Missions, The Persecuted Church Across the World, Whats On

Training Secret Believers in North Africa – May 13th 2020

Open Doors, 11 May 2020

“Do you want your family, or do you want your new faith?”  10 years ago, Kabil knew he had to choose Jesus. Nothing can equal the life that Jesus gave to me.”

When Kabil first became a Christian, his family were not particularly hostile. A few years later, however, things got worse. Kabil has not seen his mother since then and is only rarely in contact with his brothers and sisters.

Shortly after he decided to follow Christ, Kabil was give the role of Bible teacher in his church – and noticed that what they were lacking was discipleship training.

“After we started offering the Open Doors Discipleship course, we noticed changes among our brothers. We saw that they were staying in the church.”

The course has been transformative in Kabil’s church.  “I think that if this training did not exist, the church would not last over time.”

Currently, there are about 350 attendants in different churches, including many whose faith has to be kept secret from their families.

Kabil sees blessing in the midst of persecution. “I would say that persecution is never fatal to the church; actually, it is a blessing.”

Jacksons, Mission Partners of Castle Street, Missions, The Persecuted Church Across the World, Whats On

Jacksons Update – May 13th 2020

Jacksons – May Update 2

InReach in Nigeria is being greatly used to help Muslims encounter Jesus. This is often not safe. A group of converts are still across Nigerian borders, being discipled and looked after in a safe place.

One of the men involved in their escape was captured by Boko Haram but recently managed to escape – he has been left extremely traumatised. Pray for his healing and continued safety. Pray for the InReach team – Boko Haram know who they are and are gathering information on them.

Please pray for wisdom for all those in authority who are having to make decisions that affect people’s lives, that their decisions will be made selflessly and with integrity, without regard to their personal aggrandisement.

Pray for the congregations that have no facilities for online services, that people will not drift into misinformation and conflict.

Dawn had many of the Covid 19 symptoms 4 weeks ago and Fraser took to bed with what looked like the same thing.  But Dawn’s strength is holding up and Fraser is gradually progressing in the right direction.

Blythswood, Mission Partners of Castle Street, Missions, Whats On

Blythswood Update – May 1st 2020

Daniel Centre

Three of the young men at the Centre have now been allowed to go back to work; István at the supermarket, who had had pneumonia, tested negative for Covid 19.

Danny, the staff member currently doing his two weeks supervising the young men, expected to be Covid-tested before this present stint but local government did not have the facility to test him.  Balazs or another staff member will take over from Danny on 9th May, but they are concerned about the local lack of necessary testing.

There have been 11,000 confirmed cases of Corona virus and 600 deaths in Romania.

Talita Kum

Schools don’t re-open till September – older children get online classes through Zoom with their teachers but younger children get emails from teachers and parents do most of the actual teaching at home – less satisfactory.

5 Talita Kum’s teachers now offer online support to the children who normally attend Talita Kum.

Planning for Talita Kum 3 & 4 goes on and has now reached the detailed planning stage.

There was little uptake to continue the fortnightly quizzes online, so they have been dropped.

Missions, The Persecuted Church Across the World, Whats On

A high price for religious leaders in Mexico – May 1st 2020

Christian Solidarity Worldwide, 20th April 2020

A religious leader and his colleague are kidnapped from a migrant shelter and not seen or heard from since. Another is assaulted, extorted and threatened at gunpoint. Both provided protection to migrants and asylum seekers trapped on the border. Religious leaders warn that threats and attacks against them are one of the most serious problems facing churches today in ironically one of the world’s most religious countries, Mexico.

The worsening situation for migrants and asylum seekers passing through Mexico has been exacerbated by the US Migrant Protection Program which has made it increasingly difficult for migrants to win asylum cases in the US, and many have sought refuge in church-run migrant shelters across Mexico while they wait.

While many Protestant and Catholic leaders have responded to the rising levels of need in an outworking of their faith by following commands to help the poor, their work increasingly exposes them to organised criminal groups who prey on the vulnerable migrant population.

High levels of fear engendered by the brutal and very public tactics of illegal groups targeting migrants and intimidating the population mean that church leaders and other victims are usually extremely reluctant to speak out. Members of criminal groups very rarely have to face any kind of justice and the consequences of speaking out against them are potentially too horrific to consider.

Barnabas, Mission Partners of Castle Street, Missions, Whats On

Barnabas Update – May 1st 2020

57 murdered and church damaged in Mozambique

Barnabas Fund, 15 April

Islamist fundamentalists murdered at least 57 people, with a further five deaths unconfirmed, and smashed their way into a church in an upsurge in violence at the beginning of April in Mozambique’s northernmost province of Cabo Delgado, which is Muslim-majority.

On 10 April, militants launched a murderous attack where one person was shot, another burned alive, and three drowned as they tried to escape. About 60 people were taken hostage but released later the same day.

On 9 April, five died in an attack on the Quirimbas archipelago. The terrorists caused severe damage to the local church and destroyed homes of church missionaries.

On 7 April, at least 52 people were massacred in the same area when they refused to join the terrorist group.  “The criminals tried to recruit young people to join their ranks, but there was resistance,” said a police spokesman. “This provoked the anger of the criminals, who indiscriminately killed, cruelly and diabolically, 52 young people.”

The Bishop of Pemba said that Muslims “have, from the beginning, distanced themselves from these attacks and said that those involved are not religious, and are misusing the name of religion to do this,”

Militant Islamist organisation Ahlu Sunnah Wa-Jama have effectively gained control of an area of Cabo Delgado.

Missions, The Persecuted Church Across the World, Whats On

Persecution and the rise of the surveillance state – May 1st 2020

World Watch Monitor,  January 15, 2020

A case can be made that today there are more Christians in China than members of the Communist Party.  Christians appear to threaten President Xi Jinping’s government as they worship a higher power than him and the Party.  But it would be impossible to imprison at least 90 million Christians as they have done to a million Uighur Muslims.

So China and other authoritarian states, which already heavily restrict ‘religious freedom’, are stepping up their use of biometric technology and artificial intelligence.

Children under 18 are now strictly forbidden to attend churches, especially in Henan where the percentage of Christians is among the highest.  In Xinjiang, one officially-sanctioned church requires congregants to queue for facial-recognition checks.

A Social Credit System (SCS), rating everyone to reward good citizenship and punish bad, is reportedly adding  penalties for those who “illegally spread Christianity”.

Online resources are a major source of encouragement for Christians. Online sharing will now be allowed only when the religious affairs department has issued a license for it.

In addition, the mass media continue to mischaracterize Christians as ‘agents of the West’.

Missions, The Persecuted Church Across the World, Whats On

Pastor Arrested on Fabricated Charges – May 1st 2020

Morning Star News, April 27, 2020

Presbyterian assistant pastor Sarfaraz Raja was preparing to deliver a Good Friday sermon in Pakistan on April 10 when he heard that police had intruded into his house and were harassing his mother and other family members.

“I excused myself from the sermon and immediately rushed to my home with the village headman, Chaudhry Ranjeet Lal, and some other people,” said Pastor Raja.

They found Sub-Inspector Shahbaz Ahmed and five other policemen threatening his mother and family members.

“Instead of explaining the purpose of his raid, SI Shahbaz grabbed my collar and bundled me into their vehicle.”  Police also arrested his uncle, Manzoor Raja, who lives with the family.

Upon reaching the police station, officers took liquor manufacturing equipment from a room and forcibly took the two men’s photographs with it. They then accused them of illegally manufacturing and selling liquor.

He was released on bail the next day. Police falsely arrested him because he has complained about them protecting area criminals, the pastor said.  “Almost all crimes in our villages are backed by the local police,” he said.

He said his involvement and prior complaints of criminal activities had drawn the ire of Shahbaz.

Villagers are standing by ready to vouch for him, and the village headman, Lal, said he supported Pastor Raja.

Jacksons, Mission Partners of Castle Street, Missions, Whats On

Jacksons Update – May 1st 2020

Barnabas Fund is continuing to support NetACT partners and investigating how to help with salaries.  Pray, however,  that those colleges which are involved in teaching and proclaiming Christ would live up to their verbal profession and not take advantage of the situation by grossly inflating what they claim to be their operating costs.

 Fraser is running a one-man ‘helpdesk’ operation for Hugenote College tutors starting to try online learning tools.  Pray that the students in their homes will be able to access the courses and be able to pay for the internet data required.

 Dawn has had Covid 19 symptoms for a few weeks but is now getting better.  Some prison officials are not taking Covid19 precautions. Pray they will be responsible, especially as cases recorded in prison so far are thought to have been brought in by staff.

Blythswood, Mission Partners of Castle Street, Missions, Whats On

Blythswood Update – April 15th 2020

Daniel Centre

The money previously assigned for the refurbishment of the large depot in Cluj has had to be temporarily re-directed to Blythswood in Deephaven to maintain essential services, including the food banks, across a wider spectrum of Blythswood projects which are currently in lockdown.

The Daniel Centre is in complete lockdown which means that all the residents have to be in isolation for 14 days and those young men who have been working will lose their jobs because of this.  Two of the lads have left the Centre for the time being, another would like to leave but this would probably have to be permanent, and seven remain with different members of staff taking turns to spend two weeks in the Centre with the young men.  The cook retires at the end of April but one of the current staffers will take his place.

The Daniel Centre has been delivering care packages to 30 homes, about 100 people, on a regular basis, but that has now to be curtailed to only the two most elderly and vulnerable people.  The Daniel Centre will transfer money regularly to the accounts of the other 28 family units till the crisis is over.

Talita Kum

The lockdown continues and the staff are now on furlough and receiving 75% of their normal salary.

Balazs has had no news of whether their fortnightly quizzes going online has been successful or not.  They may have to stop their care plan for the elderly in the current situation.

Missions, The Persecuted Church Across the World, Whats On

Terrifying locust swarm enters Uganda – April 15th 2020

Barnabas Fund, 7 April 2020

A local pastor called for prayer as he reported the arrival of a vast swarm of young desert locusts in north-eastern Uganda.

The immature locusts migrated in a dense swarm from Kenya, at the “worst possible time”, when farmers are planting new crops for a much needed harvest in a few months’ time.  Severe food shortages are anticipated.

“Because these locusts are still young, they are much more dangerous than the previous ones. Their lifespan is still long and they have the capacity to eat and destroy anything that they come across,” the pastor warned.

With the country now battling to contain the coronavirus pandemic, it has been difficult for regional authorities to effectively track the movement of the locusts.

New swarms are now forming and representing an “unprecedented threat to food security and livelihoods”, according to The Food Security Cluster (FSC).