuted Church since 1996. Being a Christian believer is not about playing games, it’s not about trying to gain God’s favor by following rules and regulations, it’s not a Sunday-morning-only religious exercise. And, being challenged by Hebrews 13:3  Remember those who are in prison, as though you were in prison with them, and those who are mistreated, since you also are in the body, I will take primary focus off our needs and onto others.

Here is what’s going on:

IRAN:  Pastor Youcef Nadarkhani,  32 years old, married with two small boys, was in jail for 1,000+ days, accused of apostasy against Islam.  After Christians around the world, running into the millions after joining in a Twitter campaign, were praying for him he was suddenly released two months ago. 

Elsewhere in that same country, there have been and continues to be, waves of arrests of Christians, and regular raids on Christian meetings, destruction and confiscation of Bibles and church properties.  An Iranian pastor, based in London, England, relates how “one Iranian Christian describes the house church movement ‘like a James Bond movie’ – how they are careful about their communication, how they switch meeting places, how they turn off their phones, how they take out their SIM cards.”

EGYPT: The media has told us about the “Arab Spring”, but listen to what is the motto of the Muslim Brotherhood who took power there last year: “Allah is our objective, the Prophet is our leader; the Quran is our law; Jihad is our way; dying in the way of Allah is our highest hope”.  Whereas there was relative safety for Christian believers, most of them Coptic Christians, prior to last year’s revolution in Egypt, imagine what that type of a motto does to the safety of Christians right now!

SYRIA: another Middle Eastern country, is currently suffering through a civil war which has so far cost 30,000 lives.  Conditions for Christians and non-Christians alike have gotten worse.  A pastor there sent an email to the organization Open Doors USA.  He said: “I can cry like Nehemiah because the walls of our cities are burnt and the people in great trouble and disgrace.  I can weep like Jeremiah because of the intensity and the spread of evil.  I can mourn like David because of the indiscriminate brutal killing of innocent people, children, women, elderly, youth.  But despite the dangers, the churches remain determined to extend the Gospel and to offer aid as they are able. The pastor concludes: “While we can see and sense the evil powers spreading a dark cloud over the country, closing the door for the light of hope, we still trust our all-sovereign God ‘who always leads us in triumphal procession in Christ’” (2 Cor. 2:14).  Notice how his images and practical theology emanate from the Bible and its people!

NIGERIA: particularly in the northern states, the vicious group Boko Haram (Hausa = “Western education is sin”) routinely attack Christian churches during services and massacre dozens of worshipers at a time.  Still, unafraid, the believers keep going to church to worship the Lord;  SUDAN: Christians are still fleeing aggression from their own government which has killed thousands;  PAKISTAN: people are still awaiting the verdict for a 14 year old Christian girl – Rimsha Masih – who was framed by a Muslim cleric with burning a Quran;  INDIA: there continues to be relentless persecution, beatings and severe harassments by Hindu mobs against Christians and pastors.  MOROCCO: deportation of Christian workers who were running children’s homes, or community development projects like job creation and education, for “proselytizing”.  Asks one of them: “We’ve always lived our lives openly; at what point does living your life become proselytizing?”

So, what do Christians do to “fight back”?  Members of the organization “Stephen’s Children” in Cairo’s slums in the garbage heaps go door-to-door to identify needs, sharing Bible stories, developing reading skills, and offer critical nutrition to the families living there.  Mama Maggie, who is in charge of Stephen’s Children says: “Greater is He who is in you than he who is in the worldChristians in Egypt have known hardships before… so, we are very happy that we are the fruit of the prayers of the martyrs and their seeds. So it’s our turn to do something until we leave.”

House-church networks in various countries report growth, also in number of converts; they refuse to let fear paralyze them.

Astonishingly, the first thing these persecuted Christians ask for isn’t activism or advocacy on their behalf; it’s prayer!  Prayer for protection against violence… prayer to remain faithful under pressure… prayer for the ability to continue their Christian service.  Prayer, not necessarily for persecution to go away, but for faith that is unwavering (!).

Those of us who confess Jesus Christ are part of His Body, a community of faith in the Living Savior and Lord.  This community is world-wide, it is rooted outside time and space, yet it is present here and now.

Add to your daily prayer list those brothers and sisters in the faith around the world who are being persecuted as they live out the same relationship with Jesus that you and I do. 

Sources: WORLD Magazine, Open Doors USA, on-site and personal interviews, etc.

Friday, November 9, 2012

Prayer for the Persecuted Church


Imagine you're on your feet, dancing and singing praises to the Lord during the Sunday morning church worship service.  Before anyone realizes what is happening, your pew neighbor crumbles to the floor. As you reach over to help him, you hear yelling and sounds of gun shots from the back of the church building.  Horrified, you hit the cement floor and take cover under the wooden bench.  Screaming drowns out singing, crying and desperate calls for help are mixed in the cacophony that follows.  The gun fire silences the cries from your friends in church.  Loud battle cries accompany the intruders and can still be heard as they exit the door, pumping their guns into the air, leaving dozens of church goers dead or wounded in their wake.
Such a situation took place last month in Nigeria.  It was the most recent of many such attacks.  Not only there; regularly in other places like Afghanistan and Viet Nam Christians suffer anything from beheadings, languishings in jail, homes ransacked and burned.  Christians are brutally persecuted and killed, and the local government is either unwilling or unable to protect its Christian citizens.

Increasingly, this is the case in more and more places around the world.  Christians are risking their lives by proclaiming their faith.  And they do it, anyway, personalizing 1 John 4:4 - "Greater is He who is in me, than he who is in the world".  Fully aware of the risk and cost, they value their life in Christ higher than the hardship they almost certainly will be confronted with.
Since 1996 one Sunday in November has marked The International Day of Prayer (IDOP).  This year, it’s Sunday, 11 November.  So far, over 100,000 churches in the US, plus in 130 countries, including almost every denomination, has participated in remembering those who are persecuted for their faith in Jesus Christ.

An entry on www.persecutedchurch.org explains: “The International Day of Prayer for the Persecuted Church (IDOP) is a global day of intercession for persecuted Christians worldwide. Its primary focus is the work of intercessory prayer and citizen action on behalf of persecuted communities of the Christian faith. We also encourage prayer for the souls of the oppressors, the nations that promote persecution, and those who ignore it.  We believe that prayer changes things. Exactly what happens is a mystery of faith. God invites us to present to Him our requests and to pray without ceasing. Persecuted Christians often plead for prayer to help them endure. The most we can do is the least we can do — pray.”

Join us in doing so this Sunday, and then add to your prayer list our persecuted brothers and sisters that they may have courage and stand strong in the faith.