Tuesday, May 31, 2011

EGYPT: Muslims Attack Christian Churches

At least 12 people were killed and more than 200 were wounded on May 7, when several hundred ultraconservative Salafist Muslims attacked two churches and surrounding Christian-owned homes and businesses in the Imbaba district, a poor section of Cairo.

The Muslims gathered outside the Coptic St. Mena Church, protesting over the allegation that a Christian woman was being held there against her will because she had married a Muslim man and converted to Islam. In attempts to dispel the rumor, head clergymen of St. Mina allowed a group of Islamic imams into the church to search for the woman. Violence erupted though, according to witnesses at the scene, the imams declared to the gathering Muslims that the woman wasn't in the building.

After unsuccessfully trying to push through barricades the Christians had managed to erect, the rioters went to the nearby Virgin Mary Church and set it and other homes ablaze.

Sources: BBC News and Compass Direct News
Photo: Compass Direct News

Please pray for the volatile situation in Egypt. Pray for members of the church that was burned and those who were injured in the attacks. Pray that God will comfort the families of those slain. Pray also that God would block the Muslim Brotherhood from coming into power and raise up God-fearing men and women to govern Egypt.

"But may the God of all grace, who called us to His eternal glory by Christ Jesus, after you have suffered a while, perfect, establish, strengthen, and settle you." 1 Peter 5:10

VOM assists Christians in Egypt through its Family of Prisoners Fund, Christian radio broadcasts and discipleship training for Muslim converts.

May 18th, 2011

A Voice of the Martyrs Volunteer

CHINA: Shouwang Church Members Arrested

Members of the Shouwang congregation in China were arrested on May 15 as they gathered to pray in the commercial area of Zhongguancun in Beijing.

Shouwang Church is the largest unregistered church in Beijing, and its leaders have been in an ongoing battle with authorities since being forced out of their worship space and prevented from renting or buying a new building.

On April 10, police detained 169 members attempting to hold services in a public park. On Easter Sunday, police detained about 34 church members. Despite the mounting persecution, house church leaders are taking a stand for the Shouwang congregation. Nineteen house church leaders are petitioning China's legislature to resolve the ongoing tensions and to guarantee religious freedom in their country. The full text of the petition is available here.

Sources: Christian Broadcasting Network and ChinaAid - Photo: ChinaAid

Please pray for house church Christians and leaders in China. Pray that God would grant them favor with the authorities and that His will prevails.

"This You have seen, O LORD; do not keep silence. O Lord, do not be far from me. Stir up Yourself, and awake to my vindication, to my cause, my God and my Lord. Vindicate me, O LORD my God, according to Your righteousness; and let them not rejoice over me. Let them not say in their hearts, 'Ah, so we would have it!' Let them not say, 'We have swallowed
him up.'" Psalm 35:22-25

VOM assists Chinese Christians by providing Bibles, Christian literature, scholarships for training and emergency aid to families of prisoners.

May 25th, 2011

A Voice of the Martyrs Volunteer

Thursday, May 12, 2011

Epidemic Of Christian Persecution Continues

The following is just a brief expose’ of persecution representing a short span of time. Some people say Christians are the least persecuted of all the religions – nothing could be further from the truth!

CHINA: One Human Rights Activist Freed and Another Disappears

Two days after US-China human rights talks concluded on Apr. 29, human rights lawyer, Teng Biao, was freed by Chinese authorities after 70 days of detention without charge. At the news of his release, many expressed the hope that there would be an easing of the persecution taking place, perhaps as a result of two days of talks between China and the United States on human rights held in Beijing last week. However, the same day Teng was released, an "unknown" group kidnapped the lawyer Li Fangping. Teng and Li are Christians and known defenders of human rights activists, both members of the China Christian Association for the Defense of Rights. Since mid-February the authorities have unleashed the worst crackdown since 1998 against rights activists and dissidents, also for fear of protests inspired by the 2011 Tunisian revolution (Jasmine revolution). The persecution also affects the Christian groups, because many of these activists are practicing Christians.

[Source: Asia News] – May 4th, 2011

IRAN: Revolutionary Guard Infiltrating Iranian Christian Groups in Turkey

Following the recent wave of aggressive intimidation and imprisonment of Christians in Iran, the intelligence gathering arm of its Revolutionary Guard has been collecting information from Iranian Christians who have escaped to Turkey. The ranks of fleeing Christians have been infiltrated by the Iranian agents posing as refugees. They try to elicit names and addresses of other Christians or family members still under the yoke of the Islamic Republic to later be used in TV confessions, show trials, and kangaroo courts. This information is used to manipulate, accuse and denounce the helpless ones languishing inside Iran's notorious prisons. According to reports received, detainees are under immense physical and psychological pressure to appear on TV and admit to criminal activities against the Islamic republic, as well as personal misconduct within the underground church.

[Source: Farsi Christian News Network] – April 20th, 2011

NIGERIA: Muslims Target Christians in Riots over Election Results

Muslim protestors went on a murdering rampage throughout northern Nigeria following the presidential elections on Apr. 16, in which the Muslim candidate, Muhammadu Buhari, was defeated by Goodluck Jonathan, a Christian. According to VOM contacts the election was deemed transparent, free, fair and credible. Though the crisis started as a political protest, it rapidly escalated into anti-Christian violence. Numerous churches, Christian businesses, homes and cars were burned and destroyed. Thousands of Christians are now trapped and spread throughout military and security barracks. VOM contacts state they have never seen anything like this in northern Nigeria before. One VOM contact wrote, "The state governorship election [is] still to come. We only pray that things will be under control. We call on brothers and sisters all around the world to pray, for God to take control." – April 27th, 2011

VIETNAM AND LAOS: Soldiers Attack Hmong Christians

Thousands of Viet-Hmong Christians from Dien Bien province who are staging mass protests demanding religious freedom and land reforms have been attacked by Vietnam and Laos security forces. Since last Tuesday dozens have been killed, many more wounded and hundreds are missing. "The government launched an aggressive crackdown on May 3, dispatching military and police units to seal off the region and attacking peaceful protestors," according to a local source. The source emphasized that, "Military units from Laotian provinces of Xieng Khouang, Khammoune and Luang Prabang were sent to the area to arrest all those who try to flee to Laos." Christianity practiced by the Hmong community is seen by authorities and sections of the Vietnamese and Lao society as an American or imperialist "import" into the country and a threat to the communist rule.

[Sources: Independent Catholic News and World Evangelical Alliance - Religious Liberty Commission] – May 11th, 2011

AZERBAIJAN: Worshipers Threatened With Arrest

The government has forbidden three Protestant groups in Gyanja to have worship meetings, according to an Apr. 8 report by Forum 18 News Service. Locals, who spoke anonymously for fear of state reprisals, informed Forum 18 that authorities warned one group, "If they met for worship on the following Sunday or at any future date they will all be arrested." The following Sunday, local and riot police arrived at the church in two buses to stop any worship. Protestants told Forum 18 that church officials reluctantly decided not to hold a Sunday service. "People are now very afraid." Many religious groups have told Forum 18 that registering for legal status is "a torturous process," and complaints to officials about slowness and hostility are dismissed. Ironically, President Ilham Aliev said recently that "freedom of religion and freedom of conscience have been fully established in Azerbaijan." – April 13th, 2011

A Voice of the Martyrs Volunteer