Missions Catalyst News Briefs

Missions-Catalyst-no-tagline_largeIn This Issue: News from North Korea, Turkey, China, and more

  1. WORLD: Refugee Sunday
  2. NORTH KOREA: 400 Flee to China, Find Living Bread
  3. TURKEY: Christian Curriculum in Schools
  4. CHINA: House Church in the 21st Century
  5. CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC: Rebels Storm Church, 30 Killed
  6. PAKISTAN: Muslim NGO Highlights Forced Conversion of Women

For additional news, see our Twitter feed.

prayercast worldBe exalted, O God, above the heavens; let your glory be over all the earth. Psalm 57:11. Image from Prayercast’s World video.

WORLD: Refugee Sunday

Source: Refugee Highway and World Evangelical Alliance, June 2014

World Refugee Sunday is celebrated annually by the Refugee Highway Partnership in cooperation with the World Evangelical Alliance. There are over 45 million forcibly displaced people around the world. Refugees seek protection and acceptance to build their life, but in reality they often experience social exclusion, largely by being ignored, marginalized or barred by country borders.

World Refugee Sunday is an opportunity for you to join churches around the world in praying for refugees and forcibly displaced people. We invite you to participate through your remembrance and prayers on behalf of those forcibly displaced by war, violence, persecution, and oppression in our world.

» Read complete article. Visit Refugee Highway Partnership for additional information about refugees and displaced people, and consider attending their North America Roundtable in Phoenix, July 24-25. Note that World Refugee Sunday coincides with the UN campaign World Refugee Day, which takes place this Friday, June 20.

NORTH KOREA: 400 Flee to China, Find Living Bread

Source: Godreports, June 2, 2014

The North Korean famine of the 1990s resulted in the deaths of as many as 800,000 people. The famine’s return in 2013 led some to undertake desperate measures to survive. Many attempt to cross the border into China in a frantic search for food.

Some of the North Koreans understand if they can locate a certain identifiable symbol on a house or building, they will find sustenance.

“North Koreans know when they find the cross, they are able to get food and shelter,” says Joseph Lee, with Cornerstone Ministries International.

One church in northeast China has spearheaded a special outreach to North Korean refugees over the last decade. As a result, about 400 North Koreans who traveled to China to get food have heard the gospel through their ministry.

After a rapport is developed and the refugees’ physical needs are attended, even deeper needs can be met. “After this we feel that they are ready to listen to us; we explain the gospel to them,” Lee noted.

“Together they are taught how to pray and sing hymns as a group so that they can sing them in their own personal devotions, as it is dangerous to carry the Bible or hymn books into North Korea. We encourage them to memorize Bible verses and hymns, which they are really good at.”

» Read complete article. See also this Report from House Churches in North Korea.

TURKEY: Christian Curriculum for Schools

Source: Mission Network News, June 2, 2014

Turkey is a country of about 76 million people. Of those, 99.9 percent of Turkish people are Muslims. Only a fraction of the population reportedly is Christian. That makes this story even more amazing.

According to Turkey Country Director for International Needs Network Behnan Konutgan, the ministry of education has requested him to lead a group of Christians to create Christian curriculum for a religion class for the public schools.

Christian students in the past were required to take Islamic education classes. Konutgan says, “We didn’t expect this, but they want to show Europe that Christians exist in Turkey and [Turkey] loves them, respects them, and we love for them to learn [about their religion].”

The curriculum has been written and submitted to the minister of education. “They promised to print it. This is the first in the history of Turkey. This is wonderful!”

If there are Christians in a public school, they can request Christian classes rather than Islamic one.

» Read complete article. You might be interested in another recent piece from MNN, Crisis in Iraq Threatens Middle East Stability (with perspective on current events from the ministry e3 Partners).

CHINA: House Church in the 21st Century

Source: Asia Stories, June 8, 2014

The house church in China is growing rapidly in the midst of the changing tides of the nation. “Liu Qiang” remembers 12 years ago bicycling past churches in the countryside. Believers met behind boarded up doors and windows.

“Obviously they are doing something bad if they are having to close up everything,” Liu recalls thinking as a teenager. After Liu became a Christian he learned why the house churches’ secrecy was protection. He is now a house church pastor himself.

Times have changed, Liu said. There’s a chalkboard in front of his home where his house church meets—an open invitation to their neighbors to worship Jehovah. Freedoms, at least in some areas of the nation, have grown.

“Zhao Jun,” a pastor and church planter, says the house church is still persecuted in many areas of China, but some provinces have a little more breathing room. Zhao said the faithfulness of Christians under persecution has touched government officials. It’s a good testimony, Zhao believes, for the government to see the church’s perseverance.

Thirty years ago, Liu says, believers had to be careful about bringing out a Bible in public. Christians in this province now buy Bibles in the Three-Self Patriotic Movement (TSPM) church’s bookstore.

» See full story with pictures. Also read Panel Looks at Christianity’s Rapid Growth in China Despite Persecution (Christian Post), or better yet and listen to the three-hour panel discussion (Brookings Institute).

CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC: Rebels Storm Church, 30 Killed

Source: 24/7 Prayer #prayeralert, June 12, 2014

On May 30, armed rebels stormed a Catholic church in Central African Republic (CAR) and opened fire. Lives were lost as people fled in fear of more attacks. Catholic churches throughout CAR had served as safe houses since December for civilians seeking shelter from violence and bloodshed that erupted in their nation.

One witness said that many took off with nothing in hand: no money, no food, not even a mat for sleeping. Others left with injuries that needed urgent medical care.

So far nearly 1 million people have been displaced from their homes. Places of shelter and refuge are being compromised by the violence and dissension overwhelming the nation.

Let’s pray for our brothers and sisters in CAR. Religious tension is high in this politically divided nation. Pray that peace would reign in hearts and for truth and honor to be released in this country. Pray that places of shelter would be guarded by the Lord. Pray that he would send his angels to surround the innocent ones and protect them from violence.

Pray that the hospitals and medical clinics would be well supplied to treat the injured and sick. Ask God to set a guard that nothing and no one would be able to reach the premises. Pray that the Word of God would be available in every hospital, building, and place of shelter. Pray that those who hear his Word grow hungry and find refuge and comfort in the Most High.

» Full story. See also a 24/7 Prayer #prayeralert for Kenya, which suffered an attack on Sunday.

PAKISTAN: Muslim NGO Highlights Forced Conversion of Christian Women

Source: World Watch Monitor, June 9, 2014

A Pakistani Muslim NGO says that every year between 100 to 700 Christian women, “usually between the ages of 12 and 25 are abducted, converted to Islam, and married to the abductor or third party.”

In its investigative report “Forced Marriages & Forced Conversions in the Christian Community of Pakistan,” the Movement for Solidarity and Peace (MSP) identifies a pattern. It says that in most of these abduction cases the parents of Christian victims file a police report, but in response, the abductor’s relatives or friends file another police complaint on behalf of the abducted Christian woman, claiming that she willfully married and converted to Islam, and that her parents are now “harassing” her unlawfully.

Of Pakistan’s approximate 185 million [people], about 95 percent are Muslims—20-30 percent Shia [and] the majority Sunni. Christians account for about 2 percent of the total population and about the same number are Hindus. The MSP represents the Hazara community, a distinct Turkic ethnic group from the areas bordering Afghanistan (in which country they make up 13 percent of the population). They belong to the Shiite branch of Islam and are treated with suspicion. In Pakistan, Hazaras have lost thousands of their people in sectarian killings in the last two decades. Subjected to violence and discrimination, the MSP confirms similar treatment meted out to Christians.

» Read complete article.