MALI: Remains of Kidnapped Missionary Recovered

Source: International Christian Concern, April 2, 2021

DNA tests confirmed that the body of Beatrice Stoeckli has been recovered, months after her reported death at the hands of Islamic extremists.

Switzerland’s Foreign Ministry announced the findings in a statement.

Beatrice Stoeckli primarily worked in Timbuktu, spreading the gospel and working with women and children in Mali since 2000. In 2016, she was taken captive by the terrorist group ama’at Nusrat Al-Islam wa’l-Muslimin (JNIM), a group affiliated [with] al-Qaeda that has been known to attack foreigners in the country.

Beatrice was confirmed dead in October 2020 by Sophie Petronin, a French charity worker that was also abducted in 2016 and later released. According to Petronin, who converted to Islam during her captivity, Beatrice protested the constant changes of location that her captors enforced, and as she continued to fight against them, they dragged her outside and shot her. It is believed that she had not converted at the time of her death.

The full story includes a few more details, also widely reported by syndicated news sources.

We also found a few updates on other stories about persecuted Christians which we shared previously: Slimane Bouhafs of Algeria continues to face persecution after moving to Tunisia and German Pastor Michael Feulner of Germany is hopeful he can remain in Turkey (Morning Star News).

BANGLADESH: Hope for the Rohingya

Source: Pray for Rohingya, via Assist News, March 30, 2021

“Where can we find a home? Where can we find security? Where can we find hope?” As I sat across the table from seven Rohingya men, my mind flashed back to a week earlier when I prayed “God, I’m losing hope in humanity.” Immediately I felt Him reply, “Why is your hope in humanity?” I was reminded that our hope is in Him alone.

All eyes were on Devin and me as these men, leaders in their community, awaited our response. We sat under a tent in the heat of Bangladesh in the refugee camps with bellies full of rice. The pain in their eyes was tangible and the hopelessness they experienced was real. Anuwar, a loving father, shared that he found out his wife was pregnant that same day. He felt aborting the baby could be a more loving option than raising another child in the camps which had no future or hope.

I told them how less than a year earlier, Devin and I were praying together. Out of nowhere “Burma” came into my mind and I pictured a woman wearing a black burqa. I could not point to Burma on a map. I had no idea who the Rohingya were, let alone their situation. The men’s jaws dropped. 

“It’s like magic! Most people hear about us from the media, but not you!” I told them that God put them on my heart, and now I was sitting in front of them, on the other side of the world, to tell them He has not forgotten them. He loves and cares for them. It is in Him that we can find hope. Mohammed announced they must share this story of hope with their community, to remember that God has not forgotten them.

The full story includes a few prayer points, and you can find more through the Pray for Rohingya website.

You may have read that at least 15 Rohingya were killed and tens of thousands displaced by a March 22 fire in Cox’s Bazaar, the largest Rohingya refugee camp (New York Times). Another blaze killed three more people soon after (Al Jazeera).

MALAYSIA: Woman Wins 13-Year Fight for Right to Call God “Allah”

Source: World Watch Monitor, March 17, 2021

A Malaysian woman’s campaign for Christians’ right to use the word “Allah” for “God” has succeeded after almost 13 years of court hearings and delays.

Jill Ireland Lawrence Bill has been campaigning for the right to use the word ever since immigration officials at a Kuala Lumpur airport seized eight Christian CDs from her in May 2008 because the CDs used the word “Allah” in a Christian context.

After a seven-year legal battle, Ireland was given back the CDs in 2015, but she maintained that the court had failed to address her constitutional right as a Christian to use the word.

In October 2017, her lawyer, Lim Heng Seng, noted that 60% of Malaysia’s Christians speak the Bahasa Malaysia (“language of Malaysia”), which uses “Allah” for “God.” The word, which predates Islam, has been used by local Christians for hundreds of years, since Europeans first spread the religion, long before Malaysia even came into existence.

He said Christians were never consulted when in 1986 the country banned Christians from using the word, and that the government’s blanket ban was unconstitutional and discriminatory.

After years of delays, including several this year due to COVID-19 lockdown, the Court of Appeals judge Nor Bee ruled in Ireland’s favor that the 1986 directive by the Home Ministry to prohibit Christians from using four prohibited words, including Allah, was not a blanket ban.

Read the full story. An article from the BBC includes additional background, and the case is more fully described in a piece from Malay Mail (which identifies Ireland as “a Sarawakian of the Melanau tribe.”) Note that this decision is being appealed (The Star).

USA: Four Positive Signs We’re on the Cusp of a Church Revitalization Movement

Source: Sam Rainer, Church Answers, via The Christian Post, April 4, 2021

I believe we are on the cusp of a church revitalization movement. The signs are there. Will churches follow them? On the road, a sign is no good unless it helps you travel to your destination. The signs point in the right direction for a church revitalization movement, but for it to happen churches will need to move.

1. Almost every church is smaller, but the core is stronger than ever. The return rate of people in churches is highly localized right now. Additionally, larger churches have lower return rates, while smaller churches are recovering more quickly. By this fall, Church Answers expects most congregations to be at 80% pre-pandemic levels.

2. The number of church adoptions [mergers] has the potential to catch the number of church closures. When a church is adopted, a healthier and stronger congregation receives a more vulnerable congregation into the family. Two families are brought together.

3. Pastor tenure will be longer after the great reshuffling. Like people in other professions, pastors are exhausted and struggling with decision fatigue. A great reshuffling is occurring. Over the long term, we expect pastor tenure to lengthen and get better, especially as Millennials enter the prime of their careers. With longer pastor tenures, revitalization is more likely.

4. The neighborhood church movement is primed for a launch. The neighborhood church is associated with a particular neighborhood. It is common for them to carry the name of the community. They were originally started in the community and for the community. For years, we have dismissed the potential for these churches. I believe they are primed for a comeback.

The full article includes links to a new “master class” and conference about church revitalization.

Also worth noting: As various sources report, less than half of Americans now claim a formal congregational membership (Baptist News).

Making News Briefs Better

In this edition:

  1. FROM THE EDITORS: Making News Briefs Better
  2. NORTH AMERICA: People in Diaspora in New York City, Toronto
  3. WORLD: Record Number of Bible Translations Completed in 2020
  4. INDONESIA: Apology to Christian Students Punished for Not Wearing Hijab in Virtual Class
  5. BURUNDI: Church Planters Battle Witchcraft Mixed with Islam

View the email edition or scroll down to read articles below.

FROM THE EDITORS: Making News Briefs Better

Dear readers,

We’re taking a break from publishing News Briefs for the month of March. We need the time to do some work behind the scenes: to evaluate our list of sources, look for those we’ve lost track of and might want to re-engage, and probably add some new ones. 

But we could also use your help! If you have some input, could you hit reply on this email?

1. What are your favorite sources for news related to:
    a. International events?
    b. Ministry stories and strategies?
    c. Issues affecting the global church?

2. What topics or content types would you like to see in News Briefs? 

3. Is there anything you’d like to see less of in News Briefs?

4. Is there a specific source you’d like to see us put on our source list? (e.g., a missionary blog or newsletter, ministry website and publication, or other source that publishes mission-related news) 

Note, we’re not planning to start writing our own news briefs from scratch; you can expect to see stories previously published elsewhere. We also expect to continue our policy of only reprinting stories from sources that have given us blanket permission to use their content rather than borrowing more freely from those who might not welcome it. We will, though, continue to include links to a variety of sources. 

Much thanks!
Marti Wade & Pat Noble

NORTH AMERICA: People in Diaspora in New York City, Toronto

Source: Global Gates and Missio Nexus

People of many nations have landed on the shores of North America looking for refuge, community, a new home and hope. These diaspora people groups have settled in urban areas often creating sub-communities within larger cities. There are many mission agencies and churches that are engaged with direct ministry. But there is still a significant need for engagement for these people to be reached with the gospel and find true, lasting, and eternal hope.

God has brought the nations to us; will we be faithful in taking his gospel to them?

Download a “misssiographic” for New York City and a new one for Toronto. Look for data visualizations about three more cities in months to come.

Note: Looks like the New York City metro area is home to more than four million unreached people, 20% of the city’s population (roughly equal to its entire population in 1900!) Global Gates says at least 20% of the Toronto population is also unreached. 

WORLD: Record Number of Bible Translations Completed in 2020

Source: Mission Network News, February 11, 2021 

Wycliffe Associates, an international organization that empowers mother-tongue Bible translators and partners with local churches in the advancement of Bible translation, saw the completion of more Bible translations in 2020 than in any other single year.

“Instead of slowing down because of COVID-19, for some national Bible translators, translation has actually accelerated,” says Tim Neu, Interim President and CEO of Wycliffe Associates.

New Testament translations were completed in 141 languages, and 8 languages now have completed translations of the Old Testament.

“I’ve been humbled to see how believers in difficult areas, some in places of intense persecution and real danger, have been absolutely unwavering in their dedication to the cause,” says Neu.

Read full story.

As we previously reported, 2020 saw big gains in digital scripture access. See also What’s A Heart Language? (The Seed Company) and a fun, four-minute video, How Many Languages Are There? (Tom Scott).

INDONESIA: Apology to Christian Students Punished for Not Wearing Hijab in Virtual Class

Source: Praying for Indonesia, February 3, 2021

A West Sumatra high school punished Christian students for refusing to wear a hijab during online classes. Parental outcry led to a ruling of unacceptable religious intolerance from the Education and Culture minister, and an apology from the high school.

Praise God this incident for the firm action by the Education Minister. Pray that this results in addressing general intolerance of Christians and other minorities.

Published on Facebook. The intersection of dress codes and online schooling got us thinking. But it also spurred a legal ruling: See Indonesia Bans Forced Religious Attire in Schools (BBC) and a longer article from Al Jazeera.

Also from Indonesia: Some missionaries are looking for 1,000 daily prayer partners to intercede for the people group they hope to reach. See Pray for the Banjar. There are too many similar efforts for us to curate them all, but if you have a vested interest in a specific group, look/ask around to see if there’s a prayer campaign you might want to join.