Argentina: “Heaven’s Angel” Takes the Gospel to Remote Jungle Areas

Source: God Reports, June 9, 2023

This Argentinian is no Hell’s Angel. In fact, he’s just the opposite, an angel, a messenger sent from heaven. His ride is bringing new life in Christ to tribal people lost in the jungle.

The native missionary—whose story is documented by Christian Aid Mission anonymously for his safety—rides his motorcycle into the most remote, dense jungle of Argentina to bring the gospel to native peoples largely cut off from civilization.

While the journey is daunting, the results have been spectacular.

“They worship Christ regardless of whether the heat or the cold hits them,” he is quoted as saying. “Many people, broken and crying, received Christ in their hearts after the message and evangelistic materials were delivered.”

See the full story with pictures.

World News Briefs from Mali, Nigeria, the Middle East & More

In this edition:

  1. World: Millions of Refugees and Displaced People
  2. Nigeria: 16 Christians Released from Captivity, Aided by Muslim Community
  3. Middle East: “I Think We’re Seeing the Collapse of Islam”
  4. Muslim World: Your Name Is Freedom
  5. Mali: Gospel Melts Inmates and Prison Official

Read or share the email edition.

Greetings!

June 20 was World Refugee Day… and a quick look at the numbers (see below) reminds us how many more are displaced within their own countries, as well. Let’s pray for them too, and places like northeast India, where more than 40,000 people have been displaced.

In the Northern Hemisphere, this is also the time of the summer solstice—something we all may experience but more emphasized by those in some pagan groups. Does anyone know of a Christian guide to praying for Wiccans? I found some good fuel for prayer on Wikipedia and a Religion News Service story about a new religious group in the U.S.

Today would be a great day to pray for the light of Christ to overcome the darkness experienced by many in our world (John 1:5).

Pat

World: Millions of Refugees and Displaced People

Source: Lausanne and Operation World June 19, 2023 (email)

68.5 million people have been forced to leave their homes worldwide.

  • 40 million have fled somewhere else in their own country.
  • 25.4 million have left their country as refugees.
  • 3.1 million are seeking asylum and argue they can never return home.

Of the 25 million who have left their homeland, around two-thirds have come from just five countries: South Sudan, Afghanistan, Syria, Myanmar, and Somalia. Peace and good government in these lands would solve most of the global refugee crisis.

85% of the world’s displaced people are hosted in developing countries. The top refugee-hosting countries—and rarely praised by the global community for this—are Turkey, Uganda, Pakistan, Lebanon, and Iran. In Lebanon, one in six of the population is a refugee.

Migrant flows today are nothing unusual in historical terms. Their numbers, as a proportion of the world, have not changed much in half a century.

  • Pray for the protection of the lives and dignity of all those who leave their homes as migrants or refugees. The path they take is blighted by exploitation, illegal border crossings, rape, torture, and imprisonment.
  • The presence of large numbers of migrants usually creates tensions and strains in receiving countries; pray for a balance between compassionate care for local people in need as well as refugees.
  • Fair sharing between nations would ease the pressure on receiving countries. International cooperation could relieve great evil; pray for justice!
  • The Christian faith has often taken root among refugees and in refugee camps. Pray for all who seek to serve refugees in Christ’s name. Pray that Christ will build his Church among those who have lost everything, turning ashes into beauty.

Sign up for daily emails from Operation World. Daily updates are also available on the Operation World website or through their app.

Note: We notice that some sources list the number of refugees and displaced people as much higher. See also numbers from the UNHCR.

Nigeria: 16 Christians Released from Captivity, Aided by the Muslim Community

Source: Christian Solidarity Worldwide, June 6, 2023

Sixteen members of Bege Baptist Church [in] central Nigeria, who were abducted in May, were released on June 4 after spending almost a month in captivity.

Around 40 members of the congregation were abducted on May 7 by armed assailants of Fulani ethnicity who attacked the church’s Sunday service. The majority managed to escape; however, 16 of them remained in the hands of their captors for almost a month.

The Kaduna State Chair of the Christian Association of Nigeria, Rev. John Joseph Hayab, informed CSW that members of the local Muslim community had contributed funds towards the ransom, and had also purchased a motorcycle requested by the abductors as part of the payment: “I confirm and give thanks that all 16 are now back home. We are grateful to the local Muslims who contributed towards the ransom, and pray that from now [on] the two religious communities will work together to bring this painful era of kidnapping, violence, and killings to an end.”

Read the full story with includes additional background and commentary on the current political climate.

Middle East: “I Think We’re Seeing the Collapse of Islam”

Source: Mission Network News, June 19, 2023

A senior cleric made waves in Iran earlier this month by saying Islam was weak. Roughly two-thirds of Iran’s mosques have closed, he said—a “worrying admission” for a state built around the principles of Islam.

Tom Doyle of Uncharted Ministries says it’s part of a broader trend. “There’s just not that general excitement, that fervency to spread Islam that we saw when we started going to the Middle East 25 years ago,” he explains.

“We see tolerance for it. In places like the Gaza Strip, people are forced to make that the issue. For at least ten years, we’ve seen attendance [declining] in mosques, and many Muslims, especially young ones, becoming agnostic.”

Additionally, “we’ve been privileged to go into Iran a couple of times, and [in] the mosques that we visited, we didn’t see any young people; just a bunch of old people, and there weren’t that many of them. We saw the same thing in Syria, in Iraq,” Doyle says.

“I think we’re seeing the collapse of Islam.”

You could say the same about Christianity in America. Church attendance is down across denominations. However, Muslims in the Middle East are not only turning away from Islam. Many are turning to Jesus.

Read the full story.

Editor’s note: We think it’s too soon to predict Islam’s collapse, but see another opinion piece about Christianity growing in unexpected places and describing why the author thinks it’s happening now (World).

Muslim World: Your Name Is Freedom

Source: Frontiers USA, June 14, 2023

Shah gripped the peeling seat of the old Toyota as he and Tony, a Frontiers field worker, rattled down the bumpy road to Shah’s home village.

He pointed to the left. “Turn here and you’ll be at my uncle’s home.” The weathered house came into view between the thick vegetation that crowded the road.

Shah’s extended family still lived in the area, although he and his parents had moved to a nearby town. Shah and his father had begun working with Tony three years earlier, and since then Tony’s prayers in Jesus’ name had led to the inexplicable healing of his mother’s leukemia and his father’s liver failure.

Shah wished he could follow Jesus, who seemed to heal the most impossible of illnesses, but he knew his family could be hurt or killed if they left Islam. Still, he hoped the prayers of his foreign friend would drive out the evil spirit that had plagued his uncle for a decade. If Jesus couldn’t help, then nothing would.

Read the full story. It’s powerful.

Mali: Gospel Melts Inmates and Prison Official

Source: Christian Aid Mission, June 14, 2023

A crowd of murderers, thieves, and other violent men, women, and minors in Mali were incarcerated uneasily in the same prison when guards called them into the courtyard.

An officer told the inmates that Christians had come from hundreds of kilometers away to give them advice, and to please listen to them.

The hardened faces softened as the native Christian worker spoke of disobedience, sin, and salvation. The worker knew this might be the only chance the criminals from different tribes had of hearing the gospel, the ministry leader said.

Within minutes, a voice cried out, “I am guilty—this man is telling the truth. God help me.”

“You could see each of them whispering similar things to themselves; others had reddened eyes and tears,” the leader said. “As if a light had just burst forth in the midst of darkness, we saw some faces unraveling—certainly the power of God was there.”

As a spirit of repentance dissolved the prior atmosphere of misery, the prison officer also confessed to the inmates: “This word concerns me—I am guilty towards God. May God help me.”

“As he spoke, tears could be seen rolling down the cheeks of many,” the leader said, adding that the officer and inmates pleaded for the workers to pray for them.

Read the full story to see how this encounter changed the prisoners, according to the warden.

News from West Africa, the Middle East and Beyond

  1. Middle East: You Have a Pool, Right?
  2. Burkina Faso/Mali: Australian Doctor Freed after Seven Years in Captivity
  3. West Africa: Holy Spirit Moves among the Fulani
  4. Ghana: Publisher Apologizes for Textbook Critical of Christian Missionaries
  5. Chad: Christians and Muslims Come Together in Bible Translation

Read or share the email edition or scroll down for more.

Image: Dr. Ken Elliott from Australia has been freed after spending seven years as a captive in West Africa. See the story below.

Middle East: You Have a Pool, Right?

Source: Frontiers USA, May 15, 2023

I was enjoying the last rays of the Middle Eastern sun late one afternoon when my friend Khaled called me.

“Hey, Trevor,” he greeted me. “You have a pool, right?”

“A pool?” I glanced across the yard at the inflatable kiddie pool my children used on hot days. “Yeah, a little one for the kids. Why do you ask?”

“An adult could fit, right? I need it next Wednesday.” His words came out in a rush. “Can you bring it to the garden? And then can you fill it up?”

I raised an eyebrow, even though Khaled couldn’t see me. “Sure, but what is this all about?”

“Salwa wants to get baptized!”

Salwa lived in a neighboring region that foreigners couldn’t access. For years, my team and I had prayed fervently for the people of this area, but all our attempts to reach them with the gospel had failed.

Salwa had been making regular treks to our city for the past several months. Here she’d met Khaled and some other local Muslim-background believers my team and I have been discipling. When they shared the gospel with Salwa, she eagerly decided to follow Jesus.

Now, Khaled’s invitation to her baptism was a stunning answer to prayer.

I grinned. “I’ll be there. And so will my pool.”

Read the full story and prayer points. Also from Frontiers, read The Grumpy Samaritan.

Burkina Faso/Mali: Australian Doctor Freed After Seven Years in Captivity

Source: International Christian Concern, May 24, 2023

Kenneth Elliott, an Australian doctor kidnapped in Burkina Faso and held captive by al-Qaeda for more than seven years, has finally returned home to his family.

“Kenneth Elliott was safe and well and was reunited with his wife and their children on Thursday night,” Foreign Minister Penny Wong told the Associated Press.

“We wish to express our thanks to God and all who have continued to pray for us,” added Elliott’s family in a statement released by Wong’s department.

On January 15, 2016, Elliott and his wife Jocelyn were taken from their home in Burkina Faso by the Mali-based terror organization al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM). Jocelyn was quickly released in February 2016.

Elliott and his wife had been running a hospital in Djibo. The hospital, which could hold 120 patients, was closed due to Elliott’s absence after the kidnappings. He was the only surgeon in the area and made his services free to the population of roughly 2 million. He was given the nicknames the “Doctor of the Poor” and “Savior of the Sahel” for the work he was doing.

Read the full story or one from the Associated Press. The family’s statement says, “At 88 years of age, and after many years away from home, Dr. Elliott now needs time and privacy to rest and rebuild strength.”

Apparently, the Sahel now accounts for nearly half of global terrorism, with more people killed by terrorists there than in the Middle East, North Africa, and South Asia combined (Unherd). On the weekend the Elliotts were kidnapped, the same group took credit for a terrorist attack in Ouagadougou that killed 30 others from at least 18 nationalities.

And in other news of captives released, an Iranian judge freed a Christian couple and ruled that house church gatherings are not illegal, and another judge reduced a Christian’s prison sentence for holding services in his home from ten years to two (Article18).