Friday, January 25, 2008

Kenyan children pray for peace in this violence-torn country

NAIROBI, Kenya-A group of children runs up a muddy path, drenched from an unexpected downpour. A 5-year-old boy speeds in front of the pack when he suddenly spies the perfect puddle.He waits until his older sister and friends are almost parallel with him and then practically "cannon balls" to get the biggest splash. He giggles and dashes inside a small, tin shack of a Baptist church as the 8-year-olds squeal and chase after him.After three weeks of post-election violence, it's good to hear the sounds of children laughing and playing-especially in the hard-hit slums of Nairobi.Inside the church, it's wall-to-wall children-and a sound even more precious than laughter can be heard-a child's sweet, innocent prayer."Father, our country is in trouble. We pray for peace to come," an 11-year-old boy prays. "Protect us, Father. Teach people to love one another and not to fight anymore."For the last two weeks, children in this small slum area have gathered to pray for their country. The church's pastor says the children started gathering on their own, so he let them in the church. The daily prayer meeting now attracts more than 200 children ranging in age from 3 to 17.Ever since the children started praying together, the pastor says there have been no deaths, houses burned or even violence in their section of this slum. Adults recite this fact in amazement. The children, however, don't even mention it because it's exactly what they expected to happen."Pastor told us that there is power in prayer. He said we can change the country through prayer," 12-year-old Boniface explains. "So that is what we are doing, changing the country."The children evidence a depth of understanding of the issues surrounding Kenya's post-election chaos.The 12-year-old prays for President Mwai Kibaki and opposition leader Raila Odinga to sit at one table and talk peacefully. Votes cast in the election for these two candidates are under contention. The two leaders have yet to talk to each other in an effort to bring the strife in Kenya to a peaceful resolution.Caroline, 16, shows her concern for the 250,000 internally displaced people around the country. She prays they will be able to go to school somewhere and that they feel safe. UNICEF estimates that more than 40 percent of the displaced are children. Parents put their children on trucks headed to the camps for displaced people but stayed behind to protect their houses and belongings. Many sit in camps, unable to attend schools that just opened in mid-January.Another young boy prays for the people hurting others who are not from the same tribe, referring to reports of ethnic animosity throughout the country. He asks God to help them all be brothers and sisters and one people.The pastor smiles and whispers to me, "A few days ago that one asked if I knew what tribe he was. I told him no. He didn't know, either. So he told me, 'I think I belong to the tribe of Kenya.'"When it's time for the "babies" to pray, a fearless 4-year-old clasps his hands and closes his eyes so tight that his entire face scrunches up. "God, people die," he says in prayer. "Please do not let anyone die in front of my house."More than 600 people have died since elections Dec. 27. The number increases daily as violence and protests continue.An adult's concluding prayer simply thanks God for the innocent prayers of children and their faith in His answers.As soon as the "Amen" is said, the church buzzes with little voices and bottled-up energy spurts out freely. Laughing and holding hands, the children rush into the rain and head home.Even though it's the dry season and rains are not supposed to come for another month, no one complains about getting wet or muddy. The rain is an answered prayer.The children had prayed about a three-day countrywide protest called by the opposition party. They had asked God to take control and keep people from dying.Because of the rains, turnout for the protest was much smaller than expected. While there was still a lot of property damage, it was much less than predicted. Death tolls for the week were the lowest since the incidents started."See," 7-year-old Natasha whistles through her missing two front teeth. "God answers prayers."

As in the days of Noah.....

BANGLADESH: ELDERLY CHRISTIAN WOMAN’S HOME SET ABLAZE

"Set to be baptized in February, 70-year-old suffers burns on 70 percent of body..."
DHAKA, Bangladesh-Unknown attackers tried to burn a 70-year-old woman to death on January 7 after learning that she would be baptized as a Christian next month.Rahima Beoa, who was planning to be baptized on February 13 in Muslim-majority Rangpur district, 248 kilometers (154miles) northwest of the capital city of Dhaka, suffered burns on 70 percent of her body.“The unknown people wanted to burn alive the elderly woman because they came to know that she would be a Christian in the next month,” said Khaled Mintu, a regional supervisor of the Rangpur district of the Isha-E-Jamat Bangladesh denomination.“It was a devilish conspiracy to stop her being a Christian.”Beoa is the mother-in-law of Ashraful Islam, who along with his wife became a Christian two years ago. Close relatives and neighbors were said to be angry with the couple for their conversion from Islam.The 40-year-old Islam lives in Cinatuly village, located on silty land on Bangladesh’s major Tista river, with his three children and mother-in-law. “Generally local people become baptized going to the capital city, Dhaka, so that nobody knows anything about the new believers,” said Mintu. “Beoa is so geriatric that it was not very easy to bring her to Dhaka for baptism. Otherwise she would have been baptized long ago.”Roads from the silty village to Dhaka are rough, and leaving the area means villagers must walk miles to catch a bus.On the night of the attack, Islam went to the Isha-E-Jamat church with his wife and two smallest children, a service that usually takes place at night as all the villagers are day laborers or vendors.The service went late into the night as the pastor taught on baptism. News that Beoa and others would be baptized in February was said to have reached the entire village.
While Islam’s mother-in-law and 9-year-old son were sleeping at home, the attackers set their bamboo and wood home ablaze. There were two head of cattle in one corner of the house, which was built with a mansard roof of corrugated tin.“The boy managed to escape the fire,” Mintu said. “But the elderly woman was injured and got 70 percent burnt on her body, and the cattle and other stuff of the house were incinerated.”No relatives or neighbors came to put out the fire, he added.A “quack doctor” treated the elderly woman’s burns in another house, he said, because the family cannot afford treatment in a hospital.“We did not file any case in the police station against anyone, because we could not trace anyone for that arson attack,” Mintu said.In 2006, he said, more than 7,000 local Muslims came to vandalize the houses of area Christians. “They wanted to evict us because are Christian,” Mintu said. “With the help of the local government officials and police, we manage to live in this land against the strong opposition of the majority Muslims.”There are 50 Christian families within two miles in that area, he said, most of them of Muslim upbringing.
Source:Compassdirect
As in the days of Noah....

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

City sued for arresting pastor on public sidewalk:Police take just 195 seconds to detain 'peaceful' Christian leader

A lawsuit has been filed against the city of Wichita, Kan., and several of its police officers on behalf of a Christian pastor arrested just for being on public property.The civil-rights suit was filed by the Alliance Defense Fund, an advocacy organization that defends constitutional rights, on behalf of Mark Holick, pastor of Spirit One Christian Center.Spirit One also has been threatened by the Internal Revenue Service with an audit for posting messages on its marquee dealing with the value of human life, based on dozens of Bible references.Holick's arrest happened last summer when a homosexual festival was being held in a public park in Wichita.He went to share his Christian faith on public property, and it took only a little longer than three minutes after his arrival for police officers to arrest him.The trespassing charges later were dropped, but that doesn't solve the issue, according to the ADF."Exercising your First Amendment rights is not a crime," said Joel Oster, ADF senior legal counsel."Arresting Christians simply because they choose to exercise those rights in a public place is unconstitutional."The law firm noted that Holick was "attempting" to express his faith on a public sidewalk outside of an event in a public park that was celebrating homosexual behavior.
According to the records in the case, Holick had contacted the police department a week before the event and expressed his desire to communicate his religious views on the date of the homosex-fest. He was told he couldn't go into Heritage Square Park where it was being held but was told the sidewalk would be his "friend."Then on the day of the event, Holick and other church members arrived at the sidewalk outside the event and "immediately" were confronted by about 10 officers. He was ordered to leave the sidewalk or be arrested.He asked where he could go, and he was told the public sidewalks were off-limits to him, and he could go into a nearby privately owned parking lot, the lawsuit said.Since that was unreasonable, he refused, and was arrested, the lawsuit said.The trespassing count later was dismissed at the city's request after officials watched a videotape that revealed the pastor was conducting himself peacefully on a public sidewalk. But when ADF lawyers sent a request to the city asking for assurances that Holick would not be "similarly harassed" at future events, the request was ignored."Cities should not be able to silence Christian speech by arresting the speaker, only to later drop the charges after the event is over," said Oster."Such actions only serve to threaten future speakers and silence the Christian message."The claim alleges violations of the First and 14th Amendments to the U.S. Constitution.WND calls to the city went unanswered yesterday.
"Plaintiff seeks a permanent injunction and a declaration prohibiting Defendants from arresting him, or from otherwise restricting his speech, on traditional public fora due to the content and viewpoint of his speech, or because of his religion beliefs," the lawsuit said.It describes how he "wanted to communicate the gospel message to those persons participating in and attending the Event" and "wanted to attend the Event to build connections with attendees so that he might be able to share the gospel with them later."However, he never was allowed even to express his beliefs, because he was confronted by police officers "immediately," and within three minutes, 15 seconds, he had been arrested.The lawsuit alleged the city's policies and actions were arbitrary and capricious and denied Holick's fundamental rights."By forcing plaintiff to choose between abandoning his religious beliefs in order to gain access to speech in the traditional public forum, or abiding by his religious beliefs only to be arrested and prosecuted, defendants have imposed a substantial burden on plaintiff's sincerely held religious beliefs," it said.WND has reported on a series of such cases, in which Christians are arrested for praying at a homosexual festival or for nothing more than having a protest sign that is "wider than their torso."In Elmira, N.Y., police arrested seven Christians who went into a public park where a "gay" fest was beginning and started to pray, faces down, while holding their Bibles.They were cited for "disturbing the peace," and Assistant Police Chief Mike Robertson told WND the seven are accused of a "combination" of allegations under that statute, which includes the "intent" to cause a public inconvenience, any "disturbance" of a meeting of persons, obstructing vehicular or pedestrian traffic or taking part in "any act that serves no legitimate purpose."Another case developed when police in St. Petersburg, Fla., arrested five Christians for carrying signs "wider than their torsos" outside an officially designated protest area at that city's homosexual festival.St. Petersburg officials, following disturbances at a previous homosexual pride festival, implemented rules governing outdoor events that set aside "free speech zones" where protesters are allowed.
Holick's church earlier was targeted by the Internal Revenue Service for the moral statements he posted on the church's sign.The notice he got from the IRS warned him about putting his Christian beliefs on the sign, and he responded that he would continue to preach the Word of God. Attorneys said the church has responded to the IRS demands, and has not had further contact yet.In that case, Holick explained the signs all "are spiritual messages that communicate God's truth or are directly related to messages in the Bible." He also provided the IRS with a list of dozens of biblical instructions "to lift up Jesus, to rebuke sin, to save babies, to be honest, to take a righteous stand" and others.

As in the days of Noah....

Friday, January 18, 2008

Malaysian wins religion-tied battle over wife's body














KUALA LUMPUR-A Malaysian has won a battle to give his dead wife a Christian funeral after Islamic religious authorities dropped their claim to the body on the grounds of her conversion to Islam.The row over the corpse of Wong Sau Lan, a 54-year-old ethnic Chinese woman who died on Dec. 30, was the latest in a series of disputes in mostly Muslim Malaysia that have upset non-Muslims, who fear authorities are trampling on their religious rights."It was harrowing to wait for 18 days," said Ngiam Tee Kong, who was at his wife's bedside when she died in a Kuala Lumpur hospital and then suffered several sleepless nights during the custody fight for the remains."I'm definitely relieved. Hopefully it will be over in a few days."Ngiam, 53, the manager of a snooker game centre, said his ordeal began the day his wife died of kidney failure, when police told him she had converted to Islam by reciting Arabic verses during a session with a traditional healer a week earlier.But Ngiam, himself a Buddhist, challenged this version of events, maintained that his wife was a Christian baptised in November, and asked a Malaysian court to intervene."The high court has ordered that the body of the deceased be released to the husband forthwith," his lawyer Karpal Singh told reporters outside the court, adding that the body would be cremated according to Christian rites after a two-day wake."The Islamic affairs council has said the conversion of the deceased was not in accordance with Islamic law, and therefore they have no objections to the body being released to the husband," he said.Race ties, always a delicate issue in multi-racial Malaysia, have become increasingly sensitive as speculation grows that the government could call for snap polls as soon as March.
FUNERAL RIGHTS
The spectacle of non-Muslims battling for funeral rights of relatives is not new in Malaysia, where disputes over religious conversions and complaints about demolitions of churches and Hindu temples have fuelled fears of a surge in hardline Islam.In another case in 2006 involving an ethnic Indian said to have converted to Islam, religious authorities also eventually climbed down and allowed the family of van driver Rayappan Anthony, 71, to reclaim his body for Christian burial.But in 2005, as Islamic officials prepared to bury former soldier and mountain climber M Moorthy against his Hindu widow's wishes, the High Court said it had no jurisdiction over such religious matters, leaving non-Muslims unsure of their rights.Politically dominant ethnic Malay Muslims form about 60 percent of Malaysia's population of roughly 26 million, while the ethnic Indian and Chinese minorities include Hindus, Buddhists and Christians."This is a very serious case because the council should be more careful in future," said Singh."It must ascertain that any conversion is made according to Islamic law, not snatch a body and refuse to release it on the grounds that there is a conversion when there is not one, later admitting there was no lawful conversion."Ngiam and his two children would seek damages from the hospital and the Islamic affairs council for the trauma they suffered, the lawyer added.

http://in.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idINIndia-31467620080118?sp=true


As in the days of Noah....

Monday, January 14, 2008

More arson attacks reported in Alabama

BIRMINGHAM, Ala.-A spate of arson attacks have affected five churches in east Alabama-attacks that follow a string of nine church-burning incidents nearly two years ago in which three college-age men were arrested.Two 21-year-old men, both professed Satanists, were arrested Jan. 6 in connection with blazes at Woodland Baptist Church in Phenix City, Greater Peace and Goodwill AME Church in Crawford and Greater Bethelpore Baptist Church in Smiths Station in early January.Still on the loose is the person who set fire to Providence Baptist Church in rural Chilton County Jan. 12, destroying the church's fellowship hall, education space and church office. Another church in the Chilton Baptist Association, Maple Springs Baptist Church in Clanton, burned in the early hours of Dec. 29.Geoffrey Tyler Parquette, 21, and James Scott Clark, 21, were apprehended after a cross stolen from one of the first three churches was found in Parquette's grandmother's home, according to The Associated Press.In a classroom at Woodland Baptist, "Teach children to worship Satan!!" was scrawled with red paint on the wall, along with an upside-down pentagram. The church is affiliated with the Southern Baptist Convention. Amid the attacks, Concord Baptist Church in Salem, also an SBC church, was vandalized.Parquette and Clark entered not guilty pleas Jan. 7, a day after being arrested, according to AP. Between them, they face a slew of arson, burglary and criminal mischief charges."Everyone has been so great to us since the fire," Bobby Watford, pastor of Woodland Baptist, told The Alabama Baptist. "There's been a great outpouring from Alabama Baptists and others, and we are grateful. We're doing really great. We're trying to get everything together now, but everyone is optimistic."For now, the congregation, which averages 80–100 on Sunday mornings, is meeting in the local Woodland Christian School.While the church's insurance company is debating whether to pay toward repairs or rebuilding, the church is hoping for a new start in a new building."The smoke went into the blocks of that old building, and so much was lost that the people would rather just tear it down and start over," Watford said. "Some of the older members were saddened because some of them had been there as long as the church had been there, but we're looking forward to what the Lord is going to do."Roland Davis, pastor of Maple Springs Baptist, said Jan. 11 that the church was still awaiting word from the state fire marshal on the cause. But after the Providence Baptist fire, The Birmingham News reported that a spokesman for the fire marshal said the cause was "unknown, but suspicious," pending the results of tests being performed on evidence. Both fires happened just after 3 a.m."We're hoping we'll hear something shortly," Davis said.But the congregation is moving forward while it waits, he said. A building committee was to be chosen Jan. 13 so that the church can begin to move toward rebuilding. For now, Maple Springs Baptist's congregation is meeting in the old sanctuary of nearby Samaria Baptist Church."We've just had so much support, and that has made the difference," Davis said. "We really appreciate that."Rick Lance, executive director of the Alabama Baptist State Board of Missions, visited the church and presented Davis with a check from state disaster relief funds."I believe that good will come from this bad situation, and I am pleased that Alabama Baptists have cooperated together to make such disaster relief funds possible for quick response," Lance said.As for the Providence Baptist fire, officials are working to chase down the culprits."The officials say they have gotten some really good fingerprints, footprints and tire prints," said pastor Allen Foster, noting that his church is thankful that the sanctuary -- located just feet from the charred remains of its neighboring buildings-suffered some vandalism but little else.The arsonists attempted to set fire to the sanctuary on the downstairs level, but the fire burned half a poster of the books of the Bible and went out, Foster said."We're just thankful no one was hurt and that we have a place to go home to," Foster told The Alabama Baptist, speaking of the church's relatively undamaged sanctuary.The Providence congregation, emotional but in good spirits, met for services Jan. 13 a couple of miles down the road at Camp Dawson, a facility lent to them by Dawson Memorial Baptist Church in Birmingham."We hope if we can get the burned part cleaned up and get the water fixed up to the sanctuary we can meet in our own facilities next week," Foster said.In addition to the check Lance presented Maple Springs Baptist, the State Board of Missions provided Providence Baptist and Woodland Baptist with checks from the disaster relief fund and offered mobile chapels if needed."We've got lots of decisions to make, but we're going to make them as a family," Pastor Davis said to the congregation during the service Jan. 13. "We're going to get through this thing. It's bigger than you and I but not bigger than the God we serve. It felt like a death, didn't it? But it wasn't. The church is still alive."

As in the days of Noah....

Dallas Man Can Share His Faith at Transit Station

A man told by police that he can’t engage in free speech at a Dallas transit station without purchasing a ticket has been restored his First Amendment rights. Upon receiving a letter from the Alliance Defense Fund (ADF), Dallas Area Rapid Transit (DART) agreed to allow Daniel Bailey to continue his activities without buying a ticket.Bailey has been sharing his faith and handing out Gospel tracts at the station for two years.“Christians should not be treated as second-class citizens simply because they choose to exercise their faith in public,” said ADF Senior Legal Counsel Erik Stanley. “We appreciate the quick and courteous response of DART officials in resolving this matter and are pleased that Mr. Bailey will now be able to return to his activities.”

As in the days of Noah...

Sunday, January 13, 2008

Christian activist to be arraigned today for refusing to honor 'free speech zone'

The director of Christian activist group Repent America will be arraigned today in a Philadelphia courtroom on charges of unlawful preaching. Michael Marcavage had been preaching to people on a public sidewalk outside the Liberty Bell Center this past October when he was arrested by officers from the National Park Service. The arrest came after he refused to move to a so-called "free-speech zone" across the street from the building housing the Liberty Bell. The incident occurred during Repent America's annual pro-life evangelism tour, and according to Marcavage, he was just exercising his constitutional right to free speech."It's a very dangerous case and another example of how our nation is headed down this path of destruction when people are not free to speak," he cautions. "Then we find ourselves in a society in which we're no longer enjoying the liberties God has bestowed upon our nation." And it is ironic, he adds, that his right to free speech was challenged in Philadelphia, the birthplace of American freedom.The chief ranger at the site told Marcavage that due to policy changes, freedom of religion and speech are prohibited anywhere on the public park grounds without a permit, and only then if in the free-speech zone.

As in the days of Noah....

China Frees Tragedy-Laden N. Korean Activist

A North Korean activist who was imprisoned in China for helping North Korean refugees has been freed, reported a Christian human rights group Monday.Yoo Sang-joon is now safely in South Korea after spending the last four months in a prison located in northern China, according to Christian Solidarity Worldwide (CSW). He is said to have endured extreme cold during his imprisonment and was believed he would die while being confined in China.Although he was sent winter clothes early in his prison term, he was only given them on the day of his release. Yoo reportedly still suffers from a number of physical problems as a result of his incarceration.“I am grateful from the depths of my heart to CSW and CSW supporters for all the deep concern, prayer and advocacy on my behalf while I was in prison,” said Yoo, according to CSW.Yoo, a North Korean survivor, was arrested near the Chinese-Mongolian border while trying to rescue other North Koreans from danger in China. He had lost his wife and youngest son in the North Korean famine. He realized the same fate awaited him and his remaining son if they remained in the country, and decided to flee to China.But unable to travel together, his 10-year-old son, Chul Min, attempted to cross the Mongolian border by himself. Unfamiliar with the inhospitable terrain, he wandered 26 hours and-suffering from dehydration and weakened from the famine-died before crossing the border.Yoo himself was able to reach South Korea and is a citizen, but he continues to be haunted by the loss of his family. As a result, he has dedicated his life to helping North Korean refugees in China, especially children, at the risk of his own safety.South Korean activists consider Yoo’s case unique because of his tragic personal story.It is said that at least 500,000 North Koreans have crossed the border over to China in the past 10 years. North Koreans who flee to China are considered “refugees” deserving of protection by the U.N. Special Rapporteur on North Korea, but China has claimed they are “economic migrants” and not refugees.China has used the status as an excuse to return North Korean refugees back to their country where they face imprisonment, torture, and sometimes execution for leaving the country – a state crime.North Korea is one of the most repressive regimes in the world and is ranked by the watchdog Open Doors as the world’s worst persecutor of Christians. Citizens of the communist state are forced to adhere to a personality cult that revolves around worshipping current dictator Kim Jong Il and his deceased father, Kim Il Sung.In the face of these grave consequences, Yoo’s punishment is considered light.“The fact that Yoo Sang-joon was released after only four months, in contrast to other activists who have served up to and surpassing four years, is surely a testament to your prayers, network and fervent advocacy,” said a CSW contact on the ground in Asia (location cannot be identified for security reason). “We thank you all so very much!”

Bible Society of Kenya Appeals for Prayer

The Bible Society of Kenya asked for prayers on Tuesday as a quick solution to the post-election crisis which has slipped further out of reach. Kenyans reach out to receive food aid handed out by the Kenyan Red Cross, Tuesday, Jan.8, 2008 in the Kibera slum in Nairobi. Kenya's president and his chief rival made key concessions to end the dispute over the country's elections, calling off protests and agreeing to talks under pressure from the United States as the death toll from a week of violence reached nearly 500.Elizabeth Muriuki, the General Secretary of the Bible Society of Kenya, has asked that people pray for President Mwai Kibaki and the leader of the opposition Raila Odinga, who remain at loggerheads over the disputed outcome of the December 27 election that secured Kibaki’s re-election and triggered mass violence and rioting.More than one week later, as many as 500 people are believed to have died in the ethnic violence and clashes between police and protesters. Looters have only added to the fatal mix, to the dismay of ordinary Kenyans who have crossed the borders into Uganda or sought refuge in schools and churches.“The general elections resulted in chaos we have never experienced in our lives,” said Muriuki. “Innocent people lost their lives and thousands were displaced from their homes. We are calling on all of you to join us in prayer that God may intervene.”Churches were filled on Sunday with thousands of Kenyans worn down by the turmoil and praying that God would intervene in the country, which was until last month’s election regarded as a bulwark of democracy and economic progress on the largely volatile African continent.“We are praying for peace which only God can give us,” Muriuki said. “Above all, the escalation of the political problem is due to a lack of personal commitment to God by the perpetrators. Please pray that they may know God in a personal way.”Outbreaks of violence and demonstrations on the streets of the Kenyan capital, Nairobi, have prevented most Bible Society staff there from reaching the office, which remains open and manned by three staff members. They say they fear for their safety.The international community has heaped pressure on Odinga and Kibaki to meet face to face, yet the two remain as hostile as ever.Odinga and his opposition Orange Democratic Movement rejected Kibaki’s offer to form a government of national unity, saying that he stole the election and must therefore step down from the presidency and enter talks with an international mediator over the prospect of a new election in a few months time. Most recently, Kibaki invited Odinga for face-to-face talks.The head of the African Union, Ghanaian President John Kufuor, was due to arrive in Nairobi Tuesday night to start mediation talks.
Muriuki added, “Please pray for those who have lost their loved ones in the skirmishes. Pray for the thousands of ordinary people who have been displaced and whose property has been burned down or looted.”

As in the days of Noah....

Seven Churches Bombed in Iraq

At least seven churches in Iraq were bombed Sunday in what appears to be coordinated attacks on Orthodox Christians celebrating New Year’s Eve.Mortar shells, explosive devices and car bombs were used in attacks targeting churches and monasteries in Baghdad and Mosul, according to Dubai-based Khaleej Times newspaper. At least six people were wounded, including two guards, reported Voices of Iraq news agency.In the explosion at Saint Maskinta Church in Mosul, the bomb destroyed the external wall of the church and caused panic among children and nuns inside where the church had an orphanage for girls.“I’m very upset. That the explosions went off at the same time proves that this was part of a plan,” said Mosul’s Chaldean archbishop, Farac Raho, on the TV channel Ishtar, according to the Assyrian International News Agency (AINA).“Both our Muslim brothers and we had just celebrated Eid and Christmas at the same time this year and everything went well,” he said, referring to the Gregorian calendar still used by the Eastern Orthodox Church where Christmas and New Year fall on a later date.“But the opposition has never really stopped pointing their weapons at us…Iraq’s government must immediately act against violence directed towards us Christians,” the archbishop pleaded.On Monday, Iraqi Vice President Tariq al-Hashimi, a Sunni, condemned the attacks and expressed sympathy with the Christian “brothers.”“I stand with them against this brutal attack that turned happiness into misery and concerns,” he said, according to the Khaleej Times.“Iraqis have a lot more to do to free themselves from the phenomenon of violence and terrorism, despite indications of relative improvement to a level of security,” according to Adnkronos International news site.He called on Iraqi president Jalal Talabani to use “care and prudence to cure Iraq from this phenomenon. ”Persecution such as church bombings, kidnappings, as well as general violence and instability has forced a disproportionate number of Christians to flee Iraq – nearly half of all refugees leaving the country are Christians, according to the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees. Christians in Iraq, composed mostly of Chaldeans, accounts for less than three percent of the country’s population. Today there are about 600,000 Iraqi Christians – down from 1.2 million before the 2003 U.S.-led offensive.Many Christians in Iraq and abroad, as well as religious freedom advocates, have expressed concern of the extinction of Christians in Iraq – either through death or forced emigration – if more is not done to protect the powerless minority group.“Many believe that it had become a little safer for non-Muslims in Iraq but now even those who held that hope have begun to waver,” said Iskander Bikasha, an editor of the Iraq-focused news site Ankawa.com, to AINA. “It’s not just churches that are being bombed but even monasteries and convents.”“It’s a war but we are not at war,” he added emotionally. “We are not a part of this war. We carry no weapons. We kill no one. We turn the other cheek. A day doesn’t go by without us hearing reports about Assyrians, also called Chaldeans and Syrians, who have been killed.”But some Iraqi Christians are defying the violence by refusing to allow persecution to stop their worship service. At one of the bombed churches in Baghdad on Sunday, believers still met after the attack to hold the Epiphany mass.“We have decided to continue to go to church, let them bomb us, we’ve had enough,” said “Daniel” (name withheld for security reason) to AINA. “It’s our country too. If they want to wipe us out, they’ll be able to do it anyway. I will die proud,” he said in defiance of increasing Christian persecution.Christians are especially vulnerable in Iraq because they hold no political or military power. In October, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki had vowed to protect and support Iraq’s Christian community.

As in the days of Noah....

Worst Christian Persecution Expected in Saudi Arabia, N. Korea

Islamic Saudi Arabia and communist North Korea are expected to be the world’s worst persecutors of Christians in 2008, a church persecution advocacy group predicted.In both countries, Christianity is illegal and practice of the religion is strictly forbidden and results in severe punishments.“In 2008 millions of Christians will face persecution,” said Andy Dipper, CEO of U.K.-based Release International, which released the survey of Christian persecution in the new year.“They’re our family. If it was your husband, wife, daughter or son behind bars you’d move heaven and earth to help them,” he said. “So what better new year’s resolution than to take your stand with your brothers and sisters imprisoned for their faith?”According to Release, most of the persecution of Christians in 2008 will take place in four “zones” – Islam, Communism, Hinduism and Buddhism. Harassment can originate from the government or its agents – such as the secret police, military, and judiciary – or from non-governmental movements, such as militant Islamic groups.In the Islam zone, Saudi Arabia stands out not only for its extremely harsh laws against all religion other than the Wahhabi branch of Islam, but also because it spends millions each year disseminating Islamic teachings around the world.These religious literatures have been accused by the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) of spreading intolerance among young Muslims by teaching them to hate “infidels,” or non-believers.Besides Saudi Arabia, moderate Muslim countries are also guilty of not providing enough protection for their Christian minorities.In moderate countries such as Egypt and Turkey, Christians still suffer from kidnapping, forced conversion to Islam, imprisonment, destruction of churches, execution, rape of Christian girls, torture, and discrimination in education, employment, housing and legal system.“Islamist militants often view Christians and non-Muslims as infidels, who must be converted, by force if necessary, or be killed or driven out of Islamic lands,” according to Release. “They believe it is their religious duty to impose Islamic Sharia law throughout their nation.”Meanwhile, in communist regimes such as China, Cuba, and North Korea, believers face a more systemic form of persecution that involves house arrest, interrogation, fines, and imprisonment.But in North Korea, which remains arguably the world’s worst persecutor of Christians, believers are imprisoned in special labor camps, brutally tortured and even publicly executed.“Pressures include an absolute ban on owning a Bible, assembling to pray or to read the Scriptures, and evangelism – even of one’s own children,” said Tim Peters of Helping Hands Korea. Helping Hands, a partner of Release International, helps refugees escape North Korea.Peters added, “Being discovered as a member of the underground church inside North Korea can result in one’s entire family being sent to a prison camp, and even torture and summary execution in extreme cases.”In the Hindu zone, Christians face extremists who have lately increased attacks against not only believers in Jesus but also Muslims. This Hindu nationalism is linked to one of the country’s largest political parties, the Bharatiya Janata Party, which is associated with a number of militant Hindu groups.
Believers are also persecuted in Buddhist Burma and Sri Lanka where religious militants regard Christianity as a threat to national identity and unity.“Persecution is part of the normal Christian life – just as Jesus warned. But Jesus also told us to love one another, sacrificially,” said Release International’s Dipper. “And the Bible encourages us to bear one another’s burdens.“At Release we’ve found it an immense privilege to stand with these faithful, overcoming Christians in prayer and in providing practical support,” he said, “And we have so much to learn from them.”Release International works to support persecuted Christians in some 30 countries through its global network. The organization supports Christians imprisoned for their faith and the family they left behind. It also helps church workers, pastors and evangelists by providing training, Bibles, Christian literature and broadcasts.Other efforts include reconstructing Christian homes destroyed in riots and providing legal aid, shelter, medicine and welfare.Release International is a member of UK organizations Global Connections, the Evangelical Alliance and the Micah Network.

As in the days of Noah....

Malaysian Christians Respond to Gov't Flip-Flop on 'Allah' Ban

Malaysian Christians have expressed deep disappointment and regret over the comment made by a local government minister regarding the prohibition of non-Muslims from using the word ”Allah.”In a statement to the media, Bishop Paul Tan Chee Ing, the head of the Malaysian Christian Federation, reiterated the fact that the term ”Allah” was used by Arab Christians before the founding of Islam and said the ban was contravening the right to the freedom of religion as outlined in the constitution."The word 'Allah' is a pre-Islamic word used by Arab Christians before Islam came into being," Ing stated."We maintain and we have always told the government that we have the right to use the word 'Allah' whether in our Bahasa Malaysia publications or otherwise."The battle over the use of ”Allah” started when the Malaysian government threatened to revoke a local Catholic tabloid’s permit to publish . In response, The Herald, the weekly newspaper of the Catholic Church in Malaysia, filed a lawsuit last month against the government, claiming that the ban is unconstitutional and violates freedom of religion.Not long after the Herald filed its suit, the government back-tracked, stating in a fax to the Herald's editor that the newspaper will get its 2008 permit with no conditions attached, according to the British Broadcasting Corp.The government’s position appeared to change again, however, when the de-facto minister for Islamic affairs, Abdullah Zin, told reporters that cabinet agreed the term should only be used by Muslims.Zin said the cabinet is of the view that "Allah" refers to the Muslim God and can only be used by Muslims, who comprise about 60 percent of Malaysia's population.Earlier this month, Zin had explained that the use of the word “Allah” by other religions “may arouse sensitivity and create confusion among Muslims."

As in the days of Noah....

Thursday, January 10, 2008

Chinese Christians to use Olympics for outreach

China-The Summer Olympics in China will be a moment of pride for the country, as well as one of scrutiny. While China gets a chance to display its best, world attention will also shed light on its failings.The Chinese government's emphasis on the Games has reached a frenzied pitch as they try to shake off the negative image. They're hoping their success will help them re-draw that and showcase the country as a global power. That's forcing an obsession that could work to the church's advantage.China Partner Ministries' Erik Burklin agrees."They want to show the world that China is progressively thinking forward, not backward."As with every Olympic contest, hundreds of faith-based groups turn out to welcome the thousands of spectators. But, ministry is not limited to just the outside partners.Burklin says it's a strategic time for believers and those they've trained as church leaders."The Chinese church is looking to the Olympics as an opportunity for Gospel advancement and for sharing Christ with those who are coming to their country. I find it significant in that not just foreign organizations are looking to the Olympics to see how this could possibly be a positive for Gospel advancement, but the Chinese church itself is looking towards this as an opportunity."Their excitement continues to build. It was felt during one of Burklin's visits to a partnering church in Chengdu. "It never stops to amaze me how many people gather to worship God on a Sunday morning," he said. "There is a genuine hunger for God's Word and a deep desire to grow spiritually."The ministry has been serving the church in China by equipping more pastors and lay pastors to carry out the work of Christ. Pray that God would raise up more Chinese Christian leaders who will faithfully proclaim the life-changing message of Jesus Christ. Pray that God would open the doors for Chinese teams to minister freely during the Games.
http://www.mnnonline.org/article/10778
As in the days of Noah....

Muslim clerics want evangelistic work restricted in Algeria

Algeria-Disconcerting news is coming from Algeria and Afghanistan. Glenn Penner of Voice of the Martyrs' Canada says Islamic scholars there are calling for a crackdown on Christians. "This head of the Islamic Association is claiming that a convert gets paid over seven thousand dollars if they become a Christian. So all you have to do is start spreading these lies around enough, and the government might say, 'We probably should do something about this.'"He's referring to Sheikh Abdul-Rahman Al-Shayban who says Christian missionary campaigns have "reached the point of aggressions against Algerians." According to the Arabic TV station, "Al Arabiya," Shayban called for the crackdown under the religious practice law for non-Muslims.The tone isn't limited to Algeria. It's also being felt in Afghanistan. According to Penner, members of the Afghanistan Islamic Council warned President Hamid Karzai not to allow foreign missions into the country, especially to the impoverished areas.The council claimed that missionaries in Kabul and in the provinces were forcibly converting Muslims, enticing them by giving them Bibles and promising to send them abroad. The Islamic scholars warned of serious consequences if the government did not stop Christians from preaching and evangelizing.Penner believes the Islamists are spreading misinformation to stir nationalist sympathies. As to whether this will curb evangelism, he says,"They take what is a very innocent act and give it serious implications. For those who are ministering in that country, both nationals and expatriates, certainly, they're going to be looked at with more scrutiny and suspicion. We need to be praying for them that they'll continue to operate with integrity and yet continue to operate fearlessly as they try to win men and women to Christ."Ask God to thwart the attempts of those who seek to hinder His work in Afghanistan and Algeria. Pray that His servants in these countries will be emboldened to carry on their service to Christ wherever God leads them. Pray that those who accuse Christians of forcible conversion will see that that the Gospel message is one of a free gift, not coercion.
http://www.mnnonline.org/article/10777
As in the days of Noah....

Attack on church leaves Christians wondering in Russia

Russia-A previously-unknown youth movement has attacked a church in Kaluga, Russia, which is southwest of Moscow. Many Christians are wondering if this was an isolated incident or a sign of things to come.According to the Slavic Legal Center, an organization that defends the rights of minority Christians in Russia, a watchman at a Baptist church noticed a group of youths scoping out the building and asked them to leave. A short time later, he heard the sound of breaking glass, but he was too frightened to investigate. Bottles and pellet guns were used in the vandalism.A pastor told the Legal Center that this is not the first time the church has been targeted by vandals, but the note attached to one of the bottles was unprecedented. It read: "We are not happy to see you here and ask that you leave our city. If you refuse, we will help you to leave... Get out of here, you pitiful American lackeys of Satan."That same night, a Pentecostal church nearby was vandalized. The culprits left a note claiming to represent the pro-Kremlin youth group "Nashi," which in the past has issued strong "anti-sect" statements. According to the Legal Center's earlier reporting, "anti-sect" leaflets were circulated around the city in recent weeks.Russian Ministries Moscow Regional Director Paul Tokarchuk says, "I think this is a growing trend in Russia. We already have many cases in many other places in the country."Tokarchuck says this incident has affectd their work. "The pastor was a Russian Ministries Missionary. And also, the church was the home of a 'School Without Walls' training program. Up to 45 students are going through the seminars.He continues: "We'll not stop. We will carry on, and we will continue doing seminars like School Without Walls to bring more young leaders to reach this next generation."
MNN's Greg Yoder is traveling with Russian Ministries this week to help with their Russian Christmas outreach called, "Greatest Gift Exchange - Project of Hope." Thousands of young people around Russia will be receiving gifts along with copies of God's Word during Christmas, which in Russia is January 7.Pray that God would move in the hearts of young people. Pray that there would be incredible "Paul like" conversions for the youth who are attacking churches across the country.
http://www.mnnonline.org/article/10761
As in the days of Noah....

Coordinated blasts rock churches in Iraq

Iraq-Compass Direct reports that four Iraqi churches and three convents were damaged in coordinated bomb blasts Sunday. It's a day on which many Iraqi Christians celebrate either Epiphany or Christmas Eve, according to some Eastern liturgical calendars.
Sites hit in Mosul:
- Chaldean Church of Saint Paul
- Nunnery of Dominican Sisters
- Orphanage of the Chaldean Sisters
Sites hit in Baghdad:
- Rum Orthodox Church (where the guard was injured)
- Mar Ghorghis chaldean church in Ghadir area
- Saint Paul Chaldean Church in Zafaraniya area where, according to Mgr. Warduni, the carbomb was discovered before its explosion and defused.
- Chaldean Sisters Nunnery in Zafaraniya
According to the reports, the blasts occurred within five minutes of each other at approximately 11:00 a.m. There were no fatalities, but Open Doors' Carl Moeller confirms the report and thinks it was geared to send a message to the remnant church. "The message that the terrorists want to send to the Christian community is, 'We don't want you here'."With the vast majority of Iraq's violence stemming from Sunni-Shiite fighting, it's hard to say whether the typical association of Christianity with the West is the main cause of attacks against Iraqi Christians. The violence has forced nearly 40% of the Christian population to seek refuge in the North in Kurdistan. Pope Benedict XVI on Monday called for Iraq's constitution to include provisions to protect minorities, including Christians."Our call to the church is to stand with them, to answer their requests for help. It's not that they want to flee: they want to stay in their homes; they want to stay in their communities. But they need help," Moeller explains. Many are forced to live hand-to-mouth and are in dire need of supplies. Fleeing North presents a whole different set of problems.There are some groups of Christians who fled with the clothes on their backs.That means they're facing a winter without enough warm clothes or shelter.Many of them stayed until the last possible moment. Moeller says that's where Open Doors comes in."They need the assistance of particular organizations like Open Doors to provide the necessary means for them to stay."Christian IDPs and refugees need relief supplies, structural help and spiritual counseling. Open Doors supports them in the basics of every day life: food, housing, heating, clothes and medical care. In Syria and Jordan, Open Doors helps with similar relief for the neediest families among the refugees.The situation isn't improving much. Islamist groups are reputed to have purged Christians from entire neighborhoods. The blasts brought an end to a fragile peace that Iraq's Christian minority had begun to enjoy in recent months.Moeller explains, "That is why Open Doors and other agencies are working very hard right now to strengthen the Christian community there, to make sure that a witness remains in that country, and that the cause of Christ continues to go forward, despite the attacks of the enemy."Through helping the refugees, Open Doors has the opportunity to establish a relationship of trust, which could revive the faith of nominal Christians who are frustrated with religion because they feel that their spiritual leaders did not care for them as they should.
http://www.mnnonline.org/article/10770
As in the days of Noah....

Religious tensions erupt in deadly riot in Nigeria

Nigeria-Last week, a second violent attack in the same Nigerian town in the last few months resulted in ten deaths and three Christian churches burned.Glenn Penner of Voice of the Martyrs Canada says this violence is evidence of ongoing tensions in northern Nigeria. "It's certainly not unusual for it to take place in Northern Nigeria, although for it to take place in the same city so close together is a little bit unsual."The tension spilled over when suspicions leaked that Christian students had removed foundation blocks from a new high school mosque under construction.Eyewitnesses say Muslim students began attacking their Christian peers during school.The violence gradually spread into town, where others joined in.Dozens of Christian homes were set on fire along with the three churches."They see each other as threats to their religion, and so they believe, as the apostle Paul did when he was still a persecutor, that what they're doing is in the name of God," said Penner.A committee of Christian and Islamic elders convened to prevent the violence from spreading.They invited Muslims to serve on the security committee as well, but the committee was seemingly unsuccessful as violence continued into the next day.One associate pastor of a local church ran to his nearby church, where he watched as Muslims set fire to his home.He lost everything.While it seems obvious that the incident began as a result of religious friction, the governor has told new sources that he believes his political enemies hired hoodlums to initiate the incident.He delayed his pilgrimage to Mecca to attend to the crisis.Penner said that the older generation does what it can to prevent incidents like this from occurring."Both Muslim and Christian leaders often try to talk to these young people to tell them to realize that acts of violence are not the way to solve problems. But unfortunately, these young men don't always listen to their elders."
As in the days of Noah....

Pastor Begins New Ministry After Attack

India-Gospel for Asia reports that a persecuted native missionary in Madhya Pradesh has now begun a fruitful ministry.Pastor Roshan was threatened by anti-Christian extremists in one village.Death threats were posed to Roshan if he returned to share the Gospel again.Roshan did return-the next day.He was attacked by the extremists with knives, rods, and other weapons. The attackers also stole his belongings and threw him out of the village gates.The GFA district leader and Roshan went to police to file a report.However, police informed them that there was nothing they could do.The district leader went to the extremists later asking that they return Roshan's belongings.They refused unless Roshan agreed to never return to the village.With no options, Roshan agreed.This incident did not stop Roshan's passion for sharing the Gospel. Roshan now has a growing ministry in a neighboring village where he works with two established GFA missionaries.Roshan would like to, someday, be able to reach out to the extremists who persecuted him.
http://www.mnnonline.org/article/10775
As in the days of Noah....

Bible college classes delayed due to violence in Kenya

Kenya- Association of Baptists for World Evangelism's missionary team in Kenya has decided it is not safe enough yet to commence classes next week at their Bible college.The situation is hard for students to grasp, especially in light of their most recent studies in Christian ethics. Many of them have neighbors who have lost everything during the violence, and one student witnessed a murder.Missionaries Gary and Mary Strange have been taking care of friends and neighbors as the need arises. One friend they're caring for is Mourice, who moved to Nairobi for work to support his family living in the country. The Chinese restaurant he was working at closed, like most other businesses. The Strange's provided for Mourice who cannot get his paycheck until the restaurant reopens. Mourice came to the Strange's for shelter when the area he was staying in became increasingly dangerous. He was the only person from the Luo tribe in a place where everyone else was from the Kikuyu tribe.Another man named Patrick came to the Strange's when his house was burned down. Patrick, his wife and three children are now homeless. Although they own a shop where they make maandazi-a type of donut, they are unable to find out if the shop is still standing.
Though the Stranges said the protests are dying down, the chaos has given troublemakers a reason to loot and murder. The tribal undercurrent of Kenya usually moves along peacefully. However, with politics involved, the spark has been lit for people to bring up old wounds with other tribes.
http://www.mnnonline.org/article/10772
As in the days of Noah.....

Ministry responds to refugee needs in Kenya

Kenya-Africa's Union head is now stepping in to try and bring an end to the political standoff in Kenya. Fresh violence broke out when President Mwai Kibaki announced his cabinet.The protestors have created roadblocks, which effectively cut off supplies to the hardest hit area.200,000 people are already displaced within the country and in need of emergency aid. Christian Reformed World Relief Committee's U.S. Executive Director Andrew Ryskamp says, "It's very difficult to get supply trucks.Transport companies are even hesitant to put their trucks on the road.But fortunately, we had some food that was already stored in the Eldoret area. So we have staff who are dedicated to the long term work, as well as staff who are dedicated to the relief operation."Because CRWRC has worked for many years in Kenya, it is in a position to play a role in providing long-term relief that Ryskamp says could run into the hundreds of thousands of dollars before affected communities can return to building their capacity and developing local resources. "We have set up a relief fund for Kenya and are asking people to give financially if they are able."Ryskamp says their team's response is an evangelistic declaration. "Standing next to them is a way of demonstrating that we are the community of Christ together. Our staff are continuing to work with people--that's an element of hope that's being brought to them. One of the aspects of our programs is also to work at peace and reconciliation."CRWRC has five full-time staff members in Kenya. The country is also a hub for CRWRC's HIV/AIDS coordinator for the East/South African region. Partners Worldwide, a CRC business-development ministry, also has a staff person in Kenya. All personnel are reported to be safe.Chris Shiundu, national relief manager for CRWRC in Kenya, will meet with a relief consortium consisting of Dorcas Aid, Anglican Church of Kenya (ACK) and Nazarene Compassionate Ministries in Nairobi this Friday to explore additional ways of working together. Click here if you can help.
http://www.mnnonline.org/article/10774
As in the days of Noah....

Wednesday, January 9, 2008

Woman loses right to wear cross:Court decides in favor of British Airways in discrimination suit

A Christian British Airways employee who sued the company after it required her to cover up a cross necklace while on the job has lost her discrimination suit, but she vows to return to work tomorrow wearing the cross.As WND reported, Heathrow check-in worker Nadia Eweida, who is a Coptic Christian and whose father is Egyptian and mother English, was sent home after refusing to remove the cross, which British Airways claimed violated its dress code.Eweida, who was placed on unpaid leave, sued her employer, charging religious discrimination, since the company allowed employees of other religions, such as Islam and Hinduism, to wear faith-related items, including clothing, jewelry and religious markings.The suit continued despite the airline loosening its cross prohibition last year. An attorney affiliated with the Alliance Defense Fund represented Eweida in court."Christian employees should not be singled out for discrimination. This decision will be appealed," said ADF Chief Counsel Benjamin Bull, in a statement. "According to British Airways, it's OK for employees to wear a symbol of their faith unless it's a Christian cross. The airline took no action against employees of other religions who wore jewelry or symbols of their religion. That type of intolerance is inconsistent with the values of civilized communities around the world." The 56-year-old Eweida is quoted by BBC as saying: "I'm very disappointed. I'm speechless really because I went to the tribunal to seek justice. But the judge has given way for BA to have a victory on imposing their will on all their staff."Eweida lost her initial suit against the company but won an injunction on appeal in the Reading Employment Tribunal. However, in yesterday's ruling in the case, Eweida v. British Airways, the court ruled the airline can continue to prohibit Eweida from visibly wearing her cross. The court concluded that other types of religious symbols, such as turbans, bangles and other religious markings, are unable to be concealed and are therefore acceptable."No Christian should be forced to hide her faith in the workplace, particularly when a double-standard exists targeting only Christians for discriminatory treatment," said Bull. "This case should be of particular interest to the American customers of British Airways who understand and value religious liberty."In a statement, British Airways said: "We have always maintained that our uniform policy did not discriminate against Christians, and we are pleased that the tribunal's decision supports our position."Our current policy allows symbols of faith to be worn openly and has been developed with multi-faith groups and our staff."Nadia Eweida has worked for us for eight years and continues to be a valued member of our staff."Regarding appealing the case, Eweida commented, "It's not over until God says it's over."

As in the days of Noah....

Chinese police release bookstore owner:'This is a clear victory of rule of law and international intervention'

The owner of a Christian bookstore in China, along with several others associated with his case, have been released by police, more than a month after being summarily jailed without explanation, according to China Aid Association.Shi Weihan, who was taken into custody shortly after Thanksgiving during police raids on his home and office, is a businessman who works as a travel agent, and recently got governmental permission to publish some Christian book titles, a friend, American businessman Ray Sharpe, told WND.The government had declined to release information about Shi or where he was being held. The individuals apparently were under suspicion of illegally printing and distributing Christian literature.But China Aid this week confirmed his release, and reported eyewitnesses said he was in good spirits and relatively stable physical condition."Shi's family members asked CAA to thank the tireless efforts of the international community for his release," the organization said.The release apparently means that Chinese authorities have decided against a formal trial, and that criminal charges have been dismissed, China Aid said. The organization said under Chinese law, people can be detained administratively for 37 days, but then either a formal arrest warrant must be issued or the people released."The Chinese government has made a positive step … regarding this case," said Bob Fu, president and founder of China Aid. "This is a clear victory of rule of law and international intervention."China Aid sources reported that the Beijing Haidian District prosecution office assigned to the case ruled it was unable to proceed with formal charges because of "insufficient evidence."China Aid said the decision follows the Communist party's conference, held while Shi was jailed, on the collective study of religion and religious policy. "During the conference, President Hu Jintao reiterated the government's stance on the 'implementation of free religious policy' stressing law-abiding management on religious affairs and support to self-governances of religious groups," China Aid said.The organization, however, said China isn't consistent in such decisions yet."While the government's decision in the Shi Weihan case should be lauded, hundreds of prisoners persecuted for their beliefs still remain in custody," the group said. "As is the case of Xinjiang church leader Zhou Heng, who was arrested in August of 2007 for receiving 'illegally printed' Bibles. Zhou, who was arraigned on the same charges as Shi Weihan, continues to serve an unjust sentence behind bars."These accounts, and others, are examples of the Chinese government's failure to remain consistent in cases receiving less international attention," China Aid said.The case against Shi had gotten considerable attention at least partly because he is the father of a U.S. citizen.Sharpe told WND questions were directed to both the Chinese government and the U.S. embassy because the man's daughter, Grace Shi, 7, is a U.S. citizen, and was forced into hiding with her Chinese mother and 11-year-old sister.Sharpe, who said he was able to confirm information about the family because he lived for a number of years in China, told WND Shi is a life-long resident of Beijing, but was arrested "in his Christian literature bookstore in a high-class business tower near the Olympics Village."He said Shi's younger brother and Shi's wife, Jing Zhang, also were taken into custody but were released after questioning.The family's home also was raided at 5 a.m. on Nov. 28 by members of the Beijing Public Security Bureau, Sharpe said. Officers confiscated Christian literature from the home, the family's company office, and the bookstore, he said.The daughter, Grace, is an American citizen because she was born during the family's visit to the U.S. in 2000. She and her older sister, "Lily," were distraught because they witnesses the raid on their home, Sharpe said.He told WND publishing Christian material is a "rarity" in China, but his friend recently had gotten permission from various authors, and had translated several books.It was feared the move was part of a larger crackdown several organizations have noted by China of anything or anyone who doesn't subscribe to government propaganda as the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing approach.Sharpe told WND he is convinced, "China will not tolerate one dissident voice during the Olympics."WND already has reported on China's Olympic blacklist. Fu confirmed documentation reveals that the nation will target 43 types of people with investigations – and possibly bans – when the 2008 Olympics are held.And those targeted will include "religious infiltrators," employees of media organizations, those tied to "illegal" religious organizations and others, the report said.The the information comes from a "secretly issued" notice from China's Ministry of Public Security that went to security officials and departments throughout the nation, Fu said."CAA learned from reliable internal Chinese government sources that in April of 2007, the Ministry of Public Security of the Chinese government issued a general nation-wide order, requiring strict examinations on all people both in China and overseas who will participate in the Olympic Games," the organization said. "These include members of the Olympic Committee, athletes, media and sponsors. With this, they also provide a list of 43 types of people in 11 categories to be barred from attending the Olympic Games."The document, a "Notice on Strict Background Check on Applicants for the Olympic Games and the Test Events," targets those who are considered "antagonistic elements," followers of Falun Gong and other "cults," as well as "religious extremists and religious infiltrators."Other categories include media employees "who can harm the Olympic Games," non-government organizations that "pose a real threat to the Olympic Games," those with grievances against the communist party, those under investigation by Chinese authorities, as well as "terrorists" and "members of illegal organizations."The report, China Aid Association said, lists among the targets anyone who belongs to an independent house church in China, which are identified as "illegal religious organizations" and those who have given "illegal sermons."Also targeted and banned will be "people who illegally distribute religious publications and video-audio materials" and "people who have illegally established both in China and abroad religious organizations, institutions, schools, sermon sites and other religious entities.""While CAA understands the legitimate security concern during Olympics, nevertheless we urge the Chinese government to be more transparent regarding the preparation of [the] 2008 Beijing Olympics," CAA said. "We call upon the Chinese government not to use Olympics as a cover to engage [in a] crackdown on peaceful people of faith both in China and abroad."The warning about the investigations came just after China heatedly repudiated a media report that Bibles were being banned from the housing complexes for athletes during the 2008 Games.The officials, who have expelled dozens for Christian missionaries in an apparent crackdown on Christianity in advance of the 2008 Beijing Games, called the report a "total rumor.""The Chinese government has not come up with any such rule," said spokesman Liu Jianchao.However, the official website for the 2008 Games has held a warning that visitors should not bring more than a single Bible with them.WND previously has reported on China's apparent crackdown on Christians and Christianity in advance of the 2008 Games, including the expulsion of more than 100 foreign Christians in China in just a 90-day period, the biggest assault on the presence of Christianity in China since 1954.
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=59588
As in the days of Noah....

'Jesus moment' starts healing for church shooting victims:'What the enemy meant for harm turned into forgiveness, redemption'

New Life Church Pastor Brady Boyd calls it a "Jesus moment" and describes a meeting of the families of church shooter Matthew Murray and victims Stephanie Works, 18, and Rachael Works, 16, as "the greatest testimony of forgiveness I've ever seen."It was a meeting he had suggested between Ron and Loretta Murray, whose son, Matthew, shot and killed the Works sisters in an attack on New Life Church in December, and the sisters' parents, David and Marie Works.As WND reported earlier, weeks before Murray armed himself with enough weaponry and ammunition to kill hundreds and staged attacks on a Youth With A Mission ministry center in the Denver metro area and then on New Life Church in Colorado Springs, he boasted in an e-mail that he had discovered and practiced the teachings of controversial British occultist Aleister Crowley, called during his lifetime "the wickedest man in the world."But his beliefs clearly departed from family teachings, as the Murray family members said thanks "to God, these remarkable families and their pastors and churches, healing and reconciliation have begun."Boyd said he was praying about the situation during the Christmas holidays, and decided to contact Matthew Murray's parents to see if they wanted to come to the church campus, see the location where the attack happened, and grieve for the loss of their son, who committed suicide after being shot by a volunteer security patrol team member. "I called them and asked, would you like to come to the New Life campus and see the place where your son passed away," Boyd told his congregation over the weekend. "When someone's gone through a tragedy, it's very important to see the place where it happened."He said the Murrays had been wanting exactly that, but didn't want to "invade" the church still recovering from the attack.Boyd then arranged for the Murrays to meet not only the Works family, but also Jeanne Assam, the volunteer security guard who confronted Matthew Murray as he was entering the mega-church complex where several thousand people were leaving a worship service, and shot at him when he refused to put down his weapon. The coroner later determined he actually died of self-inflicted wound. "It was very emotional. They just wept and cried and we prayed for them and hugged them," Boyd said. "What the enemy has meant for harm, turned into a moment of forgiveness and redemption."Matthew Murray, 24, killed two staff members at the WYAM center in Arvada in the early morning hours of Dec. 9, then posted some writings online, and then traveled to Colorado Springs to shoot the sisters in the church parking lot. He was loaded with weaponry and ammunition and heading toward the church sanctuary when Assam confronted and stopped him. The Murrays earlier met with the families of Tiffany Johnson, 26, and Philip Crouse, 24, who died at the YWAM center.Boyd said he retraced Matthew Murray's steps for the family, from the place where he parked his car to the point inside the building where he killed himself.In a statement after the meeting, the Murrays expressed their continuing sorrow over the deaths.[[["Words cannot adequately express our deep, deep gratitude to David and Marie Works, Pastor Brady Boyd, Jeanne Assam, and the entire New Life Church family. God is good and our entire experience last Thursday was filled with His loving and healing presence," they said. "We also want to once again express our appreciation for the Johnson and Crouse families for receiving us in love last month together with everyone at Youth With A Mission and the New Faith Bible Chapel in Arvada."The depth of our sorrow and our grief is greater than we can possibly describe. But with thanks to God, these remarkable families and their pastors and churches, healing and reconciliation have begun," the Murray statement said. "We are committed to finding a way to move forward in the service of The Lord and our community."When the Murrays met Assam, "the Murrays released her from any guilt or remorse over what she had had to do," Boyd said.Boyd told his congregation that such forgiveness and reconciliation is "rare in most cultures and religions.""What happened was Jesus Christ on display," he said.]]]According to reports from authorities, found in Matthew Murray's bedroom were items including information about YWAM as well as New Life Church, dozens of doses of a drug used to treat anxiety disorders, a pamphlet called "Fall of America," ammunition and another gun, and a pamphlet from The Rosicrucian Order, an ancient group that stresses mysticism.A tabulation of church shootings, or those closely related to a church setting, was done by Gary Cass, chairman of the Christian Anti-Defamation Commission, and include 10 such attacks over the last four years, including Murray's two attacks, revealing that such incidents are on the rise."Churches used to be sanctuaries that were regarded as sacred, now all church leaders must be prepared to effectively defend themselves and use deadly force if necessary to protect their congregations from violent acts," Cass said."Self-defense is not just a right, but a Christian duty. Jesus told his followers, 'if you don't have a sword, sell your cloak and buy one,'" said Cass. "Christians are not to be a soft target for the hateful and deranged. Church leaders have a duty not to allow a crazed gunman to come and shoot up their congregation. Thank God for security officer Jeanne Assam and for New Life Church's security preparations."WND has reported on the disturbing rantings Murray apparently left on several websites before-and even between-the attacks, including those reported by National Terror Alert, which documented a series of postings by "nghtmrchld26," which said, "You Christians brought this on yourselves … All I want to do is kill and injure as many of you ... as I can especially Christians who are to blame for most of the problems in the world."[[[[["It is a sad reality of our times, but Christians must take up arms to protect themselves at church," ]]]]]said Cass. He cited the postings by Murray, including the following:
"I'm coming for EVERYONE soon and I WILL be armed to the @#%$ teeth and I WILL shoot to kill. …," a statement also attributed to Murray's Internet postings.
"Matthew Murray was obviously a very troubled young man, but unfortunately he is not the only one," Cass said.
The pastor behind the Good Fight website, which documents reports from rock stars themselves of their encounters with the occult and satanic influences through their experiences with rock music, says he believes an e-mail he got weeks earlier was from Murray, and indicated trouble.Pastor Joe Schimmel told WND he recalled the October e-mail when he read the postings, included in WND stories, attributed to Murray. He said he thinks it's important for people to know what the attacker himself was feeling and thinking prior to his homicidal attack, especially since he's been described in the media as a homeschooled student from a religious family.The e-mail, although it came from a man who identified himself as "Brian," most probably was from Murray, Schimmel says, because of long list of similarities. The e-mail notes the writer has "studied and practiced the teachings of Aleister Crowley/Thelema/The Golden Dawn, Qabbalah, H.P. Blavatsky/Theosophy, Manly P. Hall, Alice Bailey, and others."Crowley, who lived during the late 1800s and first half of the 1900s, was a bisexual, drug-addicted occultist practitioner and author who almost reveled in the media description of him as "the wickedest man in the world."During a court case in the 1930s, Crowley was described by a judge as dreadful. "I thought that everything which was vicious and bad had been produced at one time or another before me," the judge concluded. "I have learned in this case that we can always learn something more … I have never heard such dreadful, horrible, blasphemous and abominable stuff as that which has been produced by [Crowley.]"Crowley also founded Thelema, a religious belief that was drawn from his book, "Liber Al Vel Legis," or Book of the Law, which gives only two commands: "Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the law" and "Love is the law, love under will."Crowley espoused a wide range of occultist activities and practices, and one of his compatriots reportedly died from drinking the blood of a cat during one ceremonial episode, according to documents on Crowley's life. Many believe Crowley was a forerunner to Anton LeVay, who formalized his beliefs in "The Satanic Bible" and established the Church of Satan.While Crowley dabbled in the occult, magic, trances, drugs, sex and blood rituals, Schimmel told WND the writer apparently had sold his soul to another devil: rock music.The e-mail attributed to Matthew Murray noted that "music is a very powerful thing," and then continued with writings that appeared to have been assembled in the form of an article titled, "My Secret Drug Addiction":
"I have a powerful addiction to a powerful drug that most people in my life don't know about. … I have found this drug to truly be a force to be reckoned with. This drug can completely alter blood pressure, heart rate, brainwave patterns and other bodily functions. … This drug will completely control a person's mind, what thought's (sic) they think and their emotions and how they feel. I found that this drug has the power to completely alter a person's religious beliefs, their morality, and their values and their entire lifestyle. … I found this drug to be a powerful driving force and easy gateway into a world of sex, other drugs, rebellion, homosexuality, alcoholism and many other dark things. … The drug … is commonly known in our culture as … Rock Music."

As in the days of Noah....

Sunday, January 6, 2008

Malaysia Embroiled in Another Conversion Court Battle

Malaysia is engaged in yet another conversion court battle, with the country’s high court deciding whether the Christian widower of a Malaysian woman has the legal right to stop Islamic authorities from burying her in accordance with Muslim rites.The judges in the court have to decide whether Wong Sau Lan, 53, converted to Islam before she died. The conversion claim made by the Islamic Council is being contested by her husband, Ngiam Tee Kong, who had received a notice from the council that she converted to Islam on Christmas Eve.The case is the latest in the string of cases brought before the court that tests the strength of the Malaysian Constitution in defending religious freedom for minority groups.Last year, Lina Joy, one of Malaysia’s best known Christians, lost a six-year battle with the government over its refusal to remove Islam from her national identity card even though she converted to Christianity.In his judgment against Joy, Federal Court Chief Justice Ahmad Fairuz Sheikh Abdul Halim had stated [[[[that individuals “cannot simply convert from one religion to another (at the whim and fancy of the individual)” even though religious freedom is protected by the constitution.]]]](1)The National Evangelical Christian Fellowship of Malaysia had condemned the court decision and claimed that it was retreating in the face of ”relentless onslaught” on their position.

PS:(1)I have news for Mr.Halim....YES PEOPLE CAN CONVERT THAT EASY...!!!!Thta's how much muslims regard about freedom....There is no liberty or freedom in Islam,but the enslavery of the soul.....

As in the days of Noah...

Riot-Hit Indian Christians Still Hiding in Jungles:Seven teenaged Christian schoolgirls missing

Several Christian families in a violence-stricken area of India’s Orissa state are hiding in nearby jungles while seven teenage girls are reportedly missing.Since Christmas Eve, mobs led by Hindu activists have attacked Christians in the Kandhamal district, reportedly killing nine people and damaged 60 churches, according to the latest official report from the state government. At least 100,000 Christians reside in the 650,000-person district.Many Christian families are reportedly afraid to return to their homes due to fear of violence. Meanwhile, 142 homeless families are taking shelter at the relief camps set up in Baliguda, Orissa.The administration has urged all homeless victims of the communal violence to return to their villages.Those reportedly missing include seven ninth grade Christian girls. A boarding school informed police about the missing students on Saturday, said Satyenbrata Sahu, a divisional commissioner."We suspect they have run away out of fear," he told The Associated Press, also reporting that police were searching for the girls.All Christian institutions in the area, including a convent and seminary, were attacked. Rioters also targeted two church-run hostels and high schools as well as a few shops managed by Christians in the small town of Bamunigam.According to Dadini, a victim of the violence, several families that fled Barkhama were hiding in the jungles within a range of six to seven kilometers from Baliguda.Ludinga Digal, who had reached the Baliguda camp, had no news of his son and daughter-in-law. Digal said the people hiding in the jungle and hills were living without proper food and water since Dec. 25.Tejeswar Nayak, a college lecturer, meanwhile alleged that he was getting threatening calls from unidentified persons because he had given shelter to pastors and the priests of ransacked churches and Christian establishments at Baliguda. Miscreants continued their threats to burn up his house as well.Fr. Laxmikant Pradhan, parish priest of a ransacked Baliguda church, wondered how the victims of police and administrative negligence could return in a few days.
More patrolling sought
The local people reportedly want more patrolling by armed policemen. But Suresh Kumar Panda, Kalahandi’s additional superintendent of police who is now camping at Baliguda, said it might not be possible to increase patrolling in the area now.Many other families are believed to be hiding elsewhere.This past Sunday, more than 1,000 Christians held protest in the capital urging the government to punish the attackers and protect the Christian community in the state.Orissa is the only Indian state that has a law requiring people to obtain police permission before they change their religion. The law was intended to counter missionary work.

As in the days of Noah....

Mission Aviation Fellowship Suspends Flights in Kenya

Mission Aviation Fellowship’s team in Kenya has suspended flights because of the dangers posed by the violence that has been rocking the country for nearly a week.The faith-based ministry said that the serious turmoil had brought non-stop requests for help from people desperate to flee deadly clashes between police and anti-government protesters over the disputed December 27 presidential election and accusations. Opposition leader Raila Odinga accuses President Mwai Kibaki of rigging the votes in favor of Kibaki’s re-election.In western Kenya, at least 70,000 people have been displaced by the violence, according to the Kenyan Red Cross.Before Mission Aviation Fellowship (MAF) suspended flights on Thursday, its pilots flew to the region to evacuate Kenyan locals threatened by the angry protesters, as well as missionaries who were no longer safe in their homes.MAF’s country director in Kenya, Bernard Terlouw, said, “The stories we heard were very, very sad.”“This morning I saw trucks with riot police on Ngong road. Right now as I write one can see smoke rising from Kibera and from the Ngong road area we hear the sounds of shots. We can only pray that someone or something intervenes,” he added.MAF said that the suspension of flights was temporary and that it planned to resume flying again on Monday. In the meantime, ministry staff remain in their homes.Thousands have headed to Kenya’s capital, Nairobi, to escape the Rift Valley area, where machete-wielding youths have burned down homes and, in some cases, entire villages. In Nairobi, police have set up barricades at the major roundabouts into the city and halted traffic.Around 300 people have been killed in the violence, the worst of which was the torching of a Kenyan Assemblies of God church in Kiambaa, outside Eldoret, on Tuesday by a mob that killed more than 30 people.A pastor at the church, Jackson Nyanga, told BBC that many of the people were beaten before the building was set on fire. According to Reuters, the victims were locked inside by the mob.

As in the days of Noah....

Regulators' assault plan puts church in crosshairs:Proposal considers taxes, fees, restrictions on numbers, sizes

A regulatory plan being considered by a Toronto suburb would put churches in the crosshairs of an assault that would include dramatically higher taxes and fees as well as restrictions on the sizes and numbers of worship centers.A series of reports by the No Apologies website featuring WND columnist Tristan Emmanuel has revealed the stunning proposals in Brampton that one source confirmed would be used in multiple cities should the Brampton effort prove successful.WND already has reported how many Biblical standards of behavior are under attack by the "bastardized courts" of Canada, where activists who claim they have "hurt feelings" are demanding – and getting – penalties imposed against those who oppose the homosexual lifestyle.That description of the courts, also known as the provincial and national Human Rights Commissions, comes from the Canada Family Action Coalition, which is warning that the United States is not far from having similar assaults on traditional family values.Now comes the report from the site launched by Emmanuel, the founder and president of the ECP Centre – Equipping Christians for the Public-Square as well as the host of "No Apologies," a weekly web-radio show "dedicated to illustrating the absurdity of political correctness.""One person who's involved … has told us at NoApologies.ca that Brampton is considered a test scenario for dozens of other municipalities in Canada, and that if the tax changes can be pushed through there, other cities are almost sure to follow," the report said.
Among the changes being reviewed:
*A plan to subject all "non-worship" space owned by religious groups to property taxes. This "non-worship" space would include offices, kitchens, nurseries, fellowship halls, parking lots, restrooms, etc. Not even the sanctuary would all be exempt: only the area "where the congregation sits/stands/gathers for actual worship."
*A new definition of "places of worship" to eliminate current provisions allowing church properties to be used for day care centers or soup kitchens.
*New limits for start-up churches, who would be allowed to rent only 3,000 square feet of industrial space for a maximum of three years before being required to buy property.
*A limit allowing only one "place of worship" for every 10,000 residents.
*A stratospheric rise in fees for things like zoning and variance issues. One church reportedly had to pay Brampton $400,000 for the paperwork required to build a new sanctuary.
*Ban religious meetings in homes if they involve more than 20 people, children included.
No Apologies reports that churches and other religious organizations are assembling a response to the proposals outlined in a city study, and a city council vote is scheduled later in January.A spokeswoman for the city told WND that the study has been launched into a "development charge bylaw," but it isn't yet completed, and doesn't even have a schedule for completion. "No recommendations have been made," she said.Al Siebring, the editor for the website, wrote in a commentary when he first heard of the plan, he thought it had to be an urban legend.But he said someone "with a bit of sympathy for the churches" leaked a copy of the still-unreleased plan that includes parts "that read like they could have been written in Stalinist Russia.""There are some really egregious rights violations potentially going on here, " he said, listing freedom of association, freedom of conscience, and "that little thing" called freedom of religion."For someone who grew up reading authors like [Voice of the Martyrs founder] Richard Wurmbrand and [Open Doors founder] Brother Andrew, the parallels to the old Soviet Union and its satellites are striking. The notion of a 'knock on the door' in the middle of a prayer meeting is so counter to everything we have understood to be fundamental to the notion of 'freedom of religion' as to be almost unthinkable," he wrote.The one good thing about the plan, he said, is that the application of new taxes, fees and limits would be on all "religious" facilities, including temples, mosques, ashrams and chapels."Which is why a coalition of 'faith groups' has been formed … to fight this," he said.Pastor Kevin Begley is the head of the new Brampton Faith Coalition, and indicated the details truly are horrific. He cited the new "plans" for new churches.
"If you want to use a rec centre or a school, you can't get that every week because it's not available," Begley told the website. "(But) if you rent a space in an industrial unit, the draft document recommends that it must be under 3,000 square feet, and you're only allowed in that area for three years. Well, 3,000 square feet - and that includes your offices, your sanctuary, your lobby, your children's or youth (ministries), whatever you want to do - you have 3,000 square feet which is ... about half the size of a gymnasium. And you're only allowed there for three years. After three years, you must have the money in the bank to go out and purchase (your own land and building). That's just not realistic. Land in our city right now is running about a million dollars an acre."

As in the days of Noah....

Saturday, January 5, 2008

Afghan clerics warn Karzai against missionaries

KABUL-Afghanistan's Islamic council has told President Hamid Karzai [[[[to stop foreign aid groups from converting locals to Christianity and also demanded the reintroduction of public executions.]]]]The council, an influential group but without binding authority, is made up of Islamic clergy and ulema (scholars) from various parts of Afghanistan and made the warning in a statement during a meeting with Karzai on Friday.The ulema have always played a crucial role in Muslim Afghanistan and have been behind a series of revolts against past governments.But since the ousting of Taliban's radical Islamic administration by U.S.-led troops in 2001, Afghanistan has seen an unprecedented period of freedoms.[[[[[["The council is concerned about the activities of some ... missionary and atheistic organs and considers such acts against Islamic sharia (law), the constitution, and political stability," said a copy of the statement obtained by Reuters."If not prevented, God forbid, catastrophe will emerge, which will not only destabilize the country, but the region and the world."Quoting what he said were reliable sources, Ahmad Ali Jebrayeli, a member of the council and also a member of parliament, said unnamed Christian missionaries had offices in Kabul and in the provinces to convert Afghans." Some NGOs are encouraging them (to convert), give them books (Bibles) and promise to send them abroad," he told Reuters on Saturday.]]]]]]
STRONG CHRISTIAN LINKS
[[[[
Numerous foreign aid groups and charities operating in Afghanistan have strong direct or indirect links to Christian organizations, but they insist they are not proselytizing.Some 23 South Korean missionaries, were kidnapped by the Taliban last year and, amongst other things, accused of trying to convert Muslims. Two of the group were murdered before the rest, almost all women, were freed following a complex secret deal.The conversion and spiriting out of an Afghan Christian convert following the intervention of several Western leaders and Pope Benedict in 2006 also sparked a series of protests locally.]]]]{{{Strict interpretations of Islam as practiced in Afghanistan treat conversions as apostasy, which is punishable by death.}}}The council also urged Karzai to stop local TV stations from airing Indian soap operas and movies-enormously popular in Afghanistan-which they said showed obscenities and scenes which threatened the morality of society.[[The council also demanded a return to public executions for murderers as well as a crackdown against graft.]]The Taliban, leading an insurgency against Karzai's government and foreign troops, used to publicly execute those convicted of capital crimes-usually on Fridays after midday prayers.While Afghanistan still has the death penalty on its books, it has been rarely been carried out since the Taliban's fall and never in public.Karzai instructed various government departments to address the demands of the council, but stopped short of committing to change, Jebrayeli said."If he fails to listen to the Ulema, people will further distance themselves from the government and there will be more pessimism and instability," he said.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080105/wl_nm/afghan_religion_dc
As in the days of Noah....

Friday, January 4, 2008

Parents race to escape before court takes kids:Government lawsuit seeks state custody of children

A homeschooling family is trying to arrange an escape from Germany before authorities can complete a court action that would give the state custody of their five children, according to a pro-family advocacy organization.The case involves Klaus and Evelyn Landahl, who have been living in Altensteig with their five children under the age of 13, including four who are school age, according to officials at Netzwerk-Bildungsfreiheit.And this case is just one of two where the parents are arranging to move out of Germany in order to provide what they consider the best schooling opportunities for their children, according to the U.S.-based Home School Legal Defense Association.The second family was identified as Dagmar and Tilman Neubronner, who have had an ongoing battle with local authorities over the education of their children, but now have confirmed plans to leave Germany and give up residency there.The urgent court action, however, targeted the Landahl family, according to Netzwerk-Bildungsfreiheit.Officials there said the father already is in England, but the mother, Evelyn, remains behind in Germany because one of her children is being treated in a hospital."They have deregistered children and wife in Germany, but nevertheless the mayor of Altensteig, the town where the Landahls lived, has filed a lawsuit with the local family court to take custody of the children away from the Landahls," an organization spokesman said."As the mayor knows that the family wants to leave Germany and that they have deregistered, his attempt is that the family court takes custody away in a so-called … (preliminary warrant) which means that custody can be taken away without a hearing [for] the parents," he said. "The final decision of the court can be pronounced later, but its intention is to prevent the parents from leaving the country with the children."He said in this case, authorities are seeking to deprive the parents of their right to make decisions about their children's schooling as well as their right "to determine the place of abode."He compared the actions of the German government to those more usually associated with the old East Germany or Soviet Union in that "not only parental rights are limited more and more, also the right to choose where you want to live is restricted."Reports said the family already had rented an apartment abroad and begun the process of moving, but then were served with a legal notice of the lawsuit regarding custody.The HSLDA, which has been active in other cases of German families falling victim to government enforcement of that nation's Hitler-era ban on homeschooling, said the policy "is in stark contrast to all other democratic and free societies that embrace homeschooling and recognize that parents have the primary responsibility and inalienable right to direct the upbringing and education of their children."The organization called it "tragic" that German families "must choose between living in their homeland and homeschooling their children.""Such behavior should not be tolerated by the rest of the free world and we call on governments and private citizens to take action to tell Germany that such policies are an embarrassment to them and must be changed," the group's statement said.The update on the Neubronner case, currently pending in Bremen, came from the family itself. "We are leaving Germany for now, and our children and my husband Tilman have already given up their permanent residence in Germany," said a note from Dagmar Neubronner. "I will maintain my permanent residence in Bremen because I am the bearer of our small publishing house…""Fortunately, we have been invited to several places in Europe. That is why our new life will start with a very long journey to see all those places and meet supporting friends and families," she wrote. "Nevertheless, it is hard to leave everything behind, especially our tomcat (a neighbor will take care of him), our relatives and friends and choirs and music ensembles and sports teams, our house and garden – our town and our country."An enclosed note from the family's lawyer said, surprisingly, the German Federal Constitutional Court recently granted the family's appeal.The family had sued because members were denied legal aid in their contest against an administrative court over penalties that the government was imposing for their homeschooling. The request for legal aid had been rejected because authorities ruled the "prospect of success [was] too small."While that decision has been overturned, the family still chose to leave Germany because of continuing threats from the "federal minister of education" to impose penalties adding up to $10,000, plus "further coercives."The government already had searched the home for items that could be sold to pay the penalties, and had shut down the family's access to bank accounts."Only jail and loss of custody are left" as potential penalties, their lawyer concluded."The Neubronners have decided that the risk to their family is too great to remaining Germany," HSLDA said. "The family will leave Germany to protect their children from the threat of being taken away from the family and so that they can continue to homeschool."Government officials repeatedly have expressed a determination to stamp out "parallel societies" and that includes homeschooling.German officials also have targeted an American family of Baptist missionaries for deportation because they belong to a group that refuses "to give their children over to the state school system."And a teenager, Melissa Busekros, eventually was returned to her family months after German authorities took her from her home and forcibly detained her in a psychiatric facility for being homeschooled.WND has reported further on other families facing fines, frozen bank accounts and court-ordered state custody of their children for resisting Germany's mandatory public school requirements, which by government admission are assigned to counter "the rise of parallel societies that are based on religion or motivated by different world views.""Even the United Nations has called on Germany to reform the way it treats homeschoolers. We appeal to the German people and German leadership to do what is right and to protect rather than attack families who choose to homeschool their children," the HSDLA has noted.In the case involving Melissa Busekros, a German appeals court ultimately ordered legal custody of the teenager who was taken from her home by a police squad and detained in a psychiatric hospital in 2007 for being homeschooled be returned to her family because she no longer is in danger.The lower court's ruling had ordered police officers to take Melissa – then 15 – from her home, if necessary by force, and place her in a mental institution for a variety of evaluations. She was kept in custody from early February until April, when she turned 16 and under German law was subject to different laws.At that point she simply walked away from the foster home where she had been required to stay and returned home.Wolfgang Drautz, consul general for the Federal Republic of Germany, has commented on the issue on a blog, noting the government "has a legitimate interest in countering the rise of parallel societies that are based on religion or motivated by different world views and in integrating minorities into the population as a whole."Drautz said homeschool students' test results may be as good as for those in school, but "school teaches not only knowledge but also social conduct, encourages dialogue among people of different beliefs and cultures, and helps students to become responsible citizens."The German government's defense of its "social" teachings and mandatory public school attendance was clarified during an earlier dispute on which WND reported, when a German family wrote to officials objecting to police officers picking their child up at home and delivering him to a public school."The minister of education does not share your attitudes toward so-called homeschooling, " said a government letter in response. "... You complain about the forced school escort of primary school children by the responsible local police officers. ... In order to avoid this in future, the education authority is in conversation with the affected family in order to look for possibilities to bring the religious convictions of the family into line with the unalterable school attendance requirement."
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=59536
As in the days of Noah....

Jesus in Turkey:After 550 years of decline, a bloodied church is being reborn

For the first time in 550 years, Christianity inside Turkey is growing in numbers and influence. But its recent growth comes at a high price: since February 2006, radicalized Muslims have killed five Christians—the kind of cold-blooded martyrdom not seen in decades.
Modern-day Turkey's 73 million citizens, 98 percent of whom are Muslims, are experiencing social and political upheaval. The country is attempting to improve its economic and human-rights record in order to join the European Union. Turkey's relations with the United States are strained as an ally in the war in Iraq, and because of Congress's aborted effort to pass the Armenian genocide resolution. Also, Turkey's border disputes with Greece over land around the Aegean Sea, as well as violent skirmishes with Kurdish rebels on its southern border, keep this nation's formidable military on highest alert.
This is the context in which a handful of Islamic radicals targeted Christians as "enemies of the state" because of their association with Western groups and their alleged support of Kurdish rebels. The five killed within the last two years were:
• Andrea Santoro, a Catholic priest killed in February 2006. A 16-year-old youth shot Santoro as he was praying in the Santa Maria Church in Trabzon, Turkey.
• Hrant Dink, a Turkish-Armenian newspaper editor. In January 2007, a teenager gunned down Dink, who had been convicted of "insulting Turkishness" two years prior.
• The three Malatya martyrs: Necati Aydin, a Turkish pastor; Tilmann Geske, a missions worker from Germany; and Ugur Yuksel, a new Christian convert from Islam. In April 2007, young radicals feigning curiosity about Christianity killed the three men by slitting their throats at a Christian publishing house in southeastern Turkey. Their survivors include five children, two widows, and a fiancée.
In November, a Turkish court set a trial date for the five suspects involved in the Malatya killings for early January. Police are calling for life imprisonment and said all five suspects have confessed to the murders. The suspects accused the Christians of "forcing local girls into prostitution" and of praising the violence of rebel Kurds. (About 30,000 people have died since the 1980s in rebel-related violence.) Meanwhile, the Alliance of Protestant Churches in Turkey is calling Turkish congregations to pray and fast every Thursday for the next several weeks in preparation for the trial.
Isa Karatas of the Alliance of Protestant Churches in Turkey told Compass Direct News, "It is clear from these statements of the suspects that there is some group of powerful influence behind them. These people want to portray Turkey's Protestants as enemies of the nation."
"At the same time," he added, "because honor is such an important concept in our culture, they are trying to accuse us of having weak morals, so that they can find a justification for their murders."
Few nations have as rich a Christian history as Turkey. This is where Paul founded some of the earliest churches, including the church at Ephesus. Seven churches in this region were addressed in the Book of Revelation. Those in the early monastic movement found the caves of Cappadocia a near-perfect place to live out lives of prayer. Constantinople, now the city of Istanbul, became the capital of the Roman Empire just as it was being Christianized, and the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople has been the leader of worldwide Orthodoxy for centuries.
But Christianity came under Islamic rule in Turkey in 1453 and steadily declined for centuries; the last 100 years have been the worst. In 1900, the Christian population was 22 percent. Now most experts estimate that there are fewer than 200,000 Christians nationwide, comprising less than 0.3 percent of the population.
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As in the days of Noah....

Thursday, January 3, 2008

Pakistan postpones elections; ministry weighs in

Pakistan-Stabilizing a volatile ally is a major concern in US-Pakistan relations.The chaos triggered by Benazir Bhutto's death led to the postponement of the parliamentary elections to February 18.There was concern that an election too soon would benefit the two main opposition parties: the Pakistan Peoples Party and the pro-government Pakistan Muslim League-Quaid-e-Azam. Additional logistics and security issues forced the decision to a head.Evangelist Sammy Tippit says they have partners working there. We asked if the upheaval was hurting ministry. "It's affected the church, only in the sense of the general population. There are some real concerns that our particular friends have, because of the work that they are doing. So many people coming to Christ are not from a Christian background, and that has caused them great concern." For Tippit, the concern is personal.In 2005, extremists kidnapped and murdered Babar Shamoun, the man who had been translating Tippit's evangelistic and discipleship messages into the Pashtun language.Shamoun had been translating for several Christian ministries in addition to STM, and he was an active pastor in the Christian community. His assistant, Daniel Emanuel, was also killed.Instability in the region has often led to a surge of nationalist thinking, which could be dangerous for believers. Christians have often been associated with the West.Tippit says, of the church in Pakistan, "When they tell us to be praying for them, we know that that's a serious thing, that they really need us to be praying for them because we have seen friends who have been killed and murdered because of their work in reaching the non-Christian population." While evangelism is difficult, Tippit says it's not impossible. "We've had broadcasts into Iran, Pakistan, India and that whole region of the world. So there are ways for them to hear the Gospel, and we need to just pray that the seed would be planted in fertile soil. I believe that soil is made fertile as we pray for people."Tippit is looking into another visit into Pakistan this year as part of the follow-up of some earlier work.Pray that the situation would settle down enough for the discipleship and encouragement to be scheduled. Pray, too, for those involved in evangelistic work, that they would be bold in their faith.
http://www.mnnonline.org/article/10746
As in the days of Noah...

Kenya's riots impact church

Kenya-Next, Assist News Service is reporting 30 people burned to death inside a church on New Year's Day. They were seeking refuge in the Assemblies of God church from a post-election riot in Eldoret, in western Kenya.The violence seems to be escalating into a tribal warfare between the Kikuyu and the Luo. The death toll from four days of clashes has passed 300. Most of the victims were members of the Kikuyu tribe to which newly re-elected President Mwai Kibaki belongs.According to a Reuters report, thousands have taken refuge in churches and police stations across Eldoret town, prompting a humanitarian crisis as food and water run short. However, with the attack on the church, some were leaving, fearing that even the church could no longer keep them safe.Police estimate that roughly 75,000 Kenyans have fled their homes. Some have fled into the neighboring countries of Uganda and Tanzania.Please pray for the safety of those who are acting as the hands and feet of Christ during this uncertain time. Pray that hearts would respond to the peace of Christ.
http://www.mnnonline.org/article/10749
As in the days of Noah...

Kenya violence is affecting ministry

Kenya-A dispute over last week's presidential voting in Kenya has triggered the worst urban clashes in 25 years and displaced tens of thousands of people in the process. President Mwai Kibaki's(picture left) narrow re-election victory and his swearing in on Sunday sparked violence across the country. Much of it was along tribal lines, with tit-for-tat killings and arson attacks.World Gospel Mission has work in Kenya. Speaking from Kenya, WGM's Regional Director for Africa Terry Duncan says, "All of our people have had to remain calm where they are in their homes. No one is traveling because travel has been pretty much blocked for everyone because of security, and some major roads are not even allowed on."This is unusual for Kenya, says Duncan. "This has been an example to many of the African nations. And democracy has been preached and taught and pretty much demonstrated here. And we would hope that would continue. It's just at a very fragile time right now for us."Duncan says almost every major city has had violence reported throughout the country. Even if the violence spreads, he says, "We have the national church, which means that the church work that we have started will continue even we would have to leave. But they have been affected by this probably even more that we have as expatriates."According to Duncan, the displaced are having difficulties."Relief agencies are here, but they cannot get to those that have been affected-communities that have been displaced. Several thousand people's homes have been destroyed."[[[[[He's asking Christians around the world to pray. "Pray that the church would be strong. Pray for those who are displaced at this time-those who have had their homes burned down. Food is in short supply. Pray for the people of Kenya that God will somehow bring a quick end to what has taken place in just a few days here."During times of uncertainty, there are many opportunities to share the truth of the Gospel. Pray that believers would be bold in their witness.]]]]]

As in the days of Noah....

Wednesday, January 2, 2008

9 dead in attacks by Hindu gangs:90 churches, 600 homes torched during violence

Nine people are dead and dozens of churches and hundreds of Christians' homes have been torched during a surge of Hindu violence in India, according to reports from organizations working there.Compass Direct News reports that the deaths and damage have been reported since Christmas Eve, when members of the extremist World Hindu Council launched their assaults on the faithful belonging to Christianity."Orissa state's Kandhamal district remains tense 10 days after the series of anti-Christian attacks began, and thousands of Christians whose houses have been burned down are facing hunger and fear," the Compass Direct report said. Pastor Victor John, who was in the region during the attacks, said federal Indian troops have been deployed, but there still remain tensions and worries.The nation's Human Rights Commission this week reported nine deaths from the attacks, close to 90 churches burned, about 600 homes either torched or vandalized, and about 5,000 people forced to flee.Swami Laxmananda Saraswati, a leader of the World Hindu Council (VHP), told local reporters that the violence was triggered by Hindus who converted to Christianity.While John Dayal, general secretary of the All India Christian Council, told Compass the death toll remained unconfirmed, there appeared to be a number of such cases."Many people, including young women, are still reported missing," Dayal told Compaass Direct. "We have no accounting, and neither do we know if the police have tried to search for them. Christians have been arrested, we learn, but there is no official word on it.
"Troublemakers seem to have a free hand in the entire district," he said.One of difficulties, he said, is that the government forces have prevented church groups from sending teams into the area of the attacks to assess damage and offer assistance.The violence apparently erupted first in Kandhamal as members of the Church of Our Lady of Lourdes in one small village were preparing for their Christmas celebration.A Hindu mob, upset with Christianity's beliefs and the apparent choice by some Hindus to follow Christianity, attacked the Christians and their shops, the Compass Direct agency reported.The blame, the report said, rests with Saraswati, who has opposed Christians and their work in India for more than a decade."It was Saraswati who instigated the mob to attack us," one Christian villager told Compass Direct on condition of anonymity. "Later, Christians learned that Saraswati was coming to launch more attacks. Sections of Christians tried to stop him on the way, which resulted in a clash between the two groups, following which the VHP claimed that their leader was hurt and announced that now Christians would be attacked as revenge."The series of attacks earlier prompted Christians to stage a rally to demand government intervention to halt violence against members of the minority religion. The recent rally in Delhi drew an estimated 1,000 Christians and was organized by the All India Christian Council.A message was delivered to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh after officials met with Union Home Minister Shivraj V. Patil, as well as the head of the National Commission for Minorities.However, Compass Direct also reported that the very officials who are supposed to be keeping order sometimes apparently have contributed to the problems. Local police officers in Bangalore recently arrested and harassed five workers from the Indian Church of Christ, the report said."One man holding a video camera slapped me on the face while focusing the camera on us, while others held us by our collars," Shaijus Philip told Compass. "A huge guy kept hitting and punching us, using abusive language against Christianity, the church and us. They caught hold of three more brothers who were there and called the police, falsely accusing us of various crimes."The Christians were jailed five days, while their attackers went free, the report said."The Christians were arrested for hurting religious sentiments of Hindus," an officer in a police station said."The police, who are supposed to protect all citizens from criminal assaults, are often found to be conniving with the ruling government to organize religion-related violence or harass the victims hoping to get bribes," a spokesman for the Christian Legal Association told Compass.In just one incident alone, a mob estimated at 25 Hindu extremists attacked a troupe of Christians who had been putting on a play, cutting off one man's finger and seriously injuring several others.Earlier, Hindu extremists were accused of disrupting a prayer meeting, attacking a pastor and filing false charges of forcible conversion against the church leader in Virajpet town, Kodagu district, in Karnataka.
Another gang of Hindu extremists attacked a prayer meeting, pelting the building being used with stones and beating up Christians.And the violence continues. According to Assist News Service, seven Christian church members were beaten on New Year's Day, with two members admitted to a government hospital for treatment."More than 200 believers … were praying … when about 25 radicals entered the church with metal rods, knives and started to mercilessly attack on the peaceful worshippers," the report said."Our leaders in Orissa and media reports both indicate that attacks on Christians were not spontaneous but preplanned by the Vishwa Hindu Parishad and other Hindutva groups. Also, the state government misled the people of India by making repeated statements that the situation was under control. It is tragic. Orissa burned while politicians talked," said Dr. Joseph D'souza, president of the All India Christian Council and international president of the Dalit Freedom Network."Hindutva leaders say the violence is a response to conversions by Christian missionaries," said Udit Raj, national chairman of the All India Confederation. "But this is a lie. Christian missionaries are targeted by Hindutva and upper cast forces because Christians truly provide education and social upliftment…"Singh has responded with an announcement of a plan for compensation for Christian victims of the riots and attacks. According to the Global Council of Indian Christians, he's proposed a payment of about $2,400 U.S. for the next of kin for the victims, and about $240 U.S. for those whose homes were damaged.According to Gospel for Asia, another Christian ministry working in India, the violence has amounted to a virtual terror campaign against Christians."This violence against believers in Orissa breaks my heart," said K.P. Yohannan, founder and president of GFA."This is the same state where missionary Graham Staines and his two sons were martyred. The believers know they will face opposition, but this outburst of persecution at Christmas time is especially disturbing."GFA said a project on which its missionaries had worked in Orissa was destroyed, and its missionary leader Matish Junni attacked."The mob beat Matish and shaved his head. Then they mockingly paraded him around the village, shouting slurs against him and other Christians," the report said. "They also forced Matish to go to their religious temples. When the mob finally released him, they warned him not to continue the construction."WND recently reported when religious radicals threatened to burn a Christian church's pastor and his family, and the church building was vandalized with a Hindu "Om" symbol.Just weeks earlier, another church leader in India was attacked, beaten and kicked for being Christian.Even within the United States, there have been attacks, although verbal instead of physical.As WND reported, the Hindu American Foundation has attacked Christian organizations ranging from the Southern Baptists' missions board and Gospel for Asia to Olive Tree Ministries, which aims to teach Christians about their beliefs."The proliferation of websites promoting religious hatred is an unfortunate consequence of the universality of access to the Internet," said Vinay Vallabh, the lead author of a report that attacked the Christian groups for their expression of their beliefs."We must vigorously identify, condemn and counter those who use the Internet to espouse chauvinism and bigotry over the principles of pluralism and tolerance," Vallabh said.
Vallabh's report, called "Hyperlink to Hinduphobia: Online Hatred, Extremism and Bigotry Against Hindus," expresses his hope that Internet Service Providers will start censoring Christian postings of their beliefs, "a necessary step as we continue our balancing act between free speech and licentious speech that leads to violence in the electronic age."
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=59504
As in the days of Noah....

Tuesday, January 1, 2008

Ministry founder: U.S. Christians 'absolutely not prepared' for persecution

The founder of Gospel for Asia says while persecution is increasing worldwide for Christians, he believes it will soon impact believers in America-and K.P. Yohannan says they need to get ready for it.Persecution against Christians is increasing worldwide, especially in countries such as India, where attacks on churches and Christians by Hindu extremists have increased dramatically.In fact, when missionaries graduate from Gospel for Asia (GFA) Bible colleges, they are told to expect persecution-and perhaps even death-for spreading the gospel.According to GFA founder K.P. Yohannan, Christians in those countries expect such treatment and are prepared when the tough times come.But he believes Christians in America will soon be faced with persecution as well-and he is fearful that many are not ready."The great falling-away from faith could be worst here in America because people are absolutely not prepared to face suffering or persecution-because we cannot imagine a gospel with the cross and the suffering in it," says Yohannan."Yet the Bible teaches very strong about it. So as the Word of God says: He who has ears, let him hear."The ministry leader is convinced that prosperity has caused many Christians in America to focus on material possessions instead of surrendering all to Christ.The result, he says, is that American Christians have become "very naïve" in thinking that real persecution will never come their way."These are warning signs," he exclaims."God is telling us that we need to prepare our lives. And preachers going around saying that revival is coming, and everything is okay, and all these things? I think that people are being set up for huge disaster and denying their faith when they face problems."It is estimated that more than 16,000 Christians are martyred worldwide each year for their faith.

As in the days of Noah....

Christians mark somber holiday season in Gaza

Gaza-A senior Hamas militant is suspected of torturing and killing the manager of a Christian bookstore in the Gaza Strip who was found dead last month. That's an alarming development, says Open Doors USA's Carl Moeller, because Hamas has previously provided a certain degree of protection for the Christian community."The most disappointing aspect of this discovery is that not only is this a Hamas person who committed this crime, apparently, but also that despite the assurances right after the murder that they had nothing to do with it, they haven't distanced themselves from him and in fact have sent him on a pilgrimage to Mecca."Rami Ayyad's murder sent shudders through the tightly-knit community. Christmas found a low-profile celebration in the region, the observance suppressed by fears of violence.The concern over Hamas' alleged involvement is confirmed by Moeller. The person thought responsible for the attack is Ashraf Abu Layla, the central Gaza chief of Hamas' so-called military wing.Ayyad, a Baptist, was accused by Gaza-based Islamic groups of engaging in missionary activities. His bookstore, owned by the Palestinian Bible Society, was firebombed in April.SAT-7's Terry Ascott says it's no wonder that believers feel like they're under siege."Pray for the Bible Society director and all the Bible Society staff throughout the Palestinian territories, that they wouldn't be discouraged by this. Pray that the Word of God would continue to be made available throughout the territories.We have a strong partnership with the Bible Society, and we very much see what we do as complimenting their work, by taking Scripture to satellite television."That means ministry continues, although the other impact of this, he explains, is the disruption of ministry. "The killing of the bookstore owner who's associated with the Bible Society has led actually to all the related staff to that shop being evacuated from Gaza. There's just one person left who could not yet receive permission from the Israeli authorities to cross out of Gaza."Open Doors' Moeller says Christians are asking prayer for boldness. "Believers who continue to promote their faith evangelistically, despite their commitment to the general welfare of Gaza, and their commitment to the people of Gaza to serve them, that there will be increasing threat against their existence in Gaza as a result of this."There are estimates that up to 70% of the Christian community plan to leave at the earliest opportunity. Pray for the staff of the Bible Society.There is already a remnant church in Gaza; pray for the safety of those who remain, that their faith will speak loudly.
http://www.mnnonline.org/article/10740
As in the days of Noah....

Slain missionaries mourned in Turkey

Turkey-The Turkish Interior Ministry has opened a judicial investigation into accusations against state prosecutors in Malatya for mishandling the case involving the torture and murder of three Christians in the southeastern city last April.Five men are expected to return to court January 14, accused of murdering three Christian workers in central Turkey. The defendants face life sentences for tying up, torturing and slitting the throats of Necati Aydin, 35, Ugur Yuksel, 32, and German national Tilmann Geske, 46, on April 18 at the Malatya-based Christian publishing house they ran.At stake is Turkey's willingness to tackle persecution. Voice of the Martyrs Canada's Glenn Penner explains:"If the killers are allowed to simply get away with lesser charges, or it's seen that these murders were somehow justified on the basis that these Christians were involved in missionary activity, then Turkish Christians are certainly going to feel that they're not equal members of society, and that their religious activities are going to continue to be under threat."Despite the government reforms to facilitate joining the European Union, there is no indication of increasing religious freedom.While the Turkish constitution includes freedom of religion, worship services are only permitted in "buildings created for this purpose," and officials have restricted the construction of buildings for minority religions.In other cases, those who dare to profess Christ face harassment, threats and prison.Evangelism is difficult.However, Penner says, "The church is continuing to move forward, and Christians are continuing to witness. But of course, it does cause some anxiety. There have been a number of attacks on evangelicals in the last two years, and they're wanting to know, 'Will our government stand up for us? Will they defend us? Or will they allow us to be shot, killed and attacked with impunity?' "Yet, even in the face of these horrible events, Christians are recognizing opportunities to talk about their faith in ways they haven't been able to previously, says Johan Candelin who heads the Religious Liberty Commission of the World Evangelical Alliance. Candelin says there's a deep national sense of confusion in Turkey today. What's added to their confusion, says Candelin, is the television interviews of the widows."The widows came out on national television and said, 'We will stay in Turkey. We love Turkey.' And, 'I have forgiven the killers because Jesus has forgiven me.' That has been a strong, strong testimony to the nation of 70 million Muslims. "Many Muslims have come out in support of the Christians who were killed. However, Candelin says, not all. "There are also strong nationalistic groups in Turkey that see the Christians, especially the missionary work they do, as something that will split the Turkish nation."The World Evangelical Alliance has a three-pronged approach to this crisis.They're trying to get all sides talking and put rumors to rest. Candelin also says a letter has been sent to the Prime Minister. "We have asked him to come out with a statement that missionary activity done by Protestants is not bad for the nation, but good."The WEA is also doing something for the families. "We have also started a love gift collection for the five children of two of the martyrs who were killed. We're trying to get love gifts together so these children can go to school."Pray for opportunities for Christians in Turkey to share the truth of Christ.

As in the days of Noah....

Turmoil faces Pakistan in the wake of assassination

Pakistan-Officials in Pakistan are considering a delay in the January 8 parliamentary elections following the assassination of Opposition leader Benazir Bhutto last week.Her death sparked waves of violence and unrest, causing authorities to worry that local governments would not be ready for electoral duties.There are also concerns that the strong emotional reaction to the assassination would skew results.Next to President Pervez Musharraf, Bhutto was the best-known political figure in the country, serving two terms as prime minister between 1988 and 1996. She was respected in the West for her liberal outlook and determination to combat the spread of Islamic extremism.Such extremism has been the bane to evangelistic work in Pakistan. Open Doors supports the evangelical church in Pakistan, which numbers about 2 percent. Minister-at-large for the ministry Paul Estabrooks wonders, "Is he (Musharraf) going to impose martial law because of the violence which could result, or will he allow the elections to go ahead?"Although Al Qaeda is denying its involvement, Estabrooks thinks differently. "She really believed that it was extremist Muslims that were out to kill her. That was her personal belief. I don't think she was a paranoid person, so I think there was something to her beliefs on this."Bhutto's death is one more ingredient in the de-stabilizing formula that allows such extremist groups room to grow. Because of that,Estabrooks predicts the immediate future doesn't look good for the country or for Christians."I think there's going to be some turmoil for quite some time over this, and of course in the past Christians have often been the object of anger of the dominantly Muslim society there."While Christians must be careful, Estabrooks is hoping that "out of this crisis, which seems to be so terrible, that God will give opportunities for our Christian brothers and sisters to share their faith with their community, both at a public statement level and in an individual one-on-one."Pakistan is not the only country being affected by the uproar. Grand Rapids, Michigan-based Mission India's Dave Stravers says of the effect on India, that "Christians are complaining that some of the national officials that do protect them from local Hindu extremists, their attention is diverted, and they're not willing to get involved in another aspect of religious violence because of this fear that Muslim/Hindu animosity might break out in the country."His comments refer to the Christmas week violence against believers in Orissa state.There have been unconfirmed reports of Christians being killed in those attacks. At least a dozen church buildings have been destroyed and numerous meetings broken up.The All-India Christian Council asked for better protection against the continued attacks.Christians were told that a government visit to Orissa was planned in order to set up procedures that would protect Christians from attack. Now, in the wake of the assassination, religious fervor is being stoked to frenzy. There are concerns that the Muslim/Hindu conflicts will explode along Pakistan's borders with India.Whenever sectarian violence flares, Stravers says, minorities-in this case, Christians-bear the brunt."Stability definitely enhances the Gospel, so I'm praying for the peace of Pakistan, and I'm praying of the peace of India, and I'm praying that whatever evil elements in the country that are seeking to use these political events for their own ends, that God will frustrate them."
http://www.mnnonline.org/article/10742
As in the days of Noah....

India's persecution of Christians continues to grow

USA-In the last few years, persecution against Christians in India has been on the increase. Anti-Christian sentiment is at an all-time high. Unfortunately, one leader in India doesn't expect that to change in 2008.Founder and President of Gospel for Asia KP Yohannan says 2007 has been a very violent year for believers. "There has not been any single week during this year that we didn't have to report that some missionary was beaten up and abused or was in the hospital. (We've even seen) some of our sisters being abused and beaten up," which isn't typical there, says Yohannan.Why is this happening? According to Yohannan, Matthew 10 says this type of persecution is inevitable. "Jesus promised this was going to happen. More people are coming to Christ, and we'll see a greater amount of persecution. Satan knows his time is very short, and therefore he will intensify persecution. "While Yohannan is praying that persecution subsides, GFA is not ignoring the problem.He says they're training Bible college and seminary graduates to be prepared for persecution."When the graduation takes place, many of the students are going out knowing that some of them are going to face severe persecution.One of the most common things we are hearing is that when they finish their training, many of them get beaten up and face difficulties for preaching the Gospel."According to Yohannan, the training has helped."Not one missionary so far ever said to us, 'I'm going back home, I don't want to face this.' Rather, they're saying that they will continue to go forward preaching the Gospel."Out of that growth, an increasing number of Bible school students are taking an oath to give it ALL for the Gospel. However, resources to help these new graduates aren't affordable by most. That's why Bible Pathway is helping.Bible Pathway's Al Joslyn says his organization will be helping a specific Bible Institute."In early Spring, one Bible Institution over in Northern India is going to be graduating over 1,000 students.These students are young pastors who will be going into highly-persecuted areas. And they will be starting churches and witnessing for Christ there."Bible Pathway has been asked to send Bibles and Bible Pathway Commentaries to them. However, Joslyn says, "Unfortunately the shipping cost is upwards of $10,000. So we're looking for alternative ways of shipping so we can get them there in time to equip these young people to go out and win the world for Christ in their area."Another group is clashing with the government over rights.Tribal farmers, known as the Gujjars, want affirmative action rights.Recent clashes killed more than 20 as the Gujjars in the state of Rajasthan seek rights given to other low castes of India's society which would provide them opportunities for education and jobs.Operation Mobilization works in India with national believers. OM's Peter Dance says the elected Hindu government in Rajasthan promised these rights in their bid to win the election, only to renege on that promise.Their demands are being met with opposition from other tribes. The Meenas oppose the granting of tribal status to the Gujjars fearing they will lose their own quotas for education and jobs. The two sides clashed in eastern Rajasthan as the Meenas tried to break the blockade.Dalit Hindus also have these affirmative action rights, but they lose those rights if they convert to Christianity.Many believe this could further anger the upper castes of India's society. According to Dance, conversion to Christianity angers nationalistic Hindus."Part of our mandate is to support and encourage these new believers. Discipleship training is part of that. And in a lot of cases, we're standing beside them financially because they've left their job, and some of these pastors have several of these church communities scattered around their local area."Pray that many more people will turn to Christ.Pray for boldness for those sharing the Gospel. And, pray that those attacking these believers will come to Christ.
http://www.mnnonline.org/article/10739
As in the days of Noah....

Kenya church fire kills 50 who fled mob

NAIROBI, Kenya - A mob torched a church sheltering hundreds of Kenyans fleeing election violence on Tuesday, killing as many as 50 people as the convulsion of bloodshed continued after the disputed vote that gave the president a second term.President Mwai Kibaki said political parties should meet immediately and publicly call for calm after rioting killed at least 263 people in what had been east Africa's most stable and prosperous democracy.The church fire in Eldoret, some 185 miles from the capital, killed at least 50 people, said a Red Cross volunteer who counted the bodies and helped the wounded.The European Union and the United States have refused to congratulate Kibaki. The EU and four top Kenyan elections officials have called for an independent inquiry."There was a huge mob; they attacked the church," said a witness, who asked that his name not be used for fear of reprisals. "We counted 15 to 20 bodies."Two police officers, who were not authorized to speak to the media, confirmed that several people burned to death.In Britain, Prime Minister Gordon Brown urged talks between Kibaki, sworn into office for a second five-year term, and opposition leader Raila Odinga."The violence must be brought to an end," he said Tuesday in London.Allegations of rigging were fueled by the fact that the opposition won most of the parliamentary seats in Thursday's vote, as well as unexplained delays in vote tallying and anomalies that included a 115 percent turnout in one constituency.Opposition leaders set the stage for more turmoil by calling for a million people to rally Thursday against Kibaki, who had been trailing Odinga in early election results and opinion polls before pulling ahead.The government banned the demonstration but opposition leaders said they would forge ahead.The bloodshed has exposed tribal resentments that have long festered in Kenya, where Kibaki's Kikuyu people-Kenya's largest ethnic group-are accused of turning their dominance of politics and business to the detriment of others. Odinga is from the Luo tribe.Anne Njoki, a 28-year-old Kikuyu, said she fled her home in the slums after she saw Kikuyus being attacked and their homes looted. She was camped out near a military base with her sister, 3-year-old nephew and 7-year-old niece."They have taken our beds, blankets, even spoons," she said of the looters. The children hadn't eaten for days, she said.Kenya's Red Cross said gangs were even checking on the tribal affiliations of aid workers trying to help the injured.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080101/ap_on_re_af/kenya_elections
PS:Dear friends and visitors....Im truly sorry that the first post of this 2008 is this one depicting so muhc violence in Kenya...but I think it's a reminder for us all that satan knows he has little time before the coming of the Lord and he is unleashing all his hellish hatred and violence against the church wherever they are and trying to take as many millions as possible to the pits of hell where his place is....
Please remember the PERSECUTED CHURCH this year and daily pray and give to help our brothers and sisters all over the world that are hurt and suffering because of just being christians.....
God is Faithful....
May God bless you
In His Love


As in the days of Noah....