

How much do you know about Hong Kong? Help your church or group pray for Hong Kong with greater insight using this video (Prayercast).
In this issue:


How much do you know about Hong Kong? Help your church or group pray for Hong Kong with greater insight using this video (Prayercast).
In this issue:
Source: Brigada Today, June 23, 2019
Our friend Doug Lucas writes:
You know, to me, one of the hardest geographical challenges in the world is figuring out the mystery that is Hong Kong. How could a piece of China be a British colony—then not so much. And what happens when all these citizens fight so hard to become so Western, then they suddenly are reattached to mainland China, so mainland China pretends to let them remain as a special economic zone, but then, not?
And then, most recently, the CEO of Hong Kong (appointed by mainland China) sets about to pass a new set of laws that would extradite Hong Kong citizens who were activists, advocates, and even foreign nationals into mainland China—so as many as [a fourth] of the entire population took to the streets in protest.
So finally, the CEO drops the proposed law (for now), but people keep demonstrating. And one of the main “unofficial anthems” of the entire protest is the song, “Sing Hallelujah to the Lord.” Learn more about the protest—and the anthem (Japan Times).
How can all this be? Would somebody please explain Hong Kong to us? Do you know of an article or book that makes this easy? If so, please help us out here.
» Read full story and add your comments. Asian Access also offers a good take on how to pray and Voice of the Martyrs shares another perspective (Mission Network News). For a sense of the protest scale, check out Flowing Data’s mashup of aerial photos. Amazing.
» In other China news, an update from Asia Harvest reports the persecution of Christians is now nationwide.
Source: OMF International, July 2, 2019
The seventh month of the lunar calendar is called “Ghost Month” in Taiwan. In Taiwanese folk religion, the spirit world consists of three types of beings. The gods are the highly respected and powerful spiritual beings. Ancestors are family members who have already died [and] require living relatives to offer ongoing resources in the spirit world. Ghosts are the spirits of people who died but are not being sufficiently supplied by the offerings of their living relatives.
During Ghost Month, ghosts are released from the underworld to roam the earth for one month. They can harm people who don’t provide for their needs. So, food and drinks are offered to to satisfy their hunger.
The largest of the food offerings happens during the middle of the month. Homes and businesses place tables with offerings out the front. Even fast food restaurants, tea shops, and grocery stores have tables set out to offer food and drink to the hungry ghosts.
People place burning incense sticks on the offering arrangements. Anything the incense ash falls upon is believed to become spiritual in nature for the ghosts to consume.
After the offerings are given, the people who give the offerings will either consume the food themselves or share it with others.
» Full story includes links to OMF videos about Taiwan. See also Understanding the Buddhist Worldview, a summary from OMF’s subject-matter expert (with great photos).
» Check out the new 15 Days Buddhist World Prayer Guide from WorldChristian.com. I just ordered 10 copies.
Source: Christian Freedom, July 1, 2019
Nearly 100 Christians were massacred by Muslim Fulani herdsmen in a Mali village on June 9, 2019. Witnesses said 50 radicalized herdsmen surrounded the village in trucks, destroyed everything, and killed men, women, and children.
“Anyone who tried to escape was killed,” a witness told AFP [news agency].
Fulani herdsmen who have been radicalized by Islamic militants are slaughtering Christian farmers and hunters in west Africa. The Nigerian House of Representatives declared it a “genocide” in 2018. In 2013, radical Islamists who captured north Mali were fought back by French troops. Jihadists shifted to other regions.
Pray for:
» Read full story. A story from Open Doors has more detail and links. Note the roots of religious violence may be more complex than they seem.
» From elsewhere in Africa, read Ethiopia: Pressure on Churches Building; Evangelical Church Told to Vacate after Ten Years (World Watch Monitor). For a more positive report, see Is the World’s Next Mission Movement in Ethiopia? (Christianity Today).
Source: Open Doors, June 20, 2019
In the landlocked country of 19.1 million people, the church and general population have seen escalating and deadly violence from Muslim extremists. Recent attacks have targeted church buildings and Christians, suggesting the involvement of Islamic extremists or what the population is calling jihadists.
The country’s foreign minister says tackling terrorism has become a fight “for the very survival” of the Sahel region, which incorporates the countries of Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali, Mauritania, and Niger. Militants have forced 100,000 in Burkina Faso alone to flee their homes in recent months.
The Muslim-majority nation (Christians make up roughly 35 percent) has long been known for its peaceful coexistence between different religious and ethnic groups. But now, Muslim extremist violence is on the rise, fueling panic and fear over decreasing stability in the greater Sahel region.
One resident in the eastern region testified of increasing Sharia law: “At 6pm, everyone has to go to the mosque, then straight home. In the middle of the night, you must go and listen to sermons. You’re forbidden to criticize them. Women have to cover their heads. There’s no talk of cigarettes, alcohol or music, no celebrations.”
» Elsewhere, we see Christianity in Iraq has decreased by 80 percent over the last two decades. An article in The Atlantic shares the story through the eyes of one family. An article from The Independent tells the haunting story of a 12-year-old Christian girl who, before dying in a fire set by ISIS, urged her parents to forgive them.
Source: Mission Network News, June 19, 2019
Muna was born in Amman, Jordan and has moved to different areas of the world to work with refugees and immigrants. In 1989, she moved to Atlanta, Georgia and then later to London, working with different ministries, and finally, in 1993, she moved to Sweden.
Following her move to Sweden, she began supporting immigrants as they integrated into the culture of Sweden, which was different from their own. Recently, Muna also began coaching immigrants on how to find jobs to stop living on social benefits.
Muna says when she first moved to Sweden, she began to pray that a [theological education by extension] program would begin in the country. In 2004, her prayers were answered.
[The Program for Theological Education by Extension] courses in Sweden have been teaching believers how to share the gospel effectively for 15 years now, but there are challenges.
“Many of them, they didn’t go to Sunday school when they were children, and many, many of them, they didn’t study after high school.”
Muna has been acting as the sole tutor in the area as she has higher education and [the program] does not have another qualified Arabic-speaking tutor. She has led courses and met with students on a regular basis. However, with the development of online courses, some of the weight has been lifted off her shoulders, and technology is making it easier for students to study and meet via the internet.
» While refugees may leave the Middle East for places like Europe, many more remain. In the last two decades, refugees have almost doubled the population of Muna’s hometown, Amman. Learn more and pray for Amman (Arab World Media).