Missions, The Persecuted Church Across the World

New restrictive religious regulations for China – September 20th

Church in Chains, 29th August 2023 (excerpts)

China’s Administration of Religious Affairs drafted more restrictive religious regulations on 1 September 2023.

Online magazine Bitter Winter says, “In this case, the final text of the Measures… is even worse than the draft”.

China Aid says they “continue to suffocate religious freedom in China.”

Religious Liberty Prayer Bulletin says, “They obliterate the space for Bible-believing individuals to operate.”

Leaders of China’s government-controlled Three-Self Patriotic Movement have sworn allegiance to them.

Some of the 76 new measures state how Religious Venues must support the CCP and restrict church activities.

Article 3 states: “Places of religious activity shall uphold the leadership of the CCP and the socialist system.”

Article 27 stipulates that religious leaders must “love the motherland and support the socialist system”.

Article 30 orders religious leaders to “support the leadership of the CCP and practise socialist core values.”

Article 36 requires “Places of religious activity to regularly study the policies of the CCP.”

Article 39 stipulates that “sermons shall reflect core socialist values”.

Article 71 warns that “a place of religious activity shall be punished if established without authorisation.”

Missions, The Persecuted Church Across the World

The Lezgin in Ukraine – September 20th

Joshua Project, 20 September 2023

The Lezgin people of Ukraine are a Muslim group that live and work in brutal weather conditions. Even though the Lezgin are Muslim, they have not relinquished their pre-Islamic belief in the spirit world.

In recent years, some Lezgins have come to faith in Jesus Christ. However, their numbers are so few that they cannot form a fellowship even in Ukraine, the “Bible Belt” of Eastern Europe. Most of them live in Russia’s Caucasus region, one of the least reached parts of the world.

Islam is an obstacle. Being Muslim in a Christian culture like Ukraine means they must actively try to retain their culture.

Followers of Christ can attend Lezgin cultural events and actively learn to appreciate their music and stories. If someone learns enough about their music, they can spread the gospel in a culturally relevant, non-threatening way.

Pray for a movement to Christ among Lezgins in Ukraine and in Russia. Pray for the Lezgin people to see beyond Lezgin culture and identity and give a fair hearing to the gospel. Pray for the Lord to thrust out loving and patient ambassadors who will disciple new Lezgin believers.

Blythswood, Mission Partners of Castle Street, Missions

Blythswood – September 7th – Update 1

Daniel Centre

The new resident with severe psychiatric continues to be a challenge but Ionuz has benefitted greatly from his time in the Centre but still struggles with money management.  They have now lost 3 lads within a few weeks but are expecting two more coming in.

One of Blythswood’s partners in the Ukraine has dropped out since they have other sources of funding who require less accountability than Christian Aid.  Negotiations continue for funding of Ukrainians still in Romania.

Balazs’ wife Agnes is coming on Blythswood staff to deal with contractual negotiations for their depot in Cluj.  A potential tenant would like to lease the whole depot.

Blythswood are still looking for a Ukrainian in Cluj to be responsible for what they are doing in the Ukraine.

Talita Kum

Adi has still not found replacements for the two teachers he has lost and may have to take a more active role in TK2 himself.

He already has 8 older children who have graduated to high school and therefore has them in a fledgling TK3.

Missions, The Persecuted Church Across the World

Pressured Conversions Shame Christian Families – August 30th

International Christian Concern, 28th August 2023

As a religious minority in Egypt, Christians face various pressures to convert to Islam. Women, and particularly Christian widows, face uniquely harsh pressures. When even one family member decides to convert to Islam from Christianity, that decision brings a communal shame to the whole Christian family, even in their own Christian community, family, and church.

One recent case of a Christian family highlights this shame in Egypt. The daughter, who is in her 20s, met and fell in love with a Muslim man in her workplace and a few months later disappeared, having apparently converted to Islam to be married to this man. As a result of the stigma attached to their daughter’s conversion, the father was forced from his job and a younger daughter had her engagement broken off since other families did not want to associate with a family whose daughter did such a thing as convert and elope with a Muslim man.

Egyptian Christians face daily challenges in their communities from the pressures of the majority society around them. ICC continually helps families facing these pressures to remain strong in their faith and to encourage those experiencing shame and stigma in their communities resulting from these types of incidents.

Barnabas, Mission Partners of Castle Street, Missions

Barnabas Fund – August 30th – Update 1

Updates on the persecuted Church – 22 August 2023

Barnabas Fund, 22nd August 2023 (excerpts)

  • On August 19, Ehsan, a young Pakistani Christian man, uploaded a video on his TikTok account showing solidarity with the Christian community in Jaranwala, Punjab following anti-Christian riots on August 16.  Ehsan, from Sahiwal, 62 miles to the south, was accused of uploading a “blasphemous” message in the video that was hurtful to Muslims’ feelings and dishonouring to Islam.  He and his family were forced into hiding once the complaint was registered with the police. 
  • Pastor’s wife Peace Chinyereugo was fatally wounded and her husband Samuel was injured in a shooting outside their church in Edo State, Nigeria on August 14.  The church’s assistant pastor was also injured.  The pastor and his wife had just arrived at the church in their car when 3 gunmen approached and opened fire.  The pastor and his assistant both received hospital treatment.  Ask the Lord to draw close and comfort Peace’s family and friends.  Pray for healing for Samuel and his assistant as they recover from the trauma of the attack.
  • 2 Myanmar churches and a pastor’s home have been damaged in airstrikes by the military in Christian-majority Chin state.  7 people were injured when a church and a residential home in Ramthlo village were hit on August 12.  The same day a pastor’s home in the courtyard of a church in Hakha city was damaged in a missile strike.  A church was also hit in an airstrike in Kayah state on August 12.  Pray for healing for those wounded in the airstrikes.
Missions, The Persecuted Church Across the World

Imprisoned Chinese elder hospitalised – August 30th

Church in Chains, 23rd August 2023

Elder Zhang Chunlei, leader of the banned Ren’ai (Love) Reformed Church in Guiyang, capital of China’s southwestern Guizhou province, was sent to Sanjiang hospital in early August after suffering a bout of cholecystitis (gall bladder inflammation) in prison. Elder Zhang has been in detention since March 2021.

China Aid reported, “For a long time, Zhang has been healthy and optimistic, but this sudden bout of cholecystitis triggered his family’s concern about his life in prison.”

Elder Zhang was detained on 16 March 2021 following a raid on his church and was officially arrested on suspicion of “fraud” on 1 May 2021. In November 2021 his wife Yang Aiqing said in a social media post that the Public Security Bureau in Guiyang has accused her husband of “not having the status of a state-approved religious clergyman while holding religious gatherings and swindling believers of about 100,000 RMB [approximately €12,600]”.

Chinese house-church leaders are increasingly being prosecuted on false charges of “fraud”, which can carry a sentence of more than ten years. On 21 August 2023 China Aid’s Special Correspondent Gao Zhensai commented, “In recent years, the Chinese Communist Party authorities have used church tithes and offerings as a reason to impose fraud charges to bring down Christian churches, arresting and sentencing many church pastors and co-workers… Fraud is now the norm in the persecution of Christian house churches in mainland China.”

Jacksons, Mission Partners of Castle Street, Missions

Jacksons – August 30th – Update 1 (excerpts)

Simxolele, a young man with a face full of prison tattoos, sometimes comes to Bible study in Maximum. Most weeks he’s evangelising other inmates and can’t make it. He’d been in and out of prison many, many times, always visited by his parents and thinking he always would be, until his mother told him that if he was sent back again, she wouldn’t visit any more. She wanted him to change his life. The next time he was sentenced she was true to her word. She has neither visited nor answered his phone calls. He was sure she hated him and covered his face with bitter and dangerous symbols. Then he met Jesus.

Now he has left gang activity behind and is living out his faith humbly in the room, helping the older men, washing up for them and showing the change in his life.  Give thanks for the warders who care and try to help the men.

Pray that Dawn will have wisdom and understanding to interact with the men. There’s an opening for someone to do another Bible study at Allandale Prison. Pray that Dawn will know whether to volunteer for that gap.

The NetACT Journal Board meets soon to appoint a new editor.  Pray for wisdom.  Fraser is setting up the Mukhanyo Library system to automatically print spine labels and book plates.  It is painstaking finicky work to get everything matching the labels they already have..

Serina, a lovely lady in our Wellington church, holds a street Sunday school in the town, sometimes in a field where the gangsters gather at the edges and gang-related gunfire accompanies the lesson. Pray for her safety and that of the children.

Missions, The Persecuted Church Across the World

Bible for New Believer Transforms Family – August 30th

Voice of the Martyrs, 24th August 2023 (excerpts)

Pema Ongmo, 27, was raised in an animist family and had never heard about Christ until a friend shared the gospel and invited her to church. Her father, a village leader, found out and forbade her to read the Bible the pastor had given her. But she started reading the Bible secretly and began to follow Christ. Her mother became ill, and her father spent all the family’s resources looking for a cure. 

Pema told her father that the Jesus she read about in the Bible healed many people. Her father agreed to let his wife go to the church, where she was healed. The whole family eventually placed their trust in Christ. “Thank you for the wonderful Bibles you freely gave us,” Pema said. “I thank you and ask the Lord to bless you richly!”

Until the 1980s, Bhutan was isolated from the rest of the world by its Himalayan geography, poor infrastructure and poor international relations. In 2008, the country adopted a multiparty constitutional democracy and implemented a new constitution that affords a greater level of religious freedom. Most Christians in Bhutan are of Nepali heritage, and believers are focused on reaching the ethnic Bhutanese with the message of Christ.

88 percent of the Bhutanese people are Buddhists. Approximately 1 percent are Christians.  The king identifies himself as the defender of the Buddhist faith, and the government works covertly to discourage the spread of Christianity. Christians are viewed as followers of a foreign, Western religion. There is no opportunity for the legal registration of churches in Bhutan. Christians often lose their jobs and are unable to find work because of their faith. Many Christians must worship in secret.

Missions, The Persecuted Church Across the World

The Berta in Ethiopia – August 30th

Joshua Project, 28 August 2023

Very few of the Berta people in Ethiopia have accepted Christ. After several centuries of Arab Sudanese influence, most have embraced Islam. The majority are farmers. During weddings, men play large calabash trumpets called waz’a.

Even though the Berta are officially Muslim, they believe in religious specialists who practice healing and display divination powers. The Berta believe these specialists have the ability to deal with evil spirits. They do not accept Christ’s ways.

There are many evangelical Christians in Ethiopia. These believers can go as missionaries and commit themselves to taking the gospel to all unreached tribes in Ethiopia.

There are a few Christians among the Berta. Pray for them to become firmly established in the faith, not wavering in their commitment to know and follow Christ. Pray for God’s word to be translated into the Berta language. Pray for adequate supplies of clean drinking water and rainfall for their crops and livestock.

Pray for rising literacy rates among the youth. Pray for the Berta people to look to the Lord for all their physical and spiritual needs and find him faithful. Pray for spiritual hunger that will give them hearts that seek after God. Pray for workers who will teach Berta believers to make more disciples.

Blythswood, Mission Partners of Castle Street, Missions

Blythswood – August 23rd – Update 2

Daniel Centre

Another resident has been expelled for drug use and a new resident has arrived with severe psychiatric problems at the request of the local psychiatric hospital.  So, challenges continue, particularly for the night staffers, Sergiu and Avram.

Balazs has a significant load of paperwork with Christian Aid increasing their requests for accountability from Blythswood’s partners in the Ukraine over the next year’s funds.  Negotiations are also going on for the funding of the Ukrainians still living in Blythswood premises in Cluj.

Because of other paperwork commitments, Balazs has fallen behind with contractual negotiations for letting the Blythswood depot in Cluj.

Blythswood are also looking to take on a suitable Romanian who speaks Ukrainian to be responsible for what they are doing in the Ukraine.

Talita Kum

Adi’s summer camps have all gone well and the Blythswood shops in Jimbolia continue to be a major contributor to the running costs of the afterschool TK1 and TK2 activities.

Having lost the Head Teacher for TK2, Adi has now reported the loss of a key teacher in TK1 – both because of the recent salary increases in the public sector.

Despite these setbacks, Adi has not given up his dream of launching TK3 for older children.