Blythswood, Mission Partners of Castle Street, Missions

Blythswood Update – December 21st 2022

Daniel Centre

Balazs will have the Chief Executive Officers of Christian Aid and the UK Disaster Emergency Committee going with him to visit the relief efforts in Odessa in the Eastern Ukraine at the end of January – Balazs’ first visit to that part of the Ukraine.

Julien and Cipri have delayed their departure to share an apartment until January 2nd.  Damian’s attitude has now improved and he is working 12 hours a day on his delivery scooter. 

The present group of Daniel Centre residents are much more positive about celebrating Christmas than many of the former residents and are looking forward to a Christmas dinner in the Centre as well as one in the home of Balazs and Agnes.  Danny will come to the Centre exceptionally on Christmas Day to take the lads to church.

Talita Kum

Adi still hopes to move all the TK1 students to TK2 from January to save on heating costs.  They are still seriously considering purchasing a sizeable portion of the empty ground behind TK2 that would serve as a sports field for the children.

Missions, The Persecuted Church Across the World

Child among three killed in attack in Myanmar – December 21st 2022

Barnabas Fund, 5 December 2022 (excerpts)

A 7-year-old child was one of three people killed when the Myanmar military launched a land and air attack on Mon Hla, a historic Christian village in Myanmar’s Sagaing Region.

More than 200 troops were involved in the assault on 23 November in which a 40-year-old woman and a 30-year-old man also died.

Over 200 of the village’s 700 buildings, including a church and a Christian school, were destroyed after being engulfed by fires started by the soldiers.

Barnabas has provided food and practical aid for thousands of Myanmar Christians driven from their homes by military attacks

Mon Hla is home to 3,000 mostly Christian residents.  It is one the region’s historic Bayingyi villages where inhabitants are descended from Christians who settled in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.

Another Bayingyi village, Chaung Yoe, has been subjected to at least three attacks by the military.  In the last assault on the community, in May 2022, the majority of the village’s 350 houses were razed, forcing hundreds to flee.

In June 2021 hundreds of homes were razed by the military in a second attack on the Bayingyi village of Chan Thar.

The military, which seized power in Buddhist-majority Myanmar in February 2021, has for many years persecuted Myanmar’s Christian minority, estimated to make up 6.2% of the population.

Barnabas, Mission Partners of Castle Street, Missions

Barnabas Update – December 21st (excerpts)

Iraqi Christians were victims of IS war crimes

Barnabas Fund, 8 December 2022 (excerpts)

Iraqi Christians were victims of war crimes committed by Islamic State after the jihadists seized around a third of the country in 2014, investigators reported on 1 December.

The United Nations team said evidence collected in Iraq supports preliminary findings that Islamic State seized Christian-owned properties, looted and destroyed churches and subjected believers to sexual violence, forced conversions and enslavement.

The team has identified leading IS members who seized control in August 2014 of three predominantly Christian towns in the Nineveh plains.

It has also started collecting evidence on crimes committed against the Christian community in Iraq’s second largest city, Mosul.

The 26-page report also updated the team’s investigations into attacks on the Yazidi community and other minority communities.

Islamic State was officially declared defeated in Iraq in 2017 following a three-year reign of terror.

In February 2022, factories, shops and parcels of land seized from Christians and Sabeans were restored and given back to their rightful owners.

An estimated 75% of Iraq’s Christians (around 1.5 million in 1990) have left the country in the last 30 years because of anti-Christian hostility and violence.

Jacksons, Mission Partners of Castle Street, Missions

Jacksons – December Update 2 (excerpts)

Two men in Maximum had asked Dawn for one-to-one chats.  Michael, at 57, deeply feels the mistakes of his past.  He has a desire to know Jesus more closely but lacks reassurance.  Pray he’ll understand the hurt his actions caused his children and how that affects their attitudes now.  He’s been a smoker for decades and longs to be able to give up as a testimony to others.

Pray for Howard to be able to control his tongue and learn to deal with conflict in a Jesus-way.  He has a sentence of 65 years but thanks God he’s in prison as that’s where he met Jesus.  Pray his wife Shannon will come to know the Lord and his two young daughters will be protected.

Pray for all incarcerated men over December and most of January as there will be little outside spiritual input.  This is a time when darkness thrives in the prisons.

Dawn was able to host a small but profitable end of year gathering for the Boland Hope Prison Ministry team. 

She flew to the UK on Monday.  Thank God that her train journeys are falling in between strike days. 

Fraser is enjoying his time in the UK and being able to reconnect with people.

Missions, The Persecuted Church Across the World

Muslim Extremists Attack Ugandan Teacher & Son – December 21st 2022

Morning Star News, 19 December 2022 (excerpts)

Muslim extremists in central Uganda lured a Christian teacher to his home by forcing his wife to call and tell him she was ill, then the intruders beat him and his son.

Abdu Muyinga and his adult son are nursing injuries after Muslims upset with their conversion to Christianity beat them on December 10.

“We were attacked and beaten because of leaving Islam, as the Islamic law instructs Muslims to kill anyone who leaves Islam,” Muyinga said.

He and his son left their home at about 8 p.m. for an all-night prayer vigil.  Seven Muslim extremists went to his home at about 10 p.m. and, not finding them there, learned from his wife that they had gone to the prayer vigil.

“They forced her to make a telephone call indicating that she was seriously ill,” Muyinga told Morning Star News.

As they hurried home, they saw three men standing in the middle of the road in white clothes. At first Muyinga thought that they were traffic police.

“I stopped, and one hit me with a stick on my shoulder, the back, the head and left leg, and I fell unconscious,” he said.  The attackers left us half-dead and half-naked.”

“After converting to Christianity, the story about our conversion circulated countrywide, and five days later, I started receiving threatening messages.”The attack was the latest of many instances of persecution of Christians in Uganda.

Missions, The Persecuted Church Across the World

Afghan Christians Need Protection, Provision – December 21st 2022

Voice of the Martyrs, 10 November 2022 (excerpts)

“The crisis in Afghanistan is not over,” said one Afghan Christian leader recently.  Afghan believers who have fled Taliban rule mostly live in refugee camps in nearby nations.  With little to do, many feel isolated and depressed.  

Christians who have stayed request prayers for protection and that God will raise up new leaders within the country to help disciple young believers and those who have recently come to faith, mostly through online ministry efforts.  With winter approaching, as many as 18 million people are reported to face acute food insecurity.

The good news of Christ reached Afghanistan by the second century, but today there are no church buildings.  Cultural and religious opposition remain great challenges for all missions efforts in this Central Asian nation.  And sadly, most Afghans have never heard the gospel, do not know a Christian and have been indoctrinated to follow Muhammad’s teachings without question.  

Radical Islam and violent tribal political activity make the nation a difficult and dangerous place for Christians to practice their faith.  But there is a special unity among Christians labouring for the gospel in Afghanistan.  Indigenous, near-culture and expatriate believers are taking risks and using every opportunity to help believers grow in faith and connect with local house churches.  

While church growth has been slow among the more than 40 unique people groups, significant Christian growth has occurred among the Hazara people, and members of other people groups are also coming to know Christ.

Blythswood, Mission Partners of Castle Street, Missions

Blythswood Update – December 6th 2022

Daniel Centre

In his new Blythswood capacity, Balazs has been visiting the Divine Grace University in Moldova, a Blythswood partner there, and also to meet up with Ukrainian partners since the Christian Aid security advisor has told him not to visit Ukraine directly for the time being.  The University also functions as a mission school and training college for nurses and social workers with many students from the Stans of the former USSR.

Julien and Cipri prepare to leave the Centre later this month to share an apartment.  Damian has been back in the Centre for a week but his attitude has not improved and he may be expelled again. 

Blythswood has received a further “winterisation” £450,000 from Christian Aid which has to be spent before the end of February for generators, fuel, wood-burning stoves etc.  The communities themselves have to decide how to use the money under the SCLR initiative (Survivor Community-Led Response).

Talita Kum

Adi has paid the final bill to the Romanian body of EU funding for cancelling the TK3 and TK4 project for the time being but was able to do it without having to pay a fine, thus leaving open the relaunching of the project at a future date.

Missions, The Persecuted Church Across the World

Pastors, Newly Marrieds Arrested at Reception – November 30th 2022

International Christian Concern, November 30, 2022 (excerpts)

Nine Christian pastors were arrested and jailed on false charges of conversion activities in Azamgarh, in the North Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, on Monday. 

The pastors and a recently married Christian couple were arrested by police at a wedding reception. Radical Hindu nationalists pressured the police to act against the Christians. 

Witnesses told how the pastor of an Assemblies of God Church hosted a wedding reception at his house for his daughter and son-in-law.  During the reception, police raided the home and confiscated Bibles and other Christian items, alleging that the gathering was a conversion program.  The pastor explained that it was purely a wedding reception for his daughter, but police ignored his pleas and arrested the pastors and the newly wedded couple. 

“These days are very challenging days in our state,” a Christian leader from Uttar Pradesh said.  “More than 200 churches were shut down in the last few months, and 52 pastors and Christians are reeling in the prisons across the state of Uttar Pradesh.”  

Another Christian leader said, “Christians are living under the fear of being targeted and attacked for no reason, and police just need a complaint for them to act and send them to jail under the anti-conversion law.”

The United Christian Forum (UCF) recently released a report which said that violence against Indian Christians is at an all-time high.  This year saw the highest spike in incidents across India.  Uttar Pradesh was the most egregious, with 149 attacks against Christians.

Barnabas, Mission Partners of Castle Street, Missions

Barnabas Update – November 30th 2022 (excerpts)

Approval granted to 125 churches in Egypt

Barnabas, November 22, 2022

The government of Egypt licensed 125 churches and church-affiliated buildings on 14 November.

It is the 24th batch of approvals made since the government committee overseeing the licensing process started work in 2017.

The decision brings the number of churches granted licences to 2,526 out of the 3,730 that applied for registration after a Law for Building and Restoring Churches abolished Ottoman-era restrictions on church buildings in 2016.

At the committee’s previous meeting in April, members approved 239 churches, their largest batch.

To obtain a licence, churches must prove land ownership and comply with structural and safety regulations, including the provision of fire extinguishers.

Before the committee started work it was extremely difficult for churches to obtain a licence and many congregations had no option but to worship illegally in unlicensed buildings.

In 2018 the government permitted Christians to worship in unregistered buildings pending the completion of the licensing process.

Jacksons, Mission Partners of Castle Street, Missions

Jacksons Update – November 30th 2022 (excerpts)

At Drakenstein Maximum Bible study Walter, a long term resident and regular Bible study attendee, objected to another man sitting beside him, got up and sat by himself at the back.  Dawn reminded him that, as a follower of Jesus, you are to forgive anyone who offends you.   Walter returned to his seat.  Later in the class he apologised to the other man.  That took – strength and humility. 

Ebrahim in Maximum says he’s innocent and it often leaves him very depressed.  His wife believes and supports him.

Teswill in Medium A is quietly evangelising, particularly with Smee, a senior general in the 26 prison gang.  The Holy Spirit seems to be moving in Smee’s life.  Pray for wisdom for Teswill as he relates to Smee.

At the year-end events in Maximum and Medium A, many men came to individually thank Dawn and Hylma for being there all year.  They delegated a man to give public thanks and a letter including thanks to our husbands for their support, assuring them we’d be looked after if there was any trouble.  Another man, very talented in art, gave each of us an original work of his.  At Maximum, Dawn played 3 carols with men of the guitar group and the rest of the men singing along.  It was quite something.

A prison officer wanted to talk to Dawn one to one for counselling.  They have a very difficult job with great strains on their family lives.  Thank God she is there to listen, maybe another great opportunity.  She returns to Maximum next week for one-to-ones with 3 men and hopefully a proper chat with the officer.

Fraser is still trying to get the latest NetACT journal issue published before he leaves for the UK.  He travels to the UK on Thursday.  He is in the Dingwall area from 5th-21st December.  He flies home with Dawn on January 18th.