The Persecuted Church Across the World

Persecuted Church Kenya Sept 2017

Kenyan Christians killed for refusing to recite Shahada

August 22, 2017 By World Watch Monitor 

Three Kenyan Christians were hacked to death by Al-Shabaab militants on 18 August after they refused to recite the Islamic prayer of faith.

The three men were held at machete point and ordered to recite the Shahada. When none of them did, the attackers began to tie them up. When the men resisted, they were hacked to death.

Last month, Al-Shabaab beheaded nine Kenyans. One witness said the attackers were “specifically looking for non-Muslim men”.

Al-Shabaab has targeted Kenyan Christians for years. This has left behind a trail of pain and destruction, and has instilled fear among regions where Christians are the minority.

April 2015, Al-Shabaab attacked Garissa University College, killing 148 people – mainly Christian students.  June 2014, attacks left 52 people dead. The militants struck a shopping mall in 2013 in an attack that left 68 people dead. They separated Muslims and killed Christians in one of the deadliest attacks in the city.

The Persecuted Church Across the World

Persecuted Church Laos 1 Sept 2017

LAOS: HEALINGS LEAD MANY TO FAITH IN CHRIST

Open Doors 18 August 2017

Beun* is a believer in Laos – pictured below, although we can’t show his face for security reasons.

He became a Christian after Christians who cared for his dying brother. “When I heard that Jesus is the King of Kings and that Jesus is love, I decided to follow Him, even though this was the first time I had heard about Jesus,”

He then began to pray for healing for others. One person came to him with kidney stones. “He asked me if Jesus could help him. I said: ‘Jesus can help you, but I can’t.'”

“I prayed for him. At midnight, he had severe pain in his kidney. He had never experienced so much pain before. In a vision or a dream, a man with long hair and white clothes came to him and poured water on him and into his mouth – the more water he got into his mouth the better he felt.

“After the vision, he fell asleep and slept through the rest of the night. When he woke up the next morning and went to the toilet, the kidney stones were no longer there.”

Beun and other Christians travel to distribute Bibles, teach and hold worship meetings in other villages.

*name changed for security reasons

Blythswood, Missions

Blythswood Update 1st Sept 2017

Blythswood – September Update 1

Talita Kum

Adrian Popa was brought up by Christian parents and came to faith himself as a teenager.

After studying Theology in Bucharest, he came to Wales to continue his studies and was introduced to Blythswood through a student there. 

 Returning to Romania, he was profoundly affected by how an old man, a new Christian, cared for poor children in his building.  Through that experience, he was eventually led to start Talita Kum with the help of Blythswood.

Daniel Centre

Balazs Csiszer was the son of atheistic parents but began to seriously question Marxism as a teenager. 

Through his experiences in the army at the time of the fall of Communism and his getting to know active Christians, he finally came to full faith in Christ when it sunk in that Jesus had died for his sins.

After working for some years with alcoholics at the Bonus Pastor Foundation, he met Blythswood in 2002 and is now their Chief Executive in Romania, spending much of his time in the Daniel Centre.

The Persecuted Church Across the World

Persecuted Church UK Aug 2017

NHS in court attempting to stop staff speaking about their beliefs outside of the workplace

 Barnabas Fund 03/08/2017

This week Richard Page will challenge an NHS ruling that requires employees not to make any comments outside of the workplace contradicting the NHS’s politically correct view of “equality.”

As a magistrate during an adoption hearing, he expressed the view that it was “generally in the best interests” of a child to have both a mother and father.

A panel investigating his continuing as a trustee told him, “It was not in the interests of the health service for you to serve as a non-executive director in the NHS,” his actions “likely to have had a negative impact on the confidence of staff, patients and public in you as a local NHS leader.”

Between 1719 and 1888 the UK abolished “Test Acts” that prohibited anyone from being teachers and university professors unless they publicly subscribed to certain beliefs. This NHS Trust is seeking to turn the clock back on more than 130 years of religious freedom in the UK.

The Daily Telegraph warned that this week’s hearing could have major implications for how public bodies treat staff with religious beliefs. Mr Page will warn that “the loss of his job because of his religious beliefs signifies a worrying shift away from pluralism towards ideological dictatorship in the health service.”

The Persecuted Church Across the World

Persecuted Church Sweden Aug 2017

Sweden to deport Christian back to Iran, in violation of UN Convention on Refugees

Barnabas Fund 10/08/2017

Sweden is about to deport back to Iran a well-known Iranian actress who has left Islam to become a Christian, despite this violating the UN Refugee Convention.  Aideen Strandsson came to faith in Christ after watching a video in Iran of a woman being stoned to death. She said, “I decided at that moment I don’t want to be a Muslim anymore.”

She explained how, shortly after this, “I had a dream about Jesus. He was sitting near me and he took my hand.”

Aideen Strandsson

When she came to Sweden in 2014 she asked for a public baptism, saying, “I am not afraid anymore.  I am free, I am Christian, I want everyone to know about that.”

But Swedish officials have told Aideen that becoming a Christian was “her decision” and “her problem”, not theirs. A Swedish official said it wouldn’t be as bad for her as she expects – it would only be 6 months in prison! 

As an apostate from Islam and a nationally known actress, she is likely to be viewed as a major embarrassment to the Iranian government. Her life will be in serious danger and she has already received threats on social media.

Jacksons, Missions

Jacksons Update 15th Aug 2017

Jacksons August Update 2

Give thanks to God for he is good.

The applications for visas are in at a cost of just over £70.  Please pray that our certificates will be granted this week and arrive safely with us in the UK.  We were able to have our obligatory chest x-rays done for £85 altogether.

We have been offered accommodation about half an hour from NetACT’s base at Stellenbosch University.  They run courses in social reformation which sounds like something Dawn could get involved with.

NetACT is interdenominational and is made up of partner colleges including those belonging to the Evangelical Church of West Africa, the Anglican Church in Kenya, Presbyterians and several others. These colleges are located in several countries including Uganda, Burundi, Nigeria, Kenya, South Africa and Mozambique.

Pray that the South African immigration authorities will find our applications completely acceptable.

Blythswood, Missions

Blythswood Update 15th Aug 2017

Blythswood August Update 2

Talita Kum 1 & 2 and Daniel Centre

Give thanks for another year completed by Talita Kum 1 and Talita Kum 2 projects in Romania.

They are closed for the summer holidays now. 

Pray for the Daniel Centre team in Romania who work closely with the boys.  Pray that the boys’ lives will be transformed.

Give thanks for the Bonus Pastor Foundation, Romania working among addicts and pray for their clients’ healing.

Pray for Pastor Dan Micula and his ministry among the poor and displaced in Popesti, Romania

Barnabas, Missions

Barnabas Update 15th Aug 2017

Myanmar (Burma) August Update 2

Mob destroys pastor’s house and church

Barnabas Fund Website

On 22 July, a Buddhist mob attacked three Christian homes and a church in a village in Myanmar, allegedly following the conversion of some members of the Buddhist community to Christianity.

The church pastor’s house and the church were completely destroyed, along with several motorbikes owned by Christians.

The pastor and his family are now living on the side of the road. The pastor said, “I and my family decided to serve the Lord in this village, we cannot run from this village, if we die, then we will die.”

Myanmar is 87% Buddhist and in 2015 the government passed a law requiring anyone wishing to change their religion to obtain official approval.

The Persecuted Church Across the World

Persecuted Church Turkey August 2017

TURKEY – New school curriculum to teach jihad and reinforce “Turkish” identity as Islamic

Barnabas Fund 27/07/2017

The Turkish government has launched a new school curriculum which will officially teach jihad as part of religious education. Students will be taught that the “greater jihad” – usually interpreted as a personal struggle against sin – means “to serve society’s needs.” (The term “lesser jihad” is often used to mean military jihad – war against non-Muslims with the aim of spreading Islam.) The lessons will be rolled out to all students from next year.

The alterations to the Turkish school curriculum appear designed to reinforce ideas of Turkish Islamic nationalism, by indoctrinating students that adherence to Islam equates to adherence to the state. “The real meaning of jihad is loving your nation,” stated the government’s Education Minister.