NIGER: She Found Jesus, Faced Rejection and Violence

Source: Godreports, April 8, 2015

Mounira came from a deeply conservative Muslim family in Niger. After she received Christ, her family abandoned her and her son Maoulé, leaving them homeless and friendless. Even her husband rejected her due to her faith in Christ, according to a report by International Christian Concern (ICC).

When he caught her reading the Bible, he seized the Scriptures from her hands and tore it to shreds. On Sunday mornings, he locked Mounira in her room to keep her from attending church.

One night, after he returned late from work, Mounira’s husband beat her to the point of unconsciousness because she dared to pray in a corner of their house. Her son, Maoulé, quickly called Mounira’s pastor, who rushed her to the hospital.

Even in the face of such abuse, Mounira’s faith never wavered. She holds verses such as Romans 8:38-39 close to her heart: “For I am sure that neither death nor life, nor angels nor rulers, nor things present nor things to come, nor powers, nor height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord.”

» Read full story.

INDONESIA: Muslims Make Marketing Push

Source: Charisma News, March 23, 2015

Muslims in Indonesia report losing one follower of Islam to Christianity every 15 seconds. That’s 2 million a year. At that rate, by 2035 Indonesia will no longer be majority Muslim nation. Muslims there are concerned about this trend and launched this campaign to help stem the tide of Muslim converts to Christianity.

» View full story and video and make what it discusses a matter of prayer.

» Editor’s note: The #SaveMaryam campaign began in 2012 and its websites don’t suggest recent activity. Have any of you seen an update?

World News Briefs

Missions-Catalyst-no-tagline_largeIn This Issue: Increase of International Students

  1. USA: Staggering Increase of International Students
  2. YEMEN: Christians Say “Suffering Is Our Reality”
  3. TURKEY: Orthodox and Protestants Take Steps to Mend Mistrust
  4. GREECE: A Story of Survival
For additional news, see our Twitter feed.
Arabic Easter Flash MobOn Easter 2011, a group of Lebanese Christians performed the song “Jesus Is Risen” at a mall in Beirut (SAT-7, via INcontext Ministries).

 

Dear friends,

We have a variety of reports for you this Holy Week, but first want to pass along a few stories that are specific to this season:

  1. Open Doors reports (via Mission Network News) about Resurrection in the Heart of Refugees, noting that Christians in ISIS-controlled areas are celebrating Easter and Holy Week despite the dangers they face.
  2. Have you heard about #orangejumpsuit campaign launching this week? It calls us to stand in solidarity with persecuted Christians, based on the words of Hebrews 13:3 on remembering those in prison.
  3. In reflections on A Postmodern Easter, a Christian and Missionary Alliance pastor explains why he’s changed his approach to reaching those not concerned about discovering what is “true.”
  4. Need help talking about Easter with a Muslim friend or just want some food for thought? Read Easter Found in the Quran?! from Answering Islam, via the Coalition of Ministries to Muslims in North America.

Blessings,
Pat

USA: Staggering Increase of International Students

Source: ASSIST News, March 26, 2015

The largest and most accessible mission field in the United States has grown another 14 percent in the last year according to the Department of Homeland Security. The new statistics confirm what missiologists have been saying for decades; the easiest way to reach some of the most unreached people groups in the world is to stay right here at home.

For example, Saudi Arabia, which forbids Christian evangelism and missions of any kind on penalty of death, has sent 80,941 students here this year. Saudi Islamists are the prime funders of the world’s most famous terror movements including al Qaeda and ISIS. This means one of the only places to reach out to young Saudi leadership from the world’s most closed country is in the USA.

In fact over 855,807 of this year’s international students are from Asia—331,371 from China alone, another country which forbids American missionaries. Most of the Asians are in the 10/40 Window, a region mostly behind the veil of Islam, communism, or extreme nationalism. Over 146,000 are from India where Hindu nationalists are increasing terror attacks on Christians and American missionaries are illegal.

» Read full story, which describes some of the ways Christians are responding to this opportunity. Many of these ministries participate in the Association of Christians Ministering among Internationals, which will hold its annual gathering in Wheaton, IL at the end of May.

» Also note that the Institute for International Education’s Open Doors reports offer numbers that differ somewhat from those above, but affirm that the number of international students in the USA is at an all-time high (almost double that of any other country).

YEMEN: Christians Say “Suffering Is Our Reality”

Source: Christian Broadcasting Network, March 31, 2015

Yemen is the Arab world’s poorest country. With the majority of the Yemini people following Islam, the tiny Christian community there is under constant threat.

“Life for Christians in Yemen is very hard,” a Yemini Christian named Sam told CBN News. “For that matter, across the Middle East, there’s not a country where Christians are not suffering for their faith. This is our reality.”

Sam was a Muslim, but he converted to Christianity. CBN News met him at an undisclosed location off the coast of North Africa. In an exclusive interview, he said if authorities discovered his real identity, he could be arrested or killed.

“All Christians in Yemen are from a Muslim background,” he continued. “According to Islamic Sharia law, it is forbidden for Muslims to convert to Christianity.”

“The government says there is religious freedom, but that is not true,” he continued. “Christians are routinely harassed. They face daily struggle and persecution; first from their family members, then from the government.”

Some 25 million people live in Yemen. The majority follow the Sunni branch of Islam. No one knows for sure how many, but it’s estimated there are a few thousand secret Christians.

» Read full story or watch video.

» See also What Is Going on in Yemen? (The Economist) and Remembering Yemen (J.D. Payne).

TURKEY: Orthodox and Protestants Take Steps to Mend Mistrust

Source: World Watch Monitor, April 1, 2015

On a Saturday in late March, a group of 20 volunteers went to an abandoned church in Turkey’s southeastern city of Mardin. They cleaned out broken chairs, a cracked pulpit, and books that haven’t been opened in decades. In the corner sat a 100-year-old organ.

The church, in the heartland of Assyrian Orthodoxy, has recently been transferred to a Protestant congregation. Although only big enough to hold 50 people, the building’s transfer represents the first steps of reconciliation between Protestantism and Orthodoxy in a city where the denominations have been bitter rivals for nearly two centuries.

When American Protestants first came to the Ottoman Empire in the 1800s, they drew tens of thousands of the empire’s ethnic Christians away from their original churches and baptized them as Protestants. Within decades, the Western missionaries had set up hundreds of churches along with hospitals and schools where foreign languages were taught. Orthodox patriarchs threatened excommunication for anyone who fraternized with them or went to their churches.

» Read full story.

» Readers might also be interested in an article on The New Faces of Christianity in Europe, as demonstrated by a visit to St. Denis Cathedral in Paris on Palm Sunday (The Schuman Centre for European Studies).

GREECE: A Story of Survival

Source: Christian Aid Mission, March 26, 2015

A Syrian Muslim who has no use of his hands or feet managed to flee to a Greek island off the coast of Turkey, where he faces new challenges to survive.

A doctor on the Greek island of Lesbos recently called the director of a ministry to Syrian refugees in Athens, called Bridge, to say that the disabled Syrian, Sami, was going to be released from an immigration detention center the following day—and that he had no accompanying relatives, friends, or money.

“We asked him how he came to Greece, and the answer was, ‘My co-travelers were carrying me on their backs on the mountains of Turkey till we reached the beach, and then I came by boat,” Voula Antouan said. “Easily you could see the despair and the questioning in his eyes, thinking that coming to Greece he would find everything waiting for him.”

The manager of an inexpensive hotel that previously had taken Syrian refugees told Antouan that he could not stay there, even with Bridge paying his bill; the manager said the elevator was too small for wheelchairs. When Antouan said they would handle the wheelchair and would provide all his meals, the hotel manager balked.

“No, you do not understand,” the manager said. “There is not even a handle in the bathroom. How can he manage it himself?”

The ministry’s search for more permanent housing was equally challenging. Lack of vacancy in an economically depressed country overrun with refugees, no facilities for people with special needs, and Sami’s unresolved legal status all blocked Bridge’s efforts.

» Read full story and another from Christian Aid about Burma’s Rugged Spiritual Landscape.

» Read about another amazing escape, this one involving Egyptian Christians in Libya.

World News Briefs

Missions-Catalyst-no-tagline_largeIn This Issue: Gains and gaps for the world’s women

Greetings,

My sleuthing this week yielded tons of news about women. This could be because March 8th was International Women’s Day and March is Women’s History Month in the US.

My task is to pick what might be relevant for you as you think about the task of “making disciples of all nations.” Some of these stories and statistics don’t have an obvious relation to spreading the Good News but may be noteworthy for us as we strategize for the future.

May the Spirit inspire new ideas and maybe nudge some to do a new thing as we face the challenges ahead!

Blessings,

Pat

 

WORLD: Gains and Gaps for the World’s Women

Source: various, via Pat Noble

Concerned about issues affecting the world’s women? Take a look at these stories in the news, coming from a variety of sources and perspectives.

Four stories about women pushing the boundaries:

For India’s Widows, a Riot of Color, an Act of Liberation (NPR)
Iranian Women Are Taking to Facebook to Protest against Compulsory Hijabs (VICE News)
Meet the Surfing Girls of Iran and read about the skateboarding school for girls in Afghanistan (MessyNessy)

Three stories about women in politics and government:

Ultra-Orthodox Women Enter Israel’s Election Race to Anger and Protest (VICE News)
Afghanistan: Don’t Leave Women Out of Peace Talks (Human Rights Watch)
Bagdad’s First Female Mayor Takes Office (Muftah)

Two stories about women in dangerous places:

Protecting Women and Children in the Line of Fire (Institute for Security Studies; will tell you the MOST dangerous place to be a woman)
One Woman’s Dream (Women Without Borders). This is an amazing story, and Women Without Borders, which covers human rights for girls and women worldwide, includes others that might interest you.

Finally, some global analysis; check out this interactive map that is full of information on the “gains and gaps” of progress for women over the last 20 years (No Ceilings).

IRAQ: Thirty Days of Prayer for ISIS

Source: Email from Praying Through the Arabian Peninsula, March 2015

PTAP would ask that we would pray for those suffering under the hand of ISIS and also pray for ISIS to be convicted of sin. Our continued battle is not with flesh and blood but against the spiritual forces that cause people to act with such evil. Download a 30-day prayer guide to pray for this situation. ISIS is affecting Syria and Iraq, but also the whole world. So please pray and seek his face during these times.

» Read full story, and also check out the new Pray for ISIS Members website.

» Also watch Freeing the Slave Women of ISIS (Journeyman Pictures) and read another story you might find this interesting, Calgary Imam Creates Fatwa against ISIS (Global News).