Persecution Unveiled Cause

Persecution Unveiled Cause
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Persecution Unveiled has established this cause to educate people about the persecution of Christians and religious minorities in the US & worldwide. Mission Raising awareness to the growing tide of bigotry and hatred toward Christians around the world has become a burden on those trying to wake up those who cherish religious freedom as a God given right. Persecution Unveiled has been called by God to prick the consciences of this nation and all free people to speak up and act on behalf of those who have no voice. Email
persecutionunveiled@gmail.com

Monday, February 11, 2019

American Missionary Falsely Accused of Genocide Caught in Fight Over Indigenous Tribes

The Campbells surrounded by the Jamamadi tribe
By Mark Ellis
Christian Post

An American missionary in Brazil is under investigation and may be charged by authorities with genocide for making illegal contact with a remote indigenous tribe, potentially exposing them to diseases.

Brazil’s National Indian Foundation (FUNAI) have asked authorities to look into an incident that took place in December involving missionary Steve Campbell and the Hi-Merimã tribe. FUNAI notified federal prosecutors and the police in early January about the alleged encounter.

Campbell and his wife are based in Rondonia, Brazil and work with the Jamamadi Indians in the Brazilian state of Amazonas. He has lived with the Jamamadis since 1963, when he arrived in the region as a child brought by his parents, who are affiliated with Wycliffe Global Alliance.

Steve’s “work is to help with medical, mechanical and countless other ministry opportunities with the Indians and missionary families,” according to the Greene Baptist Church in Maine, one of the Campbell’s partnering churches. His sending agency is the Baptist Bible Fellowship International.

While Campbell lived among the Jamamadi, he entered the more isolated Hi-Merimã tribe’s area by accident while teaching the Jamamadi how to use GPS devices, according to the Brazilian newspaper Folha de São Paulo.

In the 1970s, indigenous Indians in Brazil were placed under the protection of FUNAI through the passage of the Indian Statute. Since then, there have been political battles between those who favor integration of the groups into society and others who believe they should remain isolated and protected from modernity.

Powerful mining and agricultural interests that want the indigenous reservations open to development have also influenced the direction of government policies. Gold and diamond hunters paid FUNAI in recent years to conduct explorations in the Palimi-u River area until November 2018, when the army stepped in and arrested 900 people and confiscated 350 kilos of gold.

For most of the last 30 years, FUNAI has maintained a policy of non-contact with the isolated tribes after several of them lost up to two thirds of their population when they contracted diseases like measles. Some of the groups also faced adverse consequences when they were forced to relocate due to major highway construction projects.

Bruno Pereira, who coordinates FUNAI’s study of isolated groups in the region, takes a harsh view of Campbell’s (and other missionary) activities. “If it is established in the investigation that there was an interest in making contact, using his relationship with other Indians to approach the isolated, he could be charged for the crime of genocide by deliberately exposing the safety and life of the merimãs,” he noted in a statement to Brazil’s media.
“Their immunological memory is not prepared for a simple flu or conjunctivitis,” Pereira noted. “Another point is contacts conducted by people who do not respect the self-determination of these peoples and their ways of life. Historically, this has led to violent interference in their vital relationships with the environment, with family relationships, with what they believe.”
 Continue reading Christian Post report here

Persecution Unveiled has been called to prick the consciences of this nation and all free people to pray for, speak up and act on behalf of those who are persecuted for their faith. Follow us on Pinterest, and Google and like us on Facebook.


Saturday, February 9, 2019

Christians, Asked if They Believe ‘Outdated Parts of the Bible,’ Denied Foster Application


By Michael Gryboski
Christian Post
A Canadian human rights law firm is accusing a government adoption agency of discriminating against a Christian couple who wanted to become foster parents.

The Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms sent a letter to the Simcoe Muskoka Child, Youth and Family Services in Ontario demanding that they end what the group called “religious discrimination” against the couple.

The letter, whose online copy simply identified the couple as “A” and “L,” claims the couple’s application to become foster parents was denied “not due to any legitimate deficiency in their qualifications, but due solely to Child Services’ prejudice and bias against the religious beliefs of [the couple].”

According to the letter, the couple submitted an application in November 2017 to become foster parents. In the week of April 30-May 4 of last year, they met with a Child Services social worker.

The social worker asked the couple, one of whom is a pastor, if they “still” believe “in some of the more outdated parts of the Bible” and if they considered homosexuality a sin.

Last October, the couple received a letter from Child Services declining their application, stating that “the policies of our agency do not appear to fit with your values and beliefs.”

In a statement released last week, the Centre explained that with the demand letter, they hope to have “Child Services reopen the couple’s application to foster and properly process their application to become foster parents in a non-discriminatory manner.”

Founded in 2010, the Centre’s stated mission is “to defend the constitutional freedoms of Canadians through litigation and education.”

Last year, the Centre got a legal victory for an evangelical couple in Alberta who had been told they could not adopt because they oppose same-sex marriage.

Centre lawyer John Carpay said in a statement last May that he was “thrilled” by the decision in favor of the Alberta couple, adding that the legal battle "has not diminished their enthusiasm for adopting a child."
"The government has no right to discriminate on the basis of religion when looking at couples who are seeking to adopt," stated Carpay in 2018, according to The Canadian Press.
"You can't say that someone can't become an adoptive parent because they're Muslim, they're Jewish or because they're evangelical Christian."

Persecution Unveiled has been called to prick the consciences of this nation and all free people to pray for, speak up and act on behalf of those who are persecuted for their faith. Follow us on Pinterest, and Google and like us on Facebook.

Local Politician Claims 98 Christians in India ‘Reconverted’ to Hinduism Under Threat


By International Christian Concern

Jiten Chowdhury, president of the Upajati Ganamukti Parishad, claims that 98 people in India’s Jharkhand state were forcefully converted from Christianity to Hinduism. Chowdhury claims that the Hindu Jagaran Mancha, a local Hindu radical group, used threats of imprisonment to force the 98 Christians to convert.

On January 20, news outlets from Jharkhand reported that 98 Christians had “reconverted” to Hinduism in a ceremony led by the Hindu Jagaran Mancha in Ranchi Tilla. Members of the Hindu Jagaran Mancha claimed the 98 individuals had been illegally induced into converting to Christianity by missionaries.

On January 25, Chowdhury visited Ranchi Tilla to investigate the ‘reconversions’. According to Chowdhury’s investigation, the conversion of the 98 Christians was anything but consensual.
“I found out that the Hindu Jagaran Mancha forced them to be reconverted to Hinduism,” Chowdary told The Pioneer. “They said they were Christians earlier and were very happy.”
According to Chowdary, the Hindu Jagaran Mancha used a local criminal dispute over stolen livestock to threaten the 98 individuals into converting to Hinduism. 
“They threatened to put them behind bars and forced them to be reconverted to Hinduism,” Chowdhury told The Pioneer.
Hindu radicals often use the false narrative of Christian missionaries illegally converting poor Hindus as a means to spread distrust of Christians. This false narrative is also used to justify assaults on Christians and pass laws criminalizing religious conversion. However, the laws criminalizing conversion are rarely applied to conversion from Christianity to Hinduism as Hindu radicals claim these do not count as religious conversions but instead ‘reconversions’.

Persecution Unveiled has been called to prick the consciences of this nation and all free people to pray for, speak up and act on behalf of those who are persecuted for their faith. Follow us on Pinterest, and Google and like us on Facebook.

Trump Takes Big Stand for Evangelicals at Prayer Breakfast: Here Are the Christian Causes He Defended

Thursday's breakfast comes at a time when evangelicals frequently feel attacked 
by the culture of the day. 

airlift

By Heather Sells
CBN News


Thousands of leaders from different faiths attended the National Prayer Breakfast in Washington, DC, Thursday morning.

President Donald Trump delivered a crowd-pleasing speech, hitting several hot-button issues. He touted what he called "historic action" by his administration to not only protect Americans' freedom of religion but to tackle religious persecution abroad, vowing to the audience that he would never let them down in that regard.
"My administration is also speaking out against religious persecution around the world, including against religious minorities, Christians, and the Jewish community," he told the audience. "This week, I appointed a new special envoy to monitor and combat anti-Semitism – Elon Carr."
One of his biggest applause lines, however, came when he talked about abortion, a topic that's made headlines recently with Virginia and New York's push to make abortion legal right up until the point of birth.
"As part of our commitment to building a just and loving society, we must build a culture that cherishes the dignity and sanctity of innocent human life," he declared. "All children, born and unborn, are made in the holy image of God."
The president also touted his administration's work on criminal reform, human trafficking and his role in securing the release of Pastor Andrew Brunson from a Turkish prison.
"My administration is also continuing to fight for American hostages who have been imprisoned overseas for their religious beliefs. Last October, we reached an agreement with Turkey to release Pastor Andrew Brunson, who is now free and joins us here this morning," Trump said.
"This Saturday, Pastor Brunson will walk his daughter down the aisle. Wow, that's great. Congratulations," he said.

Pastor Andrew Brunson at State of the Union, 
Feb. 5 (Photo: Patrick Robertson/CBN News)

However, Trump did not talk about refugees, which is a point of contention between him and many evangelicals, who're concerned about the administration's historic low levels of admittance for Christian exiles.

Meanwhile, one battle the president took extra time to talk about was faith-based adoption agencies, which are fighting in court to stay open. They're being targeted for following their biblical beliefs when it comes to LGBTQ applicants.
"My administration is working to ensure that faith-based adoption agencies are able to help vulnerable children find their forever families while following their deeply held beliefs," the president said.
Faith-based adoption agencies are concerned about an Obama-era rule that says they must accommodate same-sex couples wanting to adopt. It's not clear how the Trump administration will protect the groups – although it did grant an exemption to a South Carolina faith-based agency recently.


Persecution Unveiled has been called to prick the consciences of this nation and all free people to pray for, speak up and act on behalf of those who are persecuted for their faith. Follow us on Pinterest, and Google and like us on Facebook.


Friday, February 8, 2019

Christian Police Officer in Ethiopia Arrested and Dismissed for Talking About His Faith


International Christian Concern

A Christian police officer in Ethiopia was recently arrested, dismissed, and told to move to another part of the country after he was discovered talking about his faith in uniform. According to World Watch Monitor, the Christian police officer, whose name has been withheld for security reasons, had converted to Christianity from Islam two year prior to his dismissal.

The Christian police officer grew up as a member of the Somali tribe living in Ethiopia’s eastern Somali region. Nearly 100% of the Somali tribe are Muslim.

According to World Watch Monitor, the Christian police officer was overheard talking about his new faith while in uniform in the Liyou police force. Colleagues filed a complaint against the Christian police officer with the Somali State Human Right Office, who advised the Christian to return to Islam.

When the Christian police officer refused, he was arrested, dismissed, and advised to relocate to another part of Ethiopia.

Muslim converts to Christianity often face extreme levels of discrimination and persecution. In some areas of the world, being a known convert to Christianity from Islam is enough to get an individual killed by members of their own family.

Website: Persecution.org

Persecution Unveiled has been called to prick the consciences of this nation and all free people to pray for, speak up and act on behalf of those who are persecuted for their faith. Follow us on Pinterest, and Google and like us on Facebook.


Legal Struggle of Doctor Reflects Wider Harassment of Christians in India

Legal Struggle of Doctor Reflects Wider Harassment of Christians in India

By Southern India Correspondent
Morning Star News

Emergency medicine doctor Christo Thomas Philip was returning with his family to his native India from a medical conference in Greece when immigration officials at Delhi’s Indira Ghandi International Airport took him into custody.

His deportation from India on that day, April 26, 2016, came after working for three years treating destitute people on the verge of death from snakebites, HIV, diphtheria, tuberculosis and heart failure, among other conditions, in Raxaul, a remote area of eastern India’s Bihar state. He was planning to return to his work there at the emergency care unit of Duncan Hospital.

“My wife and children were allowed entry back into the country,” Philip, 36, told Morning Star News. “But as soon as my passport was scanned, I was surrounded by multiple Indian immigration officials, taken into custody and was informed that I had an hour to leave the country.”
At age 10 Philip had migrated with his family to the United States, where he was educated. He had a life-time visa to India and an Overseas Citizen of India (OCI) card, but the immigration officials confiscated the card and his passport, telling him only that he was no longer welcome on orders of the Consulate General of India in Houston, Texas.
“It broke my heart to see my family from behind the cordoned-off section of the immigration detention centre. It was hard to watch my three young children crying, not knowing when they would see me again,” the Christian doctor told Morning Star News.
His children were 11, 9 and 7 at the time. He recalled sitting in his seat on the flight back to Istanbul, Turkey, the transit point from which he’d arrived, tears filling his eyes as he watched India disappear from view through the window, he said.
“Being deported from India and being separated from my wife and three young children was one of the most difficult days of my life,” he said. “It was hard to see my wife knowing that there was nothing she could do – realizing that I had never been this far away from her since we were married.”
In Istanbul, officials locked him in a detention cell with 25 others for 24 hours, until he could board a flight to Spain, a prior transit point, the next day.
“It was one of the darkest moments in my life to have my freedom taken away even though I had done nothing wrong except sacrifice a comfortable and lucrative life in the U.S. to serve those that were marginalized in India,” he said. 
“It was devastating to me and my family when I was ordered to leave this country and the people I love so much, with no explanation other than that the government no longer considered me welcome.”
From court records of the battle he fought for the next three years to regain his right to return to India, Philip could not detect who directed the consulate in Houston to order his deportation, he said. But he has not been the only Christian deported since Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu extremist Bharatiya Janata Party assumed power in 2014.

His deportation was not an isolated case, as he became aware of numerous other individuals and families working with engineering organizations, hospitals or small businesses that were deported from India around the same time, he said.

“The only common thread among the deportations was that the individuals involved were Christians or working with Christian organizations in India,” he said. “We are also aware that it was the policy of the government to place individuals on a blacklist without informing them of such an action being taken, and the only time someone would find out about the blacklist was when they were trying to enter India.”
The failure to issue notices to the blacklisted Christians appears to have been intentional to prevent any type of judicial review since, once deported, they have limited legal ability to make legal challenges, he said.

Persecution Unveiled has been called to prick the consciences of this nation and all free people to pray for, speak up and act on behalf of those who are persecuted for their faith. Follow us on Pinterest, and Google and like us on Facebook.

‘Their God Is Not My God’: ISIS Brutality Leads Syrian Muslims to Seek Christianity

Photo by Carl Court/Getty Images

By Faithwire Staff

A group of Muslims who were under ISIS rule near the Syrian-Turkish border explained why they decided to convert to Christianity instead.

Farhad Jasim, 23, who is one of many residents of Kobani, a strategic Syrian city, attending the first Christian place of worship in the area for decades, said he couldn’t fathom the religious undertones to ISIS’s brutal acts.

Libyan Officials Uncover Mass Grave of Christians Killed by ISIS
“If ISIS represents Islam, I don’t want to be Muslim anymore,” Jasim told NBC News. “Their God is not my God.”
Jasim, a mechanic, converted to Christianity late last year. He was jailed by ISIS for six months in 2016, during which he was tortured and forced to read the Quran, after the group found out he didn’t know the basics of Islam.

He became “skeptical” in his belief of his original religion after witnessing ISIS’s “brutality” with his “own eyes,” he said.

Those who abandon Islam are often ostracized by their families and communities, making religious conversion rare in Syria. About 4.6 percent of the Syrian population is believed to be Christian.

A man who requested to be named as Omar, a 38-year-old administrator at the Church of the Brethren, a Protestant church, said it was “strictly forbidden” to change religions, even under the Syrian regime before the revolution. Omar asked that his real name not be used for fears of his safety, and the church’s priests declined to partake in an interview.

Under ISIS, changing religion “wasn’t even imaginable,” Omar said, adding that the militant group “would kill you immediately.”

After Jasim heard about the Church of the Brethren – which opened in September and traces its origins to 18th century Germany – he said it “didn’t take long to discover that Christianity was the religion” he was searching for.

But, Jasim’s relationship with his parents and extended family became nonexistent after he converted, he said.

Otherwise, people in Kobani have been open-minded about Christianity as residents continue to grapple with the emotional scars they endured at the hands of ISIS, Omar said.
“Most of the brothers here converted or come to church as a result of what ISIS did to them and to their families,” Jasim added. “No one is forced to convert. Our weapon is the prayer, the spreading of spirit of love, brotherhood and tolerance.”
Continue reading Faithwire article here

Persecution Unveiled has been called to prick the consciences of this nation and all free people to pray for, speak up and act on behalf of those who are persecuted for their faith. Follow us on Pinterest, and Google and like us on Facebook.


Thursday, February 7, 2019

Turkish State Continues Interference Against Armenian Church



By Persecution Int'l Christian Concern

The Turkish Foreign Minister met this week with the Armenian Apostolic Church’s legate in the Vatican, director of ecumenical relations at the Armenian Apostolic Church, and the acting Armenian Patriarch in Turkey. The meeting was regarding the election of a new patriarch for Turkey’s Armenian Apostolic community.

The Turkish State has consistently blocked the Armenians from electing a new patriarch for the last eleven years. The official patriarch went into a coma in 2008 due to an illness, leading the Armenian Apostolic Church to seek authorization from the Turkish authorities for a new election. 

Turkish law dictates that the Armenians seek this authorization, but the state has obstructed the election process at every turn. The state argues that it cannot grant authorization, since the official patriarch is still living.

Aram Ateşyan is currently serving as the acting Armenian Patriarch. The church has repeatedly petitioned the state for freedom to elect their own religious leader, but to no avail. 

The recent meeting with the Turkish Foreign Minister was to again request that the church be given the freedom to make their own leadership decisions. Instead, the Turkish Foreign Minister issued a statement following the meeting urging “patience for reaching a solution.”

Website: Persecution.org 

Persecution Unveiled has been called to prick the consciences of this nation and all free people to pray for, speak up and act on behalf of those who are persecuted for their faith. Follow us on Pinterest, and Google and like us on Facebook.


Senate Passes Bill Allowing States to Boycott Businesses Boycotting Israel

Senate Passes Bill Allowing States to Boycott Businesses Boycotting Israel
                                          Photo courtesy: Pixabay

By Amanda Casanova
Christian Headlines


The U.S. Senate passed a bill this week that allows state and local governments to stop doing business with companies that support boycotts, sanctions and divestments (BDS) against Israel.

Sen. Marco Rubio’s bill passed by a 77-23 vote on Tuesday.
"The goal of the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement is to eliminate any Jewish state between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea," he wrote in a New York Times piece before the measure passed.
Before the vote, Rubio had said the bill would allow for the U.S. to stand “strong with our allies.”
“At its core, the linchpin of it is helping Israel defend itself,” he said.
 Some Democrats, however, say the bill is a violation of the First Amendment.
"This is a bad faith and disingenuous effort by Republicans to turn boycotts into a wedge issue, and to threaten Americans' right to free speech," said
Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D., Mich.), the first Palestinian-American woman in Congress. 
"Economic boycotts have defined historic social justice and human rights movements in the United States and beyond."
Said Sen. Dick Durbin: 
"I oppose it because it limits the right of individuals to express themselves.”
But Rubio said the bill does not infringe on First Amendment rights.
“By design, it focuses on business entities — not individuals — and, consistent with the Supreme Court's unanimous ruling in Rumsfeld v. Forum for Academic and Institutional Rights (2006), it focuses on conduct, not speech,” he wrote in The Times. “Indeed, it does not restrict citizens or associations of citizens from engaging in political speech, including against Israel.”
The bill also reaffirms cooperation with Jordan on defense operations and says it will provide humanitarian assistance to allies in the Middle East struggling because of the Syrian civil war. The legislation is part of a Middle East policy bill that asks President Donald Trump not to remove troops from Syria.

Website: Christian Headlines


Myanmar Pastor Killed After Being Kidnapped at Gunpoint, Leaves Behind Wife and Three Children

Slain Myanmar Pastor Tun Nu poses for a picture with his 
wife and three children in this undated photograph. GFA ORG|

By Samuel Smith
Christian Post

A pastor in Myanmar who led multiple fellowships is confirmed dead after being kidnapped from his home at gunpoint last month, the nonprofit mission organization Gospel for Asia has confirmed.

Pastor Tun Nu, who was one of GFA’s missionary field partners in the Rakhine state, was confirmed to have been killed along with others who were abducted by a faction believed to be a rebel army, according to a press release from the nonprofit. His death was reported on Feb. 1.

The 41-year-old Tun pastored a congregation of about 50 members in the Sittwe District of the southwestern Rakhine state, which is known for being torn by the Rohingya conflict and Rohingya genocide committed by Myanmar military forces in 2017.

According to GFA, Tun served as a pastor in Myanmar for two decades and is one of the hundreds of people to come to Christ and establish churches in that region. Since coming to Christ, Tun was believed to disciple 12 different 
fellowships of believers in the area.

Pastor Tun Nu was killed after being abducted by gunmen on Jan. 19, 2019, in the Rakhine state of Myanmar. | GFA.ORG
GFA reports that on Jan. 19, Nu was taken from his home by five men who reportedly told him that they just wanted to question him. 

The pastor leaves behind a wife and three children.

“We are heartbroken to learn of Pastor Tun’s death, and we ask you to join us in praying for his wife, family and church at this time, that they may know God’s comfort, peace and strength,” said GFA founder and director KP Yohannan.


According to GFA, Pastor Nu’s death and kidnapping are the first incident of this kind to happen to a GFA-supported ministry in Myanmar. GFA is affiliated with over 500 congregations in the country. 

“All of the brothers and sisters on the field know that, as Jesus said, they go out as ‘sheep among wolves,’” Yohannan explained. “Like Pastor Tun, they are willing to lay down their lives, if need be, to share God’s great love with those who have not yet heard the Good News.”
Since the news of Pastor Nu’s death, GFA-supported church across Myanmar have taken up an offering to support Pastor Tun’s family.

According to U.S.-based nonprofit International Christian Concern, local police and government forces were not able to locate the pastor’s whereabouts during the two weeks that he was missing. GFA reported late last month that they had not received any requests for money or ransom.

A local pastor who chose to remain anonymous told ICC that people in the district were “too scared” to look for the Tun. The pastor asserted that the community did not receive “any help in searching for him.”


Persecution Unveiled has been called to prick the consciences of this nation and all free people to pray for, speak up and act on behalf of those who are persecuted for their faith. Follow us on Pinterest, and Google and like us on Facebook.


University Can't Ban Christian Group For Requiring That Its Leaders Be Christian, Court Rules

School mascot Herky the Hawk stands in front of the Old Capitol Museum
at the University of Iowa, in Iowa City, Iowa, U.S. May 22, 2016.
 Photo: Reuters/Koh Gui Qing)
By Samuel Smith
Christian Post

A federal judge ruled Wednesday that the University of Iowa can’t selectively enforce its non-discrimination policy on a Christian student group that requires that its leaders abide by a Christian statement of faith.

U.S. District Court Judge Stephanie M. Rose issued an injunction barring the university from enforcing its human rights policy against student group Business Leaders in Christ (BLinC) so long as the school continues to allow other registered student organizations to have leadership requirements that also are deemed to violate the university’s policy.

While the order prevents the school from unevenly enforcing the discrimination policy on the Christian group, the court order affirms that there is “no fault to be found with the policy itself” because it “promotes valuable goals for both the University and society at large.”

“But the Constitution does not tolerate the way Defendants chose to enforce the Human Rights Policy,” Rose’s ruling explains. “Particularly when free speech is involved, the uneven application of any policy risks the most exacting standard of judicial scrutiny, which Defendants have failed to withstand.”
BLinC filed a lawsuit against the university in 2017 after it was kicked off campus because the organization has a policy that requires that its leaders be Christian and agree to a set of beliefs laid out in a statement of faith. The group was de-registered only after a gay student was barred from leadership because BLinC’s statement of faith opposes homosexuality.

The university has claimed that the organization’s policy not only violates its human rights policy but also violates the Iowa Civil Rights Act. But at the time that BLinC was de-registered as a campus student group, there were other religious and non-religious student groups on campus that also had selective requirements for their leaders.

In January 2018, Rose ruled that the school had to temporarily reinstate BLinC on grounds that the university was not “consistently and equally” applying its policy.

Following the ruling, the school warned other student groups with policies that don’t comply with the school’s discrimination code protecting on the basis of sexual orientation, gender identity, sex and religion that they could no longer require their leaders to uphold a certain faith or ideology.

About 40 student groups that did not change their policies were de-recognized by the school last year. The groups that were de-recognized were politically and religiously diverse.

Those groups were later temporarily re-recognized by the university pending litigation after InterVarsity Graduate Christian Fellowship also filed a lawsuit. However, the policy still wasn’t being evenly applied to other student organizations like fraternities, sororities and sports clubs.

Following the court’s demand, the university identified 32 religious organizations that could be at risk of being de-recognized if the university had won the litigation.


Continue reading Christian Post article here


Monday, February 4, 2019

The Silent Pulpit Is Not God's Pulpit


As the church falls deeper into self-reliance and further from reliance on God, our need for bold leadership has never been greater. Change will only occur when there is a strong conviction of sin, genuine faith, humility, and sincere repentance...

The Silent Pulpit Is Not God's Pulpit

By Shane Idleman
Christian Headlines


In light of a recent Barna survey suggesting that pastors are afraid to tackle moral issues, I was pleased that Dr. Michael Brown asked me to be on his show regarding why the pulpit is silent? The interview is below.

I’m an avid reader of books about revivals and spiritual awakenings written by those who actually experienced them. Ironically, many, if not all, say that we must preach and proclaim God’s Word with authority if we are to experience true revival. The New Testament also bears this out—without authority and power from on high, words are lifeless. 


There is nothing to fear when preaching the truth. God ordained it, and He blesses it. He desires that all men “come to the knowledge of the truth” (I Timothy 2:4). Samuel Chadwick (1840-1932), in his book, The Way to Pentecost, made this powerful proclamation, 
“Truth without enthusiasm, morality without emotion, ritual without soul, makes for a Church without power.” 
Authority is not a dreadful, unpleasant word—it’s a powerful word. When God gives people authority to passionately and lovingly proclaim His Word, souls are converted, lives are changed, and families are restored. Sadly, this is lacking in our day.

Where are the Isaiahs and Jeremiahs calling nations to repentance? Where are the Peters and Pauls who spoke with such authority that martyrdom did not silence them? 


Though they are dead, they still speak! 

Where are the Wycliffs who stood so unyielding for the truth that he was called The Morning Star of Reformation? 

Where are the Tyndales and Huss’ who were burned at the stake for simply declaring the truth? 

Where are the Luthers who, when asked to recant or face possible execution, said, “Here I stand; I can do no other”? 

Where are the John Calvins who shape the religious thoughts of our Western culture? Where are the John Knoxs who cried, “Give me Scotland [for the cause of Christ] or I die”? 

Where are the Whitefields who shook continents? 

Where are the Howell Harris’, Daniel Rowlands’, and Griffith Jones’ who preached with such passion during the Welsh revivals of the 18th century that we still honor them today?

I say again, “Where are they?” 


Where are the John Wesleys who said, “Give me one hundred preachers who fear nothing but sin and desire nothing but God, and we will shake the gates of hell?” 

Where are the David Brainerds who spent so much time in prayer that even the great Jonathan Edwards was convicted? 

Where are the Robert Murray McCheynes who, even though he died at age twenty-nine, was one of Scotland’s most anointed preachers—causing people to weep before even preaching a word (not emotionalism, but anointing)? 

Where are the Spurgeon’s who spoke with such authority that his sermons are read more today than ever before? 

Where are the D.L. Moodys who brought America to her knees? 

Where are the Evan Roberts’ who, during the Welsh Revivals of 1904-5, preached so powerfully against sin that people cried out, “No more, Lord Jesus, or I’ll die”? 

Where are the Puritans like Richard Baxter, who said with such humility, “I speak as a dying man to dying men”?

Where are men with uncompromising power and authority in the pulpits today? Granted, there are some, and I appreciate their ministry, but as a whole, the church is lacking. The one thing that all of the great men previously mentioned had, is the one thing that many are lacking—authority and the power of the Holy Ghost. They were also men of extraordinary prayer, brokenness, and humility. Men filled and clothed with power from on high. The men who do the most for God are always men of prayer. 


Continue reading Christian Headlines here



Small Church in India Transcends Persecution to Declare the Gospel


By Correspondent
International Christian Concern
“It was very difficult and painful as several new believers were beaten up so badly,” Pastor Ajay Ravi told International Christian Concern. 
“But I consider this a privilege to suffer for Jesus and believe God will turn this into a testimony of endurance and His faithfulness.”
Pastor Ravi bravely voiced these words following a violent attack by Hindu radicals on his church in Sarut village, located in India’s Chhattisgarh state. Calvary Gospel Ministries Church (CGM) has been under Pastor Ravi’s leadership for the past three years and he has faced threats of violence in the past. Radicals had warned him to stop Christian prayer in the village, but he refused.

Then, on Sunday, January 27, a mob of 40 radicals stormed the church and demanded that the worshippers vacate the building. The attackers spewed abusive language against the Christians, while declaring the greatness of their gods and goddesses.

Reluctantly, the 30 believers who had gathered at CGM complied and exited the building. As they exited the church, they were severely beaten with wooden clubs and stones. A third of the congregation was injured, including three members who were hospitalized.
“I am not going to stop the worship in this village because of this attack on our church,” Pastor Ravi declared. “With God’s help, I will continue God’s work no matter what may come.”
In addition to those injured by the radicals, a motorcycle was destroyed, instruments were rendered useless, and Bibles were ripped to pieces. Local police have refused to write a report regarding the attack and have demanded that the Christians compromise with their assailants outside of India’s judicial system. Even in the face of such devastation and persecution, the Christians of CGM intend to continue worshipping God openly.

CGM holds a similar attitude to the first martyr of the New Testament Church, Stephen. Acts 6-7 depicts Stephen’s faithfulness when which he paid the ultimate price for openly declaring the Gospel throughout Jerusalem. After he defended himself in front of the religious leaders using Old Testament scriptures, they dragged him away and stoned him to death. Like Stephen, Pastor Ravi is willing to boldly proclaim truth in spite of those seeking to stop him.

Please pray earnestly for this small church. Pray that God will supply them with the strength to endure, for faithfulness to the Lord, and for love for their persecutors. Pray for the radicals to repent. Remember these people and beseech the Lord on their behalf.


Persecution Unveiled has been called to prick the consciences of this nation and all free people to pray for, speak up and act on behalf of those who are persecuted for their faith. Follow us on Pinterest, and Google and like us on Facebook.


Christian Leaders in India Demand Justice for Kandhamal Victims


Persecution
International Christian Concern

Ten years have passed since the Christian community of the Kandhamal district, located in India’s Odisha state, were the victims of the country’s worst instance of Christian persecution. Despite the passage of time, many victims of the violence remain deprived of justice and compensation.

In August 2008, anti-Christian mob violence swept across Kandhamal after Christians were wrongly blamed for the assassination of a local Hindu leader. The riots persisted for nearly three months, leaving over 100 Christians dead, nearly 5,000 Christian homes damaged, 232 churches destroyed, and over 54,000 people displaced.

The 2008 riots are still considered India’s worst instance of Christian persecution in its modern history.
“Real justice for the victims of Kandhamal requires more human and financial resources,” Fr. Dibakar Parichha, Secretary of the Justice and Peace Commission of the Archdiocese of Cuttack-Bhubaneswar, said at a consultation in Delhi. 
“There are more than 320 cases. People must not be deprived of justice.”
According to data, at least 6,495 individuals were arrested in connection with the violence. However, only 78 individuals have been convicted in the ten years following the violence. Another 150 trials are still pending before the courts. Christian leaders claim these numbers show a bias against the Christians victims of Kandhamal and are demanding true justice be done.


Persecution Unveiled has been called to prick the consciences of this nation and all free people to pray for, speak up and act on behalf of those who are persecuted for their faith. Follow us on Pinterest, and Google and like us on Facebook.

Sunday, February 3, 2019

Pastor Kidnapped by Local Gang in Myanmar Still Missing


By Gina Goh
Persecution 
International Christian Concern

Gospel for Asia (GFA), a ministry that has been serving the least of these in Asia since 1979, has issued an urgent prayer appeal on behalf of one of its field-partner workers who was abducted at gunpoint in Myanmar.

On January 19, five people forced Pastor Tun Nu to leave his home at gunpoint in the country’s western Sittwe District in Rakhine State. Pastor Tun Nu has been serving this troublesome area with one of GFA’s field partners. The kidnappers told Pastor Tun that their leader, who is part of an armed rebel group, wanted to question him.

The incident was reported to local officials who have not been able to locate him. Pastor Tun’s wife, local church members, and regional church leaders have been unsuccessful in determining his whereabouts.

A local pastor who wished to remain anonymous for security reasons told ICC, “Pastor Tun’s family doesn’t know where to look for him. People in the area are too scared to look for him. We have already checked with the army and police, yet they do not know where he is as well. And we have not received any help in searching for him. There is indeed little hope for him.”

The founder of GFA, Dr. K.P. Yohannan, said, “We are extremely concerned for Pastor Tun’s safety, and we appeal to Christians around the world to join us in praying for his release without harm.”
“Please pray earnestly for peace and strength for Pastor Tun, wherever he may be, and for comfort for his family and church members,” he added. “And we are also praying for those who have taken him, that God will touch their hearts and reveal his love to them, and cause them to release Pastor Tun.”
As of January 26, GFA has not received any requests for money or ransom.
“We are also praying for those who have taken him, that God will touch their hearts and reveal his love to them, and cause them to release Pastor Tun.”
The 41-year-old pastor is married with three children, and leads a church of approximately 50 members. He has been serving in Myanmar for 20 years where he has led hundreds of people to Christ and established many churches. He currently disciples 12 fellowships of believers.


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Evidence Mounting that US BDS Groups are Fronts for Terror Organizations

"BDS is a proxy for foreign terror groups, and it is becoming increasingly popular with the American left. BDS promotes discrimination and normalizes the message of terror groups by cloaking it in the vernacular of civil rights." -- Marc Greendorfer

Palestinian solidarity protesters march towards the British parliament on
 June, 5 2018. Credit: Alisdare Hickson via Flickr.

By Sean Savage
Jewish News Syndicate

Over the past decade, the BDS movement has emerged as one of the principle challenges towards the legitimacy of the State of Israel. A modern distortion of the South African anti-apartheid campaign, the movement seeks to economically pressure Israel and isolate it politically. 

While Israel continues to thrive on both fronts—with a booming economy and expanding relations throughout the developing world—the ongoing threat of boycotts remains a constant challenge, especially for pro-Israel advocates in the Diaspora.

At the same time, emerging evidence suggests that the BDS movement has extensive ties to Palestinian terrorist organizations. By using the "social justice" movement as a veritable human shield for anti-Israel ideology and activism, terror groups are now succeeding in a type of reputational and commercial warfare against Israel.

This evidence has surfaced in a recent court case in Arizona, where for the first time a U.S. government body has formally acknowledged that the BDS movement aids actors engaged in terror.


In a brief filed by Arizona's Attorney General Mark Brnovich as part of a case before the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals concerning his state's anti-BDS law, Brnovich noted that the BDS campaign was not only motivated by anti-Semitism, but that it aids Palestinian terrorist groups, including Hamas as well as the Palestinian Liberation Organization, the latter of which provides payments and stipends to convicted terrorists or their families.

"That is particularly true as the effect, and often goal, of BDS boycotts is to strengthen the hand of the Palestinian Liberation Organization, which pays cash stipends to the families of terrorists, and its governmental coalition partner and terrorist organization, Hamas," said Brnovich.
Israeli Strategic Affairs Minister Gilad Erdan called Brnovich's stance "a significant achievement in the fight against the boycott organizations. … This step strips the mask off the boycott organizations, most of which maintain deep ties with terrorist groups while seeking to enjoy immunity as human-rights groups."

Marc Greendorfer, founder of the Zachor Legal Institute, said the ties between BDS and terror organizations are "extensive."

"The ties are extensive and quite serious," he told JNS. "Some of the BDS groups, like Dream Defenders, send members to the Middle East to meet directly with terror groups like the PFLP [Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine], and there has been testimony before Congress that financial backers of Hamas are also providing support to BDS groups. Further reports to Congress showed that the PLO has a ‘war room' in Europe from which they coordinate and fund BDS groups in the U.S.," he explained.
Last year, the Zachor Legal Institute submitted a letter to the Department of Justice urging the U.S. government to open an investigation into the ties between Palestinian terror groups and several U.S.-based BDS groups, including American Muslims for Palestine (and its affiliated entity, Americans for Justice in Palestine Educational Foundation), Dream Defenders, the Muslim Students Association, Samidoun and Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP).
"We believe—and there is copious evidence to support the allegation—that these organizations are working with designated foreign terror organizations in the United States, often as part of the BDS movement to target Israeli companies, academics and institutions," Zachor stated in a memo provided to JNS.
Greendorfer said Zachor has used publicly available information to document these group's ties with terror organization.

What You Should Know About Yemen and Its TIny Christian Population

Ras Marbat Clinic at Christ Church Aden in Yemen
in this undated photo. / Ven Dr. Bill Schwartz, OBE 
By Stoyan Zaimov
Christian Post


In case you haven’t heard already, Yemen has been facing what many have called the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.

The Middle East country, located at the end of the Arabian Peninsula, has a population of over 28 million and 22 million of them need humanitarian assistance (16 million don’t have enough food).

Much of the famine is a result of the civil war that began years ago. So how did the crisis begin and what is it like for Christians in Yemen?

Here are five things you should know.

1. 2011 uprising


Thousands of protesters called on President Ali Abdullah Saleh, who had been in office for more than three decades, to step down over the collapse of the economy, corruption and repression.

Forced to resign, Saleh transferred power to his deputy, Abdrabbuh Mansour Hadi. But Saleh remained in Yemen and formed an alliance with the Houthi rebels (made up of the Zaidi Shia Muslim minority who have been attempting to gain power for decades) who gained control of Sanaa, the country’s capital. The Zaidi believe only a descendant of the Islamic prophet Muhammad should rule Muslims.

Hadi was forced to flee the country in March 2015, under attack both by the Houthis and security forces still loyal to Saleh. This is when Saudi Arabia (Yemen’s neighbor) entered the fray, fearful of the spread of what it believes is Iran-backed Shia powers in Yemen.

The Saudi Arabian Kingdom, along with other Sunni Arab states, have been carrying out an air campaign ever since, looking to return power to Hadi and his government.

Note: 99.1 percent of Yemen’s population is Muslim; 65 percent are Sunni and 35 percent are Shia.

The civil war has been at a stalemate, with coalition troops supporting the Hadi government holding control of much of the country, including Aden, while the Houthi forces continue being in control of significant northwestern regions.

The turmoil has allowed militant groups, including al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, and an affiliate of the Islamic State terror group, to capture territory in the south and carry out deadly attacks.

The stalemate has produced the worst humanitarian crisis in the world.



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Friday, February 1, 2019

Pastor, North Korean Defectors Reveal Creative Ways They Share the Gospel in Hermit Kingdom

I actually did meet Christians and was introduced to Christianity [when I first went to China] but I already knew that Christians, when caught by the regime, 
will be killed without any exceptions.

People look toward the north through a barbed-wire fence near the militarized zone
 separating the two Koreas, in Paju, South Korea,
December 21, 2017. | (Photo: Reuters/Kim Hong-Ji)

By Leah MarieAnn Klett
Christian Post

A pastor and two North Korean Christians who defected from the hermit kingdom without being captured have revealed the creative ways they continue to share the Gospel with those back home.

Peter Jung, a pastor who specializes in spreading Christianity in North Korea, recently told The Associated Press that his group provides shelter, food, and money to North Koreans visiting Chinese border towns before teaching them about Christianity.

Before they return home, Jung said his group asks the North Korean visitors to memorize Bible verses or carry Bibles with them to share the Gospel with their friends and family. He revealed that missionaries create a “religious atmosphere” by getting people to exchange text messages containing Christian-themed words like "peace.”

Christianity is illegal in North Korea and possessing a Bible, holding open religious services or making any attempt to build underground church networks can result in torture, lengthy prison terms or execution. As North Korea consistently ranks as the worst country in the world for Christian persecution, many citizens keep their beliefs to themselves or within their immediate families.

Lee HanByeol, Jung’s wife and a North Korean refugee living in Seoul, South Korea, recalled watching her father pray whenever his wife slipped into China to borrow money from relatives in the mid-1990s.
"I saw him praying many times. ... My mom risked her life to go to China illegally to feed our family. So when my mom left, he kept praying, sitting cross-legged and trembling in the corner of our room," Lee said.
Lee said she didn't know about Christianity at the time, as her father kept his faith to himself until his death in an apparent effort to protect his family.
"I often think about how great it would have been if my father and I could have prayed together while holding each other's hands," she said.
Continue reading here

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Christian Mom Jailed for ‘Blaspheming’ Mohammed Heading to Canada After Court Upholds Acquittal

"I am really grateful to everybody. Now after nine years it is confirmed that I am free and I will be going to hug my daughters." Asia Bibi
Did Pakistan Supreme Court come to the rescue of Blasphemy ...

By Calvin Freiburger
Life Site News


The Supreme Court of Pakistan has rejected a challenge to its acquittal of Asia Bibi on blasphemy charges, ensuring the Christian mother can finally join her daughters in Canada.

In 2009, the farm worker and mother of five from the small town of Itan Wali was arrested for blasphemy over an argument with some Muslim co-workers who allegedly claimed they couldn’t drink from a cup she had touched, as her Christian faith contaminated it. She was accused of making offensive comments about the Prophet Muhammad in the ensuing argument, in response to claims she should convert to Islam.

Bibi was subsequently beaten and allegedly raped at her home, during which her attackers coerced a blasphemy confession out of her. She was convicted in 2010 and sentenced to death by hanging. The case quickly garnered international attention, with groups such as the American Center for Law and Justice (ACLJ) fighting on her behalf.

In October, the Supreme Court of Pakistan overturned Bibi’s conviction and authorized her immediate release. “Blasphemy is a serious offence but the insult of the appellant’s religion and religious sensibilities by the complainant party and then mixing truth with falsehood in the name of the Holy Prophet Muhammad (Peace Be Upon Him) was also not short of being blasphemous,” Judge Asif Saeed Khan Khosa wrote.

The ruling sparked violent protests, and while Bibi was technically free she remained in grave danger, and she and her family had to spend this past Christmas in protective custody in an undisclosed location.

The Supreme Court upheld its October ruling on Tuesday, dismissing a challenge of it for lack of merit, the Catholic Herald reports.

“I feel huge admiration for the Supreme Court justices who, by taking this decision, have been willing to put the rule of law above every other consideration,” Liverpool human rights campaigner Lord Alton said. “We cannot forget that Asia Bibi’s case is one of many, and that, by some estimates, more than 70 people are currently on death-row for alleged blasphemy crimes.”
Bibi was elated by the news that she’ll soon be able to go to Canada to finally be with her daughters, according to a friend speaking anonymously to the Associated Press. She reportedly speaks with them daily, and has been worried for her 19-year-old who struggles with unspecified learning challenges.
"I am really grateful to everybody. Now after nine years it is confirmed that I am free and I will be going to hug my daughters," Bibi said, according to the friend.
Website:Life Site News

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Principal to Teacher: 'You Can't Attend Church if Your Students Are There'

children in classroom

By Steve Warren
CBN


A principal at a Midwest school has been battling against one teacher's religious rights recently, ordering the teacher not to attend a church event that two students were also attending, even though they all attend the same church.

Liberty Counsel says it stepped in to protect the teacher's religious freedom saying the principal's command violated the First Amendment.

The principal was forced to back down from her attempt to block the teacher's church attendance after Liberty contacted the school superintendent.

"Unfortunately, this was not the first incident," Liberty states. "A year ago, this same principal tried to prevent the teacher from leading an after-school, adult-led Bible club which met with parent permission, under the same terms the Scouts meet."
The principal blocked the teacher from leading the club. Then a student tried to lead it as a student-led club. But the principal even chose to deny the student's religious rights.

Liberty Counsel sent a demand letter and the superintendent responded by reversing the principal. This year, only a phone call was necessary to have the principal's order reversed.

"The superintendent correctly reversed the principal's decision to ban teachers from attending the same church events as students," Mat Staver, founder and chairman of Liberty Counsel said in a press release. "Teachers acting in their individual capacity after school have the same rights as any others who are not teachers."
Website: CBN

Persecution Unveiled has been called to prick the consciences of this nation and all free people to pray for, speak up and act on behalf of those who are persecuted for their faith. Follow us on Pinterest, and Google and like us on Facebook.