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Your Bridge to the Persecuted Church Catch 22 pg5 A Spectrum of Persecution pg3 A Dangerous Place pg7 PERSECUTION International Christian Concern | September 2014 A Very Dangerous Place Strategies Against e Local Church

2014 September Persecution Newsletter

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Your Bridge to the Persecuted Church

Catch 22pg5

A Spectrum ofPersecution

pg3

A DangerousPlace

pg7

PERSECUTION International Christian Concern | September 2014

A Very Dangerous PlaceStrategies Against The Local Church

P3. A SPECTRUM OF PERSECUTIONPERSECUTION IS MORE THAN THE IMPRISONMENT OR MURDER OF PASTORS.

P5. CATCH-22UNWINNABLE SITUATIONS ARE CREATED TO STRANGLE AND CLOSE CHURCHES.

P7. A DANGEROUS PLACEGOVERNMENTS ATTACK CHURCHES.

P11. A DANGEROUS MESSAGESPEAKING TRUTH TO POWER.

P13. A DANGEROUS PEACETHE PERSECUTED TEACH US HOW TO LIVE WITH PAIN.

P15. YOUR DOLLARS AT WORKREAD HOW YOUR DONATIONS ARE TRANSFORMING THE LIVES OF THE PERSECUTED.

IN THIS ISSUE:

P9. A DANGEROUS PEOPLEGROUPS AND MOBS ATTACK THE LOCAL CHURCH

A NOTE FROM THE PRESIDENT

Alexis de Tocqueville was a French political figure and his-torian from the early to mid-1800s. In 1831, he went to America on a mission from the French monarchy to study America’s prison system, but instead used the time to study and understand what made America great. The product of this journey was the famous book, Democracy In America.

In it, he said something that is quite extraordinary.

I ascended (America’s) mountains and valleys. I visited (factories), markets, emporiums of trade. . .courts, and legislative halls. I

sought everywhere in vain for the secret of America’s success, until I entered the church.

It was there, as I listened to the soul-equalizing and soul-elevating principles of the Gospel of Christ, as they fell from Sabbath

to Sabbath upon the masses of the people, that I learned why America was great and free, and why France was a slave.

Empty Pews & Selections from Other Sermons on Timely Topics, Madison Clinton Peters; Zeising, 1886

Tocqueville’s insight into the power source of our mighty and as-cending country that would rule the world for next 150 years was incredibly insightful, but is missed by almost all. . . .except for Satan!

Satan knows that the humble local church can be a wellspring of life from heaven in the vast desert of despair, death, and decay, that he seeks to establish on earth. It is a very dangerous outpost of heaven, deep behind enemy lines that can produce hope, life, and growth.

Now I know the idea of the local church being dangerous is coun-ter-intuitive. The local church is not impressive by the world’s stan-dards. The building is usually old and at best, modest, in terms of niceties and style. Its people are not usually the captains of indus-try, leaders of government, or the members of the intelligentsia.

Yet, why does Satan spend so much time attacking the local church (God’s outpost), and its soldiers (the called-out ones who man the fort).

It is because the building and believer can become (and of-ten are) a channel for God to invade Satan’s territory, deep behind the enemy’s lines. This works only if the be-liever is “all in” with God. In the persecuted world, this “all in” mentality is common as believers lose all to follow Him.

When a believer is “all in” then the Holy Spirit, the real trans-forming power from heaven, is unleashed. The river of life (do a Bible study on this phrase) starts to flow into the land; the prisoners are released, the lame are healed, and the dead come to life. The book of Revelation uses the metaphor of a river of fresh water flowing from the throne of God and mak-ing salt waters fresh and bringing life to everything it touches.

This is why Satan targets the local church. His focus should awak-en you and I to a deep truth; we can only truly live with power and hope if we are “all in” with God and His power is flowing through us. If you have wandered away from The Source, then take time right now to turn back and ask for His river to flow through your heart!

Then, join me as we support these outposts and soldiers behind en-emy lines who have given up everything to follow the King of Life!

Jeff KingPresident, Persecution.org, International Christian Concern

Jeff King, President International Christian Concern

3 You can help today! www.persecution.org

A SPECTRUM OF

PERSECUTIONBy Ryan Morgan

A car owned by church workers bombed by Islamic jihadists in Indonesia. ICC trip, October 2012

The car looked like it had been hit by a rocket. Twisted metal, broken glass and shrapnel were strewn everywhere. The owner and his wife looked up at me to see my reac-tion even as my friend, who was all too familiar with this type of incident, looked up and down the street nervously.

We were standing in the middle of an Indonesian is-land that most of the world had never heard of, even though it had been the site of many untold massacres. Two days before, Islamic jihadists had tried to blow up this Christian couple, who faithfully served in the church next door, with a bomb full of metal fragments attached to their car.

The radicals, I was told, were probably close to us and after delivering quick prayers and some a ssistance, my friend and I were whisked away. The story above is the closest I have come to witnessing vio-lent persecution with my own eyes. The memory is seared into my consciousness, even though the lives of the targets were spared.

A Spectrum of Persecution Yet if we only pay attention to the most violent and headline

making cases of persecution, we miss the fact that there is a whole spectrum of persecution that affects millions of Christians across the planet.

According to the most comprehensive report yet on the subject conducted by the Pew Forum, an unbelievable 64% of the world’s population lives in nations where govern-ment restrictions are either “high or very high (see chart on next page).”

Incredibly, 74% live in nations very high levels of social hostilities towards religion. According to the research, Christians face restrictions or hostility in a massive 151 na-tions, more than any other faith or religious group.

Catch-22What does this spectrum look like? In Azerbaijan, the government passes a classic piece of Catch-22 legislation requiring legal churches to re-register with the government and then denies their registrations. The government shuts down the only church in an area of 40,000 residents.

In Egypt, churches could not be built or even repaired with-out government approval. For decades, it was almost im-possible to get approval to do either.

Government RestrictionsIn China, anyone who chooses to pastor or worship outside of the government led “Three-Self” church can be arbitrari-ly arrested and it is against the law for anyone under 18 to be brought to a church.

In Kyrgyzstan, Christians are kept from burying their dead by Islamic groups unless they convert to Islam. In Laos, Christians are charged with murder after praying for a sick villager who later dies.

Mob ViolenceIn Sri Lanka, mobs of Buddhist monks whip up hatred to-wards Christians and lead attacks on pastors, church servic-es, and church buildings.

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A Spectrum of PersecutionAs you pull back and study persecution you realize that per-secution is much more than the imprisonment or murder of pastors. There is in fact a spectrum of persecution that makes it devilishly tough to combat.

Hope at the End of the SpectrumWhile we focus on and will always rush to aid those who are suffering from the brutal end of the persecution spectrum (bombings, shootings, rape, torture, and murder), we must not forget our brothers and sisters who must daily perse-vere, often for their entire lives, under discrimination, gov-ernment restrictions, and mob attacks.

We must also never forget that the spectrum of persecu-tion always begins and ends with hope.

Time and again in the persecuted Church we see where God “bestows on us a crown of beauty instead of ashes, the oil of joy instead of mourning” (Isaiah 61:3) and as Joseph said to his brothers, “You intended to harm me, but God intended it for good to accomplish. . .the saving of many lives” (Genesis 50:20).

Today, from the ashes of decades of appalling persecution in China, a beautiful church the size of which the world has never seen before is arising. Across the world where Christians have chosen to remain faithful and endure, we see the seeds of revival beginning to spring forth.

EGYPTCHINA

AZERBAIJAN

SRI LANKA

KYRGYZSTAN

5 You can help today! www.persecution.org

The film Catch-22, released in 1970, was based on the book from Joseph Heller.

The phrase “Catch-22” comes from Joseph Heller’s satirical anti-war novel that was popularized in a 1970 film starring Alan Arkin. Arkin is the captain of a bomber in WWII who, after seeing too many other pilots die in mission, decides he has

to escape the Air Force if he is to stay alive.

To get relieved of his duties, he tells his superiors that he is crazy. The reply he receives is non-sensical and purposefully leaves him trapped without any option but to keep doing what

the military wants him to do.

“An airman would be crazy to fly more missions and sane if he didn’t, but if he was sane he’d have to fly them. If he flew them he was crazy and didn’t have to; but if he didn’t, he was sane

and had to.”

This maddening (non) logic is exactly what Christians experience in many countries as they face government restrictions on their activities. They constantly live in a

Catch-22!

In many countries, you can only legally meet for wor-ship if you register your church with the govern-ment. Problematically, these governments often never grant church registrations and in fact, the re-quired forms for registration often don’t even exist!

If you then choose to meet without the (non-exis-tent) registration approval, the police will fine you an exorbitant amount, they may jail you, or some-times you are only beaten. In this common sce-nario, Christians have a choice: they either wor-ship illegally or stop meeting for worship. Catch-22!

Governments hostile to Christianity often censor Christian religious material saying citizens can only own books on one particular “list” while refusing to publish a list of approved books (this would expose the gov-ernment’s control of religion). In this case, Christians have a choice: smuggle books and hope they’re on “the list” (risking raids, prison and fines) or never own ma-terials which will help you grow in your faith. Catch-22.

These Catch-22s even extend to death and the grave. Some Muslim towns only allow Muslims to be buried in certain cemetaries. Loved ones are told that they can’t bury their dead unless you sign papers saying you deny Christ. So the choice layed before them? Deny Christ or keep your dead loved one’s body in your home. Catch-22.

AzerbaijanDespite tight government religious restrictions, Greater Grace Protestant Church (GGPC) in Baku,

CATCH-22A dilemma or difficult circumstance from which there is no escape because of mutually conflicting or dependent conditions.

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Azerbaijan was a legal church approved by the gov-ernment. In 2009, the State demanded that all reli-gious organizations re-register with the government.

Despite having correct paperwork, GGPC’s registration was rejected. Church members battled in court and the con-gregation continued to worship “illegally” often vacating the property upon receiving tips of impending police raids.

Sadly, in January 2013, the church ran out of legal op-tions and the church was ordered to be shuttered. For the 40,000 residents near the capital of Baku, there is now NO legal place of worship for the Christian faith.

Sri LankaThis country, known for its beauty and “peaceful” Buddhist religion harbors an ugly not-so-secret, secret. Despite their loud declarations of religious freedom, in the last 20 years they have fallen from grace and may soon be on our government’s (USCIRF) list of countries with the worst re-ligious freedom record (Countries of Particular Concern).

Buddhist monks are continually leading violent mobs to tear down churches and beat up Christians in an effort to get them to leave their towns and villages. The police and government close down churches whenever they like.

If pastors complain, they are told, “Your building is il-legal. You don’t have the legal registration to meet for worship.” However, there is actually no legal document that a pastor can fill out and submit to the govern-ment to become a “legal” place of worship. Catch-22!

ChinaThe government created the Three-Self Patriotic Church.The house churches refuse to be controlled by an atheist government that has arrested and killed their pastors, and shut out the Gospel for decades.

The Chinese government doesn’t allow unregis-tered churches to have church buildings. Therefore, Christians will meet in someone’s house (a house church). The government can raid house churches in the excuse that they are not registered even though to do so would “gut” the house church and suppress the Gospel. Catch-22!

UzbekistanThere is a list of banned Christian books in Uzbekistan. The government says these books are danger-ous but won’t say why and won’t publically disclose the list. Therefore, at any time and without warning, the government can raid your home and if they find any of these books can jail, fine, or beat you.

This makes it nearly impossible for Christians to know what they can and cannot own and gives authorities carte blanche to consider any religious book as contra-band. This has resulted in exorbitant fines (10 times the monthly wage) and jail time. Christians go to extraor-dinary lengths to smuggle in Bibles and books that will teach them about Jesus, but live in constant fear, won-dering whether or not the books they own are on “the list” or not, and if they will be discovered and go to jail.

KyrgyzstanIn Kyrgyzstan, a 73-year-old Christian woman who had converted from Islam, died in a village in Kyrgyzstan. She had asked her Christian family members to bury her ac-cording to local Muslim tradition because this was the only way she would be allowed to be buried in the village cemetery where her relatives and ancestors were buried.

However, on their way to the funeral the fam-ily was stopped by the local Imam and other villag-ers. Her son said that, “at first the Imam demanded that three relatives write a statement that my moth-er was not a Christian and that she was a Muslim.”

Under the pressure, and knowing how desperately their loved one wanted to be buried there, they obliged. However, then the Imam presented a new demand say-ing that her son and his two sisters, who were there for the burial, must “renounce our Christian faith.

We did not do this.” The family was forced to leave their mother’s dead body in their home for four days before authorities barged in and forced them to bury her in another cemetery, away from the family plot.

SUMMARYMany Christians live in the crazy-mak-ing non-reality of a Catch-22 existence when targeted by their governments.

This can keep them (by design) in a state of constant anxiety. Keep them in prayer if you would, so that they would be wise to the devil’s schemes and understand his constant tricks designed to keep them off balance and focused on their struggles, rather than spreading the good news of the way to life.

7 You can help today! www.persecution.org

Sanjiang Church before and during the recent Chinese government-ordered demolition

China’s Response to Christianity. “My father and I were house church pastors in China and in 2000, our church was raided by the police. Both of us were choked, handcuffed, and put in jail for a week because we preached the Gospel,” Pastor Titus, a former house church pastor, now a seminary student, told ICC during an interview. “The police beat me with a stick on my head and warned me to never ‘illegally’ teach the Bible. Even until now, the scar remains on the right side of my head.” As of 2012, Pastor Titus had been imprisoned three times by the government and his family had to move from one apartment to another two to four times a year due to the constant harassment from the po-lice.

“My heart is bleeding as I see hundreds of church crosses fall one by one in Zhejiang Province,” Ye Wanjing, a Chinese believer wrote in a public letter as he stated that he is ready to die for

his faith.

ICC has discovered in an ongoing investigation that the Chinese government has declared war on the Church in China in the biggest church crackdown since the days of Mao. They have either removed crosses or outright destroyed 360 plus churches.

China is not the only place where the government is trying to silence the Church because it is seen as a threat to China’s control. In Vietnam and Indonesia, churches face persecution actively carried out by a state determined to crack down on any

perceived ideological threat.”

A DANGEROUSPLACEGovernments Are Threatened by the Church So They Control and Strangle the Church

By Sooyoung Kim

You can help today! 800-ICC-5441 8

“The police beat me with a stick on my head and warned me to never ‘illegally’ teach the Bible.

Even until now, the scar remains on the right side

of my head.”

CHINESE HOUSE PASTOR

A church in Indonesia is shut down

Sadly, Pastor Titus’s case is not isolated in China, a coun-try that perceives religion as among four primary threats to national security (National Security Research Report, 2014). China sees religion as ideological infiltration from “foreign forces.” House church pastors and co-workers run the risk of imprisonment or detention due to “illegal gath-ering” if the congregation of a house church goes over 35.

Crackdown. In Zhejiang Province, the coastal province in eastern China, Christian churches had enjoyed a friendly relationship with local governments for at least a decade. But in early 2014, an anti-church campaign aimed at curb-ing the visibility of churches began. As of July, over 360 churches have been affected by the campaign under the guise of “removing or modifying illegal constructions.”

The government of Zhejiang Province says it is remov-ing or modifying illegal buildings for urban development. However, ICC has discovered, and the New York Times cor-roborated, that the real target is religious buildings at the exclusion of all others. The largest church demolished was the 80,000 square foot Sanjiang church (see left).

Vietnam’s Approach. Vietnam’s Communist party (VCP) sees the reten-tion of their monopoly political power as their highest priority. Vietnam has a genuine paranoia about outside threats to its power led by foreign governments and Christians are viewed as part of that outside threat to their power.

Churches and Christian organizations are seen as having the potential to or-ganize and mobilize the public to chal-lenge the power of the VCP and are therefore targeted and victimized. The Montagnards (mountain people) of the Central Highlands are home to most of Vietnam’s Christian-majority and have been a special target of the Communists.

“The VCP allows state-sanctioned church-es to grow but clamps down on independent underground churches” says Dr. Nguyen Dinh Thang, the president of an America-Vietnamese community organization (BPSOS).

They appoint government officials as “pastors” of the state-sanctioned churches. This way the VCP can appear to the outside world as having religious freedom.

However, the true Christian churches are seriously perse-cuted. Their churches are confiscated, their members ha-rassed, and their pastors are threatened, beaten, impris-oned and even killed.

Indonesia’s Rising Intolerance and Impunity toward Violence. Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim-majority nation, had a long tradition of inter-religious harmony, but since 1998, has experienced increasing reli-

gious Christian persecution. Under pressure from Islamic hardliners, an average of 40 churches per year are forcibly closed.

The government uses the Catch-22 strategy where church-es are closed for not having building permits but it is

nearly impossible to get a build-ing permit for anything but a mosque. It’s not just govern-ment restrictions that are clos-ing down churches, but threats and attacks by Islamists as well. The Communion of Churches in Indonesia reported that since 2004, there have been attacks on more than 430 churches.

Islamists harass and close churches with impunity. One Islamic political party, FPI, “sees church closures as fund-raising events,” said a long-time missionary in Indonesia, “they extort money from churches by

threatening them.” Islamists within and without the gov-ernment are determined to strangle the church.

Something More than the Cross. Governments can put restrictions on buildings and tear down crosses, but these are externals and only signs of what it truly means to be a Christian.

As Ye Wanjing, the Chinese believer said as he stood ready to defend his church in China, “I am not going to die for the physical cross on my church. However, faced with injustice, my Christian conscious pressured me to do my responsibil-ity. I hope to learn more about Jesus Christ’s calling to ‘die to myself.’”

The government can do nothing to control those who have chosen to follow Jesus like this.

9 You can help today! www.persecution.org

Human Rights Watch investigates the burning of AlAnba Mousa Church in Minya

EgyptMohammed Morsi and his radical Muslim Brotherhood ruled Egypt from June 2012 to July 2013. When he was deposed it set off a harshest level of persecution Egyptian Christians had seen in centuries. In just a few weeks, hun-dreds of Christians’ homes and shops were destroyed as well 40+ churches. Egyptian Christianity has suffered under Is-lam for 1400 years but the past twelve months were among the worst.

The Virgin Mary Church in Delga was built in the fourth century. On August 14, 2013, Brotherhood supporters gath-ered in an adjacent mosque and attacked the church after hearing the following from the mosque’s speakers: “Your Muslim brothers were killed in Rabaa and Nahda, Jihad.” They poured out of the mosque chanting, “Jihad, Jihad!” as they made their way to the Virgin Mary Church and proper-ties of the Anba Abraam Monestary, Father Abraam Taneissa told ICC.

“They looted pews, fans, curtains, chandeliers, windows, doors, and more. After they had taken all they could, they set the monastery on fire. They also looted the contents of the Mar Girgis church and the archaeological church of Virgin Mary and burned both until they were demol-ished,” Fr. Taneissa said. They announced they would be

A church is more than bricks, mortar and a cross. It’s a public witness to the presence of Jesus, followers. It is the people of God, His body, and even the physical presence of God’s encroaching presence into enemy territory. The visible representation of that incursion –

the church building – has incredible meaning.

For those who are hostile towards the Gospel, the local church is often the target of their attacks. While far too often these violent attacks succeed in destroying church

buildings, the real church will never be destroyed.

Across the world, local churches are relentlessly under attack. From the angry mob gathered outside

the church chanting insults and rocks, to the mobs that tear down the doors and destroy the church, or to an Islamist terror group that opens fire on hundreds of Christians gathered to worship on a Sunday morning; they are all sent by Satan as a strategy to erase any presence of Christ from the land. When you see Satan’s efforts to destroy the local church, you can see clearly and incongruously, that the local church is a very

dangerous place!

While there are dozens of countries we could focus on, two countries in particular, Egypt and Nigeria, stand

out as having endured intense attacks on churches.

A DANGEROUSPEOPLEGroups and Mobs Attack the Local Church

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converting the monastery into a mosque.” Fr. Abram re-called. Delga was under siege for over a month and thou-sands of Christians eventually fled the city; those who stayed behind were forced to pay jizya (protection money as ordered by their holy books).

On September 18, the Egyptian military retook the city of Delga and the following Sunday, thousands of Christians gathered in the burned remains of the church to worship.

NigeriaIn Nigeria, the Islamic terror group Boko Haram has been waging a bloody war across Northern Nigeria for over a decade. If you read the news, you might be confused as to what they are doing. If you listen to their leader, Abubakar Shekau, it becomes very clear. Here is:

“(the press) try to brainwash people that we are fighting an ethnic war, NO, we are fighting a religious war, we are fight-ing (Nigeria’s Christian President), we are fighting Chris-tians.” (December, 2013)

Their stated goal is to establish an Islamic state based on Sharia law and one of their foundational tactics is to wipe out any presence of a Christian community; the local church sits squarely in their crosshairs.

Unending Waves of AttacksMaking good on Abubakar Shekau declaration, 2014 opened with attacks being carried out on churches every Sunday in vil-lages across the country: three at a New Year’s service, eight at another, and then 22 more the following week. We were hard pressed to keep up with the killings and at a loss of how to get the secular press to pay attention to what was happening.

Not only the worship services themselves that are targets, but in nearly every raid, the attackers make certain to torch the churches of the city. In an attack in late May that left 48 dead, including 11 police men and 14 soldiers, Boko Haram set six churches ablaze. In June, an attack on church services just miles from Chibok, where the schoolgirl abductions took place, left more than 30 dead as 4 more churches were destroyed.

“There is a deliberate attempt to annihilate Christians at all cost,” Rev. Musa Asake of the Christian Association of Nigeria said in an interview following a June attack.

A Dangerous Place The heartbreaking reality confronting the Church in Nigeria, in Egypt, and elsewhere remind us that the local church, against all appearances, is a very dangerous place.

From the first century apostles, to the pastors today, Satan and his followers have attacked the Church and yet God remains faithful to his promise that he will build his Church!

Another Sunday, another church attacked in Nigeria

A DANGEROUSMESSAGE

Christians protest at the Saudi Embassy

From the very first days of the early church, and before rulers and authorities had taken it upon themselves to attempt to con-trol or crush the Christian faith, the Gospel was a very danger-ous message because at the foundation, it clarifies that every

Christian owes their first allegiance to God.

Any earthly government that allows religious freedom is implicitly acknowledging that there is an authority greater than their own which some of their citizens may choose to serve. It is a freedom that has instilled fear into dictators for centuries,

and still does today.

Approximately 64% of the world’s population, or 4.5 billion souls, live under governments with either “high or very high” restrictions on religious freedom (Pew Forum data).

This spectrum of persecution includes anything from re-strictions on employment (Burma), only allowing worship in carefully monitored “official” churches (China), to com-pletely outlawing churches (Saudi Arabia). These govern-ment restrictions are only growing progressively worse ac-cording to the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life.

So how do we fight this enormous problem? What can we do beyond prayer, beyond raising awareness and providing assistance to victims of persecution? The answer is advoca-cy. In its simplest form, advocacy is speaking truth to pow-

er (a phrase most likely coined by the Quakers). Through advocacy, we take up the cause of the persecuted and plead their case before the leaders of the nations. Often we ask those leaders, to plead the case of the persecuted with their counterparts in other nations. Sometimes politely at first, but with the clear implication that to continue to persecute religious minorities will tarnish their relationship with the United States, should it continue.

While many governments persecute, or turn a blind eye to the persecution of Christians in their countries, most are willing to address the issue if it is affecting their relation-ship with the United States or other Western powers. The potential eiplomatic and economic consequences of ignor-ing Western leaders are too painful to ignore polite requests from the U.S. to address particular persecution issues.

Over the past few years ICC has seen case after case where governments agreed to end persecution after intervention by the U.S. While we cannot share all of the stories publi-cally but three case studies are provided below.

Saudi ArabiaOn December 15, 2011, 35 men and women were arrested at a private prayer service in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. All 35 were Christians and Ethiopian citizens. During their inter-rogation, some of the men were physically beaten and the women were forced to undergo strip searches. Local au-thorities openly accused them of being infidels and spies for America and Israel. ICC broke the news of their arrest and imprisonment a few days later and in January held a conference call with the U.S. State Department, urging the U.S. to take action on the case.

After four months and two ICC-sponsored protests out-side of the Saudi embassy in D.C., we took an underground pastor who was familiar with the prisoners to Capitol Hill and held twenty-four meetings with Congressional offic-es in the House and Senate. This resulted in calls directly from our nation’s leaders to the Saudi ambassador as well as Saudi officials being called to House offices to explain the arrests in person. We soon heard from our sources in Jeddah that orders had “come from above” for the release

By Ryan Morgan

The Gospel Threatens Earthly PowerSo When Countries Persecute, We Must Speak Truth To Power

11 You can help today! www.persecution.org

of the prisoners. In early August, 2012, all 35 prisoners were released and sent back to Ethiopia after almost 8 months of detention. They reported that pressure from the outside had been instrumental in ending their stay in a Saudi jail.

IndonesiaIn 2012, ICC sources estimated that at least 50 churches had been shut down by local authorities across Indonesia. The closures always came after radical Islamic groups protested the existence of the church and put pressure on local officials to seal off the building, usually under the guise of a badly misused permit law.

In early 2013, ICC brought a pastor of one of those churches to Capitol Hill. We held dozens of meetings with key Congressional offices and asked them to write to the Indo-nesian ambassador, expressing their concern at the spate of church closures. Many did, including one key Senator on the Senate Armed Services Committee that controls much of the funding provided by the U.S. to Indonesia every year.

For seven months after our “advocacy tour” church closures became almost non-existent. Our contacts only reported a single incident. It appeared that the Indonesian govern-ment got the message, and, for a time at least, kept local officials from shutting down churches.

Sri LankaIn 2013, Christian groups in Sri Lanka documented 103 in-cidents of violence or harassment against Christians and their places of worship. Mobs, led by radical nationalist Buddhist monks, stormed churches and beat up pastors with the police often ignoring the attacks. Sometimes, they even helped the mobs destroy the church. When pastors complained, the authorities responded by saying that their churches weren’t “registered” and therefore had no right to exist. The fact that not a single law requiring places of wor-ship to register exists in Sri Lanka, or that there is no actual way to register, didn’t see seem to bother the authorities.

In May, 2014, ICC brought persecution in Sri Lanka to na-tional attention, urging members of congress to call the Sri Lankan ambassador to the US and express their concern. Several offices in the Senate and the House agreed. At the time of writing, these calls are still ongoing, but already the Sri Lanka government is scrambling for a way to explain why they’ve allowed so many attacks on churches.

The Impossible, Possible By speaking truth to power, we have seen the impossible become possible. Christians set free from prison, attacks on churches halted, and many more victories have been won when we find the courage to persistently advocate on behalf of the suffering church. With God’s help, we will continue to play our part in ensuring that far from being crushed, the Good News continues to go forth into the outer most parts of the earth.

ICC meeting with a congressman on Indonesia

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13 You can help today! www.persecution.org

By Corey Bailey

A DANGEROUSPEACEPersecution can be overwhelming. Sometimes your heart breaks as you hear another story of a woman who was set ablaze by her unbelieving husband, or of a child left orphaned when his parents were martyred. Dealing with the persecuted can bring a barrage of sadness. The heaviness is banished though when you see the hope and the beauty of their faith lived in a way that is “pressed down, but not destroyed.”

TrustI am constantly moved to tears and conviction as I see the persecuted continue to trust the Lord in the face of heavy persecution.

One persecuted pastor recently told his congregation, “God has a great purpose during the persecution. We must stand firm in the truth and never compromise. Facing persecution, we need courage and repentance before God, knowing He will (use it to) revive His Church.”

“In This World You Will Have Trouble. But Take Heart!I Have Overcome the World.” John 16:33 (NIV)

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LoveTheir example of responding in love is a tremendous exam-ple. One pastor who’s church is being threatened to be torn down told us, “We teach our kids at Sunday school to pray for the government. The secret police asked why we did this. I explained that the Bible teaches us to love those who per-secute you.”

This is called “moving in the opposite spirit” and is a way many of the persecuted are able to walk in love instead of hate. They give their hurt to the Lord, and instead of hating their persecutors, they love and pray for them. In the midst of their crisis, they choose trust, hope, and love instead of insecurity, despair, and feeling abandoned.

A Road Less TraveledIn The Road Less Traveled, Robert Frost says that choosing the road less traveled “made all the difference.” This road is not well worn, and you do not know what is around the bend. There could be rocks, thorns and glass, pain and suffering, or it may be blocked completely!

However, there could also be joy and blessing. Perhaps, even, joy and suffering are mixed together in one cup.

CourageI am emboldened when I hear accounts of the spunk and bravery of believers who routinely face persecution.

Take the Chinese pastor who told us, “When the police called me (and asked me to come into the station for an interroga-tion) without any legal orders, I simply told them that I am not available. I said, I am too busy pastoring the church and taking seminary classes to” chat” with them several times a day.” What boldness and courage he displayed!

A PromiseJesus did not promise that following Him was going to be “pain and trouble free.” No, He actually said that we would face hard times. In John 16:33 He says, “I have told you these things so that in me you may have peace. In this world you will have trouble. But take heart! I have overcome the world.” Jn 16:33

Did you hear the promise there? There is, in a sense, a “cup of joy and suffering” offered to us by Jesus. When we fol-low Him, he promises that there will be trouble; there will be persecution. Things are going to get hard. That is life. It will look different to each person, but to some degree, you will see suffering of some sort. But Jesus promises that in the midst of the suffering He can give us peace, if we go

to Him. We are to “take heart” because He has overcome the world!

Making All Things New When we, or the persecuted, face pain, we usually respond with a heart-cry: “God, why are our brothers and sisters beat-en, tortured, raped, and killed? Where are You? Why is this happening to me? Where is the hope in this?”

This is I think, a natural reaction. We were not meant to live in a broken world. We were meant to live in the Garden with connection to God and without pain, sickness or suffering. But we were thrust into a world that is controlled by the evil one and where everything has been bent and broken; a place of suffering (read Genesis chapter 3). When we suffer, or see others suffer, it’s as though we are fish out of water. We feel like our souls are drowning. And I think that they are.

The beautiful thing is that the instant we left the Garden, He began His great plan of redemption. He sent His Son to die for us, to take our sin as His own, to set our spirits free. In the midst of our pain, He said He would never leave you and that He sees your suffering and has compassion on you.

He changes what the enemy meant for evil into something good. He leaves a legacy of love to draw us to himself. He sets out to rescue our family in the suffering Church. He even sets out to rescue those that don’t know Him.

The Not–So-Secret SecretDo the persecuted have some sort of superpower? I don’t think so. They choose to trust what God has told you and I. They know that Jesus laid down His life for us, and we ought to lay down our lives for our brothers and sisters (1 John 3:16) They take to heart Philippians 3:8 (NIV), “I consider ev-erything a loss because of the surpassing worth of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord, for whose sake I have lost all things. I consider them garbage that I may gain Christ.”

They let their pain drive them to Him. If the persecuted have a superpower, this is it! They give up on the world and give it all to God. His presence can then flow through them in a powerful way. The peace and joy that come as a result in the very midst of their pain, is the great secret of suffering with God.

They experience the peace of God that passes all understand-ing. They do not demand a pain-free life. They expect that as they walk down this narrow road, less travelled, they will suffer for their faith and their love for Jesus but they count it as joy!

15 You can help today! www.persecution.org

YOUR DOLLARS AT WORK

UNDERGROUND PASTORS“It’s Worth It!!”

Our first ICC-sponsored underground pastor in Central Asia has only been pastoring in his village for about nine months.

Since he arrived, he and his wife have seen 26 people saved! He is the only pastor for about 20,000 people! He asks for your prayers for strength in the midst of persecution saying, “Sometimes I get discour-aged because of all of these difficulties, because I do not have an easy job, but it is a job that deepens my relationship with The Living God, so it is worth it.”

SAVE OUR SISTERSSharing the Gospel with Great Boldness

Since 2001, “Happiness” and family experienced harsh persecution, including being surrounded and beaten by their village, teachers allowing their children to be attacked in school, being knocked unconscious by her own brother, and gasoline being poured over her house and kids.

Despite all, she continued to share the Gospel with her neigh-bors and other villagers with great boldness.

The result has been that noone in the village will hire her or give her work.

ICC has provided her with a herd of lambs to provide an income. “Sometimes because of all of this pain, I cry at night. But in spite of all of this persecution, God gives me joy in my heart, and I know it comes from Him.”

You can help today! 800-ICC-5441 16

SAVE OUR SISTERSBetty’s Story: “Joy In My Heart”

“If you do not fire her, then we will not send our children to the school.” The villagers had Betty fired from her teaching position because she was a believer. After the meeting it was made very clear to everyone in the village who all the believers were, and they were ridiculed and called names.

“We all met and prayed about the problem together, but decided that we wanted to stay in order to be used by God to be a light in this village, and to be good examples by the way that we live our lives.” ICC has given Betty and her family a small herd of sheep to provide a steady income. When they reproduce next year, half of their offspring will go to aid another fam-ily of persecuted believers. Despite persecution, she says, “I felt joy in my heart at the opportunity to suffer for Christ.”

UNDERGROUND PASTORS“Come to God with Everything”

ICC’s second underground pastor in Central Asia is no stranger to persecution. He became a Christian at a young age and the trials began right away. Now he and his wife share the love of Jesus in a village hostile to the Gospel.

Persecution has taught him that only God can help and that we should come to God with everything we need, because He is our provider, and He is more than capable of taking care of us. “Because of all of this persecution I am very physically affected, but spiritually all of this persecution has only served to grow my faith.”

PROJECT RESCUEAn Update Recently, Regional Manager William Stark traveled to Bangladesh to visit the 120 children of ICC’s Project Rescue.

He was able to meet with all of our rescued children. The chil-dren were targeted and sold to Islamic training centers centers.

William delivered gifts to all of the children and the children of the staff. During his visit he was also able to purchase new items to improve the living conditions of the children. These items in-cluded sleeping mats, mosquito nets and various board games. He was rewarded with bright smiles and a “cultural show” performed for him by the children, complete with singing and dancing!

17 You can help today! www.persecution.org

Recently, a blasphemy victim whose family received aid from ICC expressed his thanks from prison to ICC donors:

“I extend my heartfelt gratitude to those who are taking care of my wife, children, and parents. May God bless them abundantly.”

His brother, who has taken over the care of the victim’s wife and four children, said:

“At our time of difficulty, ICC’s support is unforgettable. Caring for five extra people was too much for us. I am

thankful for every token of love, solidarity and concern from your donors. I salute ICC for giving us [an auto rick-shaw] for business and building our children’s future by taking care of their education expenses.”

His wife expressed the longing of her heart, and something we can all pray for:

“I am waiting for the day of rejoice, when Asif (my hus-band) will be among us. I want to see him chatting and playing with his children again.”

An autorickshaw like the one we provided to a blasphemy victim’s family. SAVE OUR SISTERS

Blasphemy Victims Update

You can help today! 800-ICC-5441 18

Biggest Need!!Below you can see the level of funding in each of ICC’s funds. By far, ICC’s biggest need presently is for funds to be donated to “Where Most Needed.” If you could provide an extra gift this month and direct it there, it would be of immense help.

WHERE MOST NEEDED

UNDERGROUNDPASTORS

KIDSCARE

SUFFERING WIVES & CHILDREN

COMMUNITYREBUILD

BIBLES TO THEPERSECUTED

FUND BALANCE:HIGH

FUND BALANCE:LOW

FUND BALANCE:MEDIUM

FUND BALANCE:LOW

FUND BALANCE:HIGH

FUND BALANCE:MEDIUM

GIVING TO ICC VIA YOUR WILL

Provide now for a future gift to ICC by including a bequest provision in your will or revocable trust. If you would like more information on giving to ICC in this way, please give us a call at 1-800-ICC-5441.

YOU CAN HELP TODAY!

SEND DONATIONS TO:ICC

PO BOX 8056 SILVER SPRING, MD 20907

OR ONLINE AT WWW.PERSECUTION.ORG

OR BY PHONE 800-ICC-5441

#10988Federal employees can give to ICC through CFC. CFC allows you to donate to ICC by making a pledge during the cam-paign season from Sept. to Dec. Dona-tions are taken through payroll donation.

Enter #10988 on the pledge form at your place of work.

DONATE TO ICC VIA YOUR WORK

International Christian Concern is a nonprofit 501(c)(3) (all donations tax-deductible). ICC makes every effort to honor donor wishes in regards to gifts. Occasionally, situations arise where a project is no longer viable. ICC will then redirect those donated funds to the fund most similar to the donor’s original wishes. ICC uses 7% of each restricted donation to carry out the mission of it’s segregated funds.

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