The Persecuted Church Across the World

Persecuted Church North Korea 20th Sept 2017

NORTH KOREA: ‘SO MANY COMing TO FAITH’

Open Doors 05 September

“The spiritual battle always intensifies when God is doing something amazing.”

These are the words of an Open Doors contact who has worked with North Korean refugees in China for many years. He has asked us to pass on this message to all those who pray for North Korea and ministries like his:

“Please know that your prayers have been answered. Yes, North Korea is still a very dark country and the people suffer day in, day out. Yes, there’s extra tension because of North Korea’s missile and nuclear tests. But never before have I seen so many North Koreans come to faith as nowadays.”

Many North Koreans risk their lives to make the dangerous and illegal journey over the border into China in search of work or food to take back to their families.

But it’s in China that many North Koreans hear the gospel for the first time.

The Persecuted Church Across the World

Persecuted Church Austria 20th Sept 2017

Austria: Jihadism based on Islamic theology

Barnabas Fund August 2017

A major academic study has shown that many jihadists and other radical Islamists have a deep understanding of Islamic theology.  It comprehensively refutes the claims made by many politicians and other public figures in the West that radical Islam is a perversion of Islam and jihadists have little knowledge of Islamic theology.

The 310-page study, by Ednan Aslan, professor of Islamic religious education at the University of Vienna, was based on 29 in-depth interviews with radical Muslims in Austria.

Western governments must grasp the fact that the jihadists’ persecution of Christians and other non-Muslim minorities is primarily driven by interpretations of Islamic theology that go back centuries.

Barnabas, Missions

Barnabas Update 20th Sept 2017

Myanmar (Burma) – September Update 2

Global One

 An estimated a quarter of a million Rohingya refugees have been forced to flee Myanmar due to conflict and burning of villages. No choice remained but to flee to neighbouring Bangladesh. Without basic everyday essentials, the Rohingya are living in squalor without food, shelter or even vital medical attention.

The Rohingya are considered some of the most persecuted minorities in the world, and the current atrocities only demonstrate their continuous suffering. Rejected and unwanted, this ethnic minority group face ostracization. They are denied basic citizenship rights in a country which they have called home for generations.

Yet Christian Rohingyas are doubly disadvantaged. The country refuses to acknowledge them and the Rohingya tribe rejects Christians who’ve converted from Islam.

Blythswood, Missions

Blythswood Update 20th Sept 2017

Talita Kum 

Wary and bemused, 4-year-old Madalina squats in the doorway of her home.  Who are these people?  And what’s in these brightly wrapped boxes that they have brought?

 The knitted hat and mitts that Madalina has found in her box will help to warm her up.  The sweets will give her energy and the toys will stimulate her hands and her imagination.

Come September, four of the children from this family will be enrolled in Talita Kum, Blythswood’s after-school programme for children from low-income homes.

Madalina should be joining them by the time she is seven, if her mother agrees to let her go to school.

Jacksons, Missions

Jacksons Update 20th Sept 17

We have booked an appointment for a visa interview in Manchester for Friday 22nd September.  Pray that we’ll get clarity over which category of visa would be best to apply for. The letter of invitation from South Africa is currently being couriered to England and should arrive any day now. 

 Pray for the lives and attitudes being changed through InReach groups continuing in Nigeria. 

James, now at Glasgow University, and Ruth, at college in Scunthorpe, are both settling into this stage of their education. 

Check our latest leaflet in the rack which describes what we hope to do and includes a helpful little map showing the countries that benefit from NetACT’s work at present.

Thanks for all your prayers.  The mountains that arise are moving out of the way one by one.

Barnabas, Missions

Barnabas Update 1st Sept 2017

Myanmar (Burma) – September Update 1

Tearfund

Hours from the nearest town, lies a flourishing healthcare training centre, situated in the Chin State of Myanmar. The immense challenges of the topography surrounding the centre testify of people’s yearning to learn, inspired by the vision of one man, Dr Sasa.

Too many mothers weren’t surviving childbirth, children were dying from diarrhoea and other preventable diseases were claiming lives.

Driven by a God-given determination, Dr Sasa set about developing a training centre where people could come to study as community health workers.  ‘It was about being able to support people spiritually and socially as well as medically – a totally holistic approach to healing.’

His passion rubbed off on hundreds of locals who have helped him construct a mini-campus in the jungle, complete with training hall for 500 people, dormitories and offices.

The centre has trained more than 300 community health care workers from 150 villages and provided them with basic medication – the first time these villages have been able to access any form of healthcare at community level.