Missions Catalyst World News Briefs

Missions-Catalyst-no-tagline_largeIn This Issue: Mission news from Greece, Russia, Benin, and beyond

For additional news stories throughout the month, follow us on Twitter.

Missions Catalyst is a free, weekly electronic digest of mission news and resources designed to inspire and equip Christians worldwide for global ministry. Use it to fuel your prayers, find tips and opportunities, and stay in touch with how God is building his kingdom all over the world. Please forward it freely!

About Us

Missions Catalyst is a free, weekly electronic digest of mission news and resources designed to inspire and equip Christians worldwide for global ministry. Use it to fuel your prayers, find tips and opportunities, and stay in touch with how God is building his kingdom all over the world. Please forward it freely!

PatPat Noble has been the “news sleuth” for Missions Catalyst since 2004. In addition to churning out the news, she is working to create a SWARM (Serving World A Regional Mobilizers) in Northern New York using the NorthernChristian.org website. You can connect with her at www.whatsoeverthings.com.

 

 

GREECE: Prayer Spaces in Schools

PrayerSpace

Source: 24-7 Prayer International, February 11, 2014

Prayer spaces can have a deep impact. [In early February] a Christian teacher at a private school in Thessaloniki hosted the first prayer space that we know of in Greece.

“It’s developing really fast,” he said. “The students from the high school helped to build and create a room just how they want it. When other students came to visit, at first they said that it was weird, but it didn’t take long for them to join in… many said that they wanted to find some space for themselves and God.

“Other teachers responded to the prayer space like happy little children, and some said that they would like a corner of the room all to themselves, where they could read the Bible.

“In general, the Greek people are in difficulties. The financial crisis affected us very early and very deeply, and a lot of people are stuck in poverty. However, some of the parents were so excited by the impact of the prayer space on one student’s character that they decided to help out by raising some money to develop the prayer space. A small office room is changing into an area where students can find a refuge.”

“These prayer spaces can have a deep impact; they can cause an awakening here.”

» Watch the five-minute video on Prayer Spaces in Schools.

BENIN: Broadcasts Break Voodoo’s Hold

Source: SIM-USA, February 12, 2014

Proclaiming the gospel through Christian radio programs remains an essential way to get the message of salvation to those in bondage to voodoo.

Benin, West Africa is known as the birthplace of voodoo, and signs of this ancient practice are entangled in the culture, especially in the southern parts of the country.

At a recent Fulani women’s conference, one participant described how she was set free from the bondage of demons and idols after she had listened to the “Programs of Life” radio broadcasts. For years Fulani herdsmen have heard the gospel in their mother tongue on eight local radio stations. Many of the women listen faithfully and have now started to support the radio work financially to mark their commitment.

Gospel broadcasts in the Adja language recently touched the hearts of a respected Voodoo deity and his assistant, as well as the leader’s three wives and many children. All came to faith in Jesus Christ.

Radio goes where people cannot easily go, and it is perceived as official, true, and important. Prominence is given to the gospel message as radio continues to open new areas for church planting.

» Read full story. Readers might be interested in another recent story from SIM-USA, this one from South Sudan. See A Ministry to the Whole Family.

RUSSIA: Sochi and the North Caucasus

Source: Pioneers-USA, February 2014

With the Winter Olympics being held in Sochi just a short distance from the troubled Caucasus region, it’s a great season to remember God’s heart for unreached people groups there.

A narrow 300-plus mile sector lying between the Black and the Caspian Seas, the Caucasus region is home to some 50-60 minority people groups, most of whom are of non-Slavic ethnicity and Muslim.

Operation World identifies the Caucasus region as Europe’s least-evangelized region, with little in the way of Scripture translations or churches. The Caucasus region is not only one of geographic Russia’s least stable regions, but also the poorest, with the highest unemployment and the highest birthrates as well.

People groups of the region are isolated from one another by the rugged terrain and by the violence of their historical conflict with one another – violence that has even reached parts of the world unaware of the religious and political realities of that region.

From the point of view of 12 disparate militant Islamist factions functioning in the region, the Sochi Games are a perfect time to raise awareness of their plight and worldview – perhaps with violence. The security at the Olympics and of the rest of the region is a critical component in the coming weeks.

“Many people know little of the geography or existence of these unreached peoples,” [says a cross-cultural worker]. “Our prayer is that believers everywhere will learn about and awaken to the spiritual need of every single tribe and tongue represented in the North Caucasus.”

» If the unique location of the Olympics doesn’t make you want to watch and pray, read Why Christians Must Watch Winter Olympics (The Christian Post). See also Russians Return to Religion, But Not to Church (Pew Research Center).

MOROCCO: Proselytism Case Dismissed

Source: Morning Star News, February 6, 2014

An appeals court judge in Morocco today overturned a conviction against a Christian convert from Islam who had been sentenced to 30 months in prison for alleged proselytizing.

The judge in the Court of Appeal in Fez dismissed the case against Mohamed El Baladi, 31, because of lack of evidence, sources close to him said.

In the remote town of Ain Aicha, Taounate Province, 50 miles from Fez, security officials arrested El Baladi for alleged proselytizing of two Muslims after someone complained to police about a conversation he allegedly had with them about his faith.

Having a conversation about one’s faith is not generally considered proselytizing in Morocco, but sources confirmed reports that El Baladi was set up by an uncle with whom he had a previous dispute. The uncle hired two teenage boys to feign interest in Christianity, and police were on hand to arrest him for proselytizing minors when he met with them a second time.

» See also Morocco Repeals “Rape Marriage Law” (Al Jazeera).

CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC: A Report

Source: Simon Guillebaud, February 6, 2014

The below is from “Pierre,” who has asked me to ask you to get involved. It’s incredibly humbling to read – what he and his family have gone through, the love and commitment he has for his nation and for Muslims, his unshakeable trust in the Lord – all are profoundly challenging. Day after day he sends me updates of arbitrary lynchings, rapes, and wanton destruction. The scale of this crisis is horrific.

“Some time ago, I was helping to try to alert and educate the body of Christ concerning the rise of Islam, but religious leaders and Christians said it could never happen here. What seemed like a utopia yesterday has become reality today. The church in the CAR is poorly prepared, very poorly prepared to face persecution, and now it is paying a heavy price for its earlier lack of concern.

“For nearly a year now, the ministry has no longer functioned according to schedule. Various programs had originally been planned to be held at intervals throughout 2013. Everything has been postponed indefinitely. The rise of the Seleka followed by that of the anti-Balaka has constituted a major obstacle and created a situation of chronic insecurity, preventing us from getting out to visit our brothers in the field.

“The work among our converts from the other faith kept going until the last quarter of 2013. Unfortunately, the arrival of the anti-Balaka in Bangui undermined everything. Almost all Muslims have been driven from the capital, and the converts have also suffered from the situation. We are sheltering some of them and have rented a house elsewhere to hide some of the (as yet unconverted) Muslims who are in danger.

“This week we lost two converts, who died in the vehicle in which they were supposed to be traveling to Chad, after a grenade was thrown into it. So Habib and Abdel Kader are now with the Lord. It is really sad, what is going on here. The devil is making the work among Muslims impossible. But we remain confident in the Lord, who wants all men to be saved and come to a knowledge of him.

“Sister Nathalie, who cares for the orphaned children, has been in Chad for some months for surgery. The children and the families they are staying with are often moving about, and the meetings with them can no longer be held regularly; nevertheless we continue to follow them up and assist them. We enrolled some of them in school for the new academic year; unfortunately, as mentioned earlier, the schools are still not running. Pray for the children to persevere in faith.”

» Continue reading Pierre’s report, view pictures, and learn how you can help.

» Also read Christian Militia Could Wipe Out Central African Republic’s Muslim Population, Says Human Rights Group (The Christian Post) and pray. I recommend this this PrayerCast and website to share with your church or group.