World News Briefs: Quality Education in the Name of Jesus

A year ago today, a tragic explosion shook Beirut. The people of Lebanon are still looking for answers. See a story below for how one Lebanese ministry is serving its community (Mission Network News).

In this issue:

  1. LEBANON: Quality Education in the Name of Jesus
  2. THE SAHEL: Christians in Peril in “Africa’s Afghanistan”
  3. BANGLADESH: Christians Flee After Buddhist Radicals Attack
  4. SOUTH ASIA: Believer Makes Sacrifice to Serve His Persecutor
  5. WORLD: An Olympic Games Roundup

Read or share the email edition or scroll down for individual stories.

LEBANON: Quality Education in the Name of Jesus

Source: Mission Network News, August 2, 2021

Many Christian schools in Lebanon have classes made up of mostly Muslim children. Wissam Nasrallah of Lebanese Society for Educational and Social Development says this isn’t a problem.

Children come to schools like Beirut Baptist School for high-quality education. They also get to see the love of Jesus in action. Nasrallah says, “We’re committed to providing education to the community that is Christian but also excellent. This has been a landmark of evangelical schools to serve students from all faith backgrounds and all social classes, regardless of belief or status. This is a legacy that we have in Lebanon. It started with Protestant Presbyterian missionaries in the 19th century and Catholic missions.”

These students even take classes about the Bible and attend chapels with their parent’s knowledge, Nasrallah says. It all stems from the trust Christians have built in the community.

And that trust is needed right now, during COVID-19 and the current financial crisis in Lebanon. Nasrallah says, “Our resilience has been stretched thin. At one point we even wondered if we could keep on going. So what we need today is a lot of prayer for patience, wisdom, and discernment to make the right decisions. We want to be able to find favor and grace in the eyes of the community that we are serving.”

Read the full story and pray for the people of Lebanon. Learn more about ministry in Lebanon from MNN. Congratulations to Mission Network News for 30 years of ministry!

For another story from the Middle East, Reaching Yemenis Through Media.

THE SAHEL: Christians in Peril in “Africa’s Afghanistan”

Source: Religious Liberty Prayer Bulletin, July 20, 2021

France’s Operation Barkhane, tasked with fighting terrorism in the Sahel, will come to an end in early 2022, just ahead of France’s presidential election. Troops are already being withdrawn. It comes as jihadists in the Sahel are: (1) escalating their activity; (2) enacting Sharia laws and penalties in territories they control; and (3) actively working to expand south into Ivory Coast, Ghana, Togo, and Benin.

On the night of June 4-5, Islamic jihadists—many of whom were mere children—massacred at least 160 civilians in Solhan Village, Yagha Region, northeastern Burkina Faso. Separately, jihadists in eastern Burkina Faso have targeted a Bible school, burning its library and threatening its staff.

Christians in the Sahel—especially those in the tri-border region of Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger—are imminently imperiled. Please pray.

The full story includes more detail, prayer points, and many links.

In other news from the Sahel, a Malian woman broke a world record. No, she is not an Olympic athlete. You should read her story.

BANGLADESH: Christians Flee After Buddhist Radicals Attack Their Church

Source: The Christian Post, August 2, 2021

A small Christian church in southeastern Bangladesh was attacked and destroyed twice amid weeks of threats from radical Buddhists against Christians who refused to re-convert to Buddhism. Many believers in the community are reportedly displaced from their homes.

“The radicals told us to destroy the church, but we will not,” Tubel Chakma Poran Adetion, the church’s assistant pastor, told Asia News. “If we have to sacrifice our lives, we will. They threatened us to return to our old religion, but we will not return. Jesus Christ is our savior. We will die for him.”

The pastor told the news outlet that believers at the church were previously Buddhists who “met Jesus Christ” in 2005. The Christian residents of Suandrapara built the small brick-and-tin church in January through funding provided by the Bangladesh Bawm Tribal Baptist Church.

The pastor said they gathered and prayed daily despite threats and opposition from the Buddhist majority. The Christians were given a seven-day deadline to stop all church activities and re-convert to Buddhism.

The believers refused to comply.

Read the full story or a similar article from International Christian Concern. But both draw on the same article from Asia News, which reports that the church in question has about 50 members. Christians represent only 0.4 percent of Bangladesh’s 166 million people, most of whom are Muslim.

SOUTH ASIA: Believer Makes Sacrifice to Serve His Persecutor

Source: International Mission Board, July 28, 2021

“Mark” found faith in Christ about five years ago, reports IMB missionary Owen Stoddard. Mark comes from a South Asian Muslim background and works as a painter in his local community to provide for his wife and young daughter.

After Mark became a Christian, he obediently participated in baptism and began to boldly share the saving power of Christ with his fellow villagers. Mark’s obedience cost him his good reputation within the community and has affected his ability to find people who will hire him.

“Deciding to trust Christ and be baptized has blessed Mark with joy in Christ and fellowship with God’s people,” said Stoddard. “However, his faithfulness to share how Christ can also save other villagers causes locals who disapprove of his bold witness to speak out against him. As a result, it has become difficult for Mark to find work. Nevertheless, he has remained faithful to Christ.”

When Mark’s South Asian country was hit by the COVID-19 pandemic, the lockdowns left many families without jobs and a way to find food. Many residents are day laborers, working the rice and vegetable fields to feed their families.

Yet Mark sought out the man who was the most responsible for publicizing his conversion and encouraging his persecution and gave his own family’s food to this man—his enemy.

Read the full story.

Read more from IMB: New Strategies Emerge as Japanese Churches Face Future Without Pastors and Japanese Hunger for Hope on the Horizon (featuring a good infographic).

WORLD: An Olympic Games Roundup

Source: Various

The Olympics: A Pattern for the Church?

The Olympic Games provide a wonderful foretaste of the Church in Revelation 7. Or do they have more in common with the gathering of nations in Genesis 11?

Read what UK theologian and missiologist Eddie Arthur has to say on this topic (Kouya.net).

Iranian Defector Dedicates Olympic Medal to Israel

Competing for Mongolia, Iranian defector Saeid Mollaei won a silver medal and dedicated it to Israel. Mollaei told the Israeli Sports Channel he is grateful for the support he’s received from Israel after defecting from Iran (due to pressure from his team to deliberately lose a match to avoid competing against an Israeli).

Read more (CBN News).

Madeline Manning Mims, Chaplain at the Olympics

What is it like to be a chaplain to elite athletes at the Summer Games? A sports ministry asked Olympic 800-meter champion and trailblazer Madeline Manning Mims.

Watch a short video on YouTube or below (Athletes in Action).