Middle East Miracles | From Africa to the Rest

  1. Middle East: “I Will Not Fear Anything as Long as Jesus Is With Me”
  2. Africa: Born Different, Not Less
  3. Iraq: Kingdom Advance Comes Through Healing
  4. Uganda: Persecution Escalates and Spreads as President Loses His Way
  5. Africa: The Most Christian Continent Grapples With Its Missional Future

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Middle East: “I Will Not Fear Anything as Long as Jesus Is With Me.”

Source: Media to Movements monthly newsletter, September 21, 2022

“Khalil,” a young adult from the Middle East, experienced many injustices in his life and was searching for a place to belong when he found a gospel video that [a media ministry team] posted on Facebook. This video sparked Khalil’s curiosity, and he quickly wanted to meet with someone to learn more about Jesus. From that first meeting, he couldn’t stop reading the Bible.

Khalil soon surrendered his life to Jesus; and from that time, [the] fear disappeared. He said, “I will not fear anyone as long as Jesus is with me.” He was later baptized, quickly developing a passion for Christ, and is now sharing his newfound freedom with his entire family! He continues to learn more every day and meets with believers whenever possible.

Pray for his wife and sister who are now reading the Bible, that they too, would come to faith. Pray that Khalil’s spiritual roots would grow strong and deep and that God would multiply fruit through this passionate brother.

Editor’s note: Media to Movements, which provided this story, is looking to add a full-time social media marketing coach to their team. It sounds like a great job and ministry opportunity for someone. You or someone you know? Learn more about their work or contact them.

See also a story about a man from the Arabian Peninsula who took his questions about faith to the internet (Operation Mobilization).

While many question the faith of their ancestors, we read an interesting story about people returning to an ancient faith. Read Greeks Return to Worshiping Gods of Ancient Greece (Greek Reporter). Pray for them!

Africa: Born Different, Not Less

Source: Every Home for Christ, October 2022

Martha’s 11-year-old son, Jonah, has cerebral palsy. Jonah desperately wants to go to school, Martha tells me. Jonah’s physical challenges and his family’s financial circumstances make that impossible. Martha just wants a full life for her son.

The stigma against people with disabilities in Africa is oppressive. It’s tragic. It’s infuriating.

Children and young people with disabilities are treated as outcasts and often neglected. Governments provide little or no support to families with children who have disabilities. Husbands frequently abandon their wives when their child’s disability becomes apparent. Disability is often seen as a curse on a family. Families and communities blame mothers.

The Bible says children are a blessing from the Lord. It does not specify able or disabled children. They are all a blessing.

Jesus calls us to reach not only the people we are comfortable with but the ones we are not so comfortable with. We are to urge anyone we find to come to the house of the Lord. Anyone means any human being you find with God’s breath, regardless of shape or form, abled or disabled. That’s the Great Commission.

In the full story, the author talks about her own son, who has autism, and her ministry to people on the margins.

This is a global problem, not just a problem in Africa. Scripture has much to say about ministering to the marginalized. And many of us look away. See a short post comparing the themes of the top 25 Christian worship songs with what’s in the Psalms (Craig Greenfield, via Global Christian Worship). You’ll see some notable gaps.

Iraq: Kingdom Advance Comes through Healing

Source: Christian Aid Mission, October 12, 2022

Years after losing the use of his legs [during the Iraq-Iran war], Mustafa Abbas was watching a Christian program on a satellite channel in 2011 when he followed the speaker’s encouragement to pray in Christ’s name for healing, he told ministry workers in his native Iraq.

“I repeated those prayer words with all my heart and asked Christ to heal me, and I was healed,” he told the workers last year. “Christ healed me, and I am grateful to him, and I know you are his followers—tell me how to return this favor to him.”

They gave him a Bible and encouraged him to read it. The ministry leader then told Abbas, “If you want to return the favor, surrender your life to Christ as you surrendered your body, and the Lord will heal you from sin as he healed you in the body.”

“Not a week goes by that Mustafa doesn’t call us to ask us about an issue in the Bible and theological matters,” the leader said. “Hallelujah.”

Read the full story and another from Christian Aid, Refugees Obtain Miraculous Help in Europe.

For more about refugee ministry, read One Year Later: Afghanistan (Help the Persecuted) and the last bit of a roundup of news and analysis from the war in Ukraine in Jeff Fountain’s Weekly Word (which also deals with geopolitics and Christian nationalism).

Uganda: Persecution Escalates and Spreads as President Loses His Way

Source: Religious Liberty Prayer Bulletin, September 20, 2022

Persecution is both escalating and spreading throughout Uganda. Islamic radicalization and guaranteed impunity have combined to make Uganda (which is 84 percent Christian and 14 percent Muslim according to the 2014 census) an increasingly dangerous place for Christian evangelists, apologists, and converts from Islam.

Despite Muslims comprising a small minority, Uganda is a member of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation and the Islamic Development Bank. Thus, Uganda is committed to promoting and defending Islam, which is growing in numbers, increasingly radical and overtly confident.

Meanwhile, President Museveni (a professing Christian) appears to have lost his way, trusting less in God and more in corruption—particularly patronage (rewarding supporters) and repression (punishing opponents) as he retains power by any means. Prayers for Uganda, its president, and its Church are urgently needed. Please pray.

The full story includes links, details, and analysis as well as prayer points.

See also Evangelists Sustain Knife Wounds After Debates in Uganda and Young Woman in Uganda Killed After Accepting Christ (Morning Star News).

Africa: The Most Christian Continent Grapples With Its Missional Future

Source: Lausanne Movement, August 23, 2022

Africa is the most Christian continent in the world today. Hallelujah! In the year 2018, for the first time in history, there were more Christians in Africa than on any other continent in the entire world. The continent now has well over 670 million Christ-followers.

It gets even more impressive—by 2050 there will likely be more Christians in Africa (1.25 billion) than in the current second and third place contenders, Latin America (705 million) and Europe (490 million) respectively, combined.

No doubt, the nature of global Christianity will be shaped by the African majority, from missiology and theology through public policy to international relations. The future of the global church is African. But what sort of Christianity will Africa offer and bequeath to the world?

[Our] big dream is that every African Christian, continental and diasporic, will be imparted with vision and be empowered to transmit the gospel of Jesus Christ in word, deed, and power right where they are and beyond.

Read the rest of the article, adapted from the introduction to the authors’ new book about African mission efforts entitled Africa to the Rest.

By the way, you might find it interesting to see how some African countries have fared on the Good Country Index (this link is to the 2022 report). This research has been gathered since 2014 and this TED talk will help you understand the method. I’m wondering why Kenya went from ranking number 30 in 2014 to number 67 in 2022.