Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
www.barnabasfund.org
MAY/JUNE 2014
A LOVING,
CHRISTIAN
IN THIS ISSUE
EDUCATION
Bethlehem
Christian education in Christs birthplace
Refugees
Persecuted Christians far from home
Egypt
New constitution gives hope to Christians
6.99
Coming soon
Freedom to Believe
Patrick Sookhdeo
Muslims are not allowed to convert from Islam. Sharia prescribes death for adult male apostates and imposes other penalties on those who leave Islam. This book raises awareness of Islams apostasy law and promotes the case for its repeal. It discusses Islamic teaching on apostasy, the debate amongst Muslims and the treatment of converts. ISBN: 9780978714192 | Cover: Paperback | No. of pages: 176 | RRP: 8.99 | P & P: 2.00
To order these books, visit: barnabasfund.org/shop. Alternatively, please contact your nearest Barnabas Fund ofce (addresses on back cover). Cheques for the UK should be made payable to Barnabas Books.
The paper used in this publication comes from sustainable forests and can be 100% recycled
Front cover: Children at a Christian school in Bethlehem supported by Barnabas (Photo credit: Raymond Dague) To guard the safety of Christians in hostile environments, names may have been changed or omitted. Thank you for your understanding. Unless otherwise stated, Scripture quotations are taken from the New International Version. Every effort has been made to trace copyright holders and obtain permission for stories and images used in this publication. Barnabas Fund apologises for any errors or omissions and will be grateful for any further information regarding copyright. Barnabas Fund 2014
ajor changes are taking place within our world today. Relations between and within nations are being transformed. Saudi Arabia, the centre of Wahhabism, has broken its links with Qatar, the centre of the Muslim Brotherhood. The other Gulf States have rejected political Islam and are now isolating any country, such as Qatar, that seeks to propagate it. Turkey is in turmoil. Egypts new constitution gives full equality to Christians and Jews for the rst time. At the same time appalling conicts are now raging in places such as the Central African Republic and the Middle Belt and North of Nigeria. The war in Syria continues unabated, but with the difference that Saudi Arabia and the Gulf States have put pressure on Qatar not to send in any rebel forces, nor to fund them, nor to arm them. Momentous changes are in progress as rulers abandon old positions and adopt new ones. How are we to understand what has happened? How are we to make sense of the changes in our world? The book of Proverbs gives a basic afrmation that the kings heart lies in the hand of God: in other words, that
God is the supreme ruler of the universe and this world; all rulers ultimately owe their authority to Him
God is the supreme ruler of the universe and this world, that all rulers ultimately owe their authority to Him, that He will ultimately direct the forces of the nations. As the Church remembers the Ascension of Jesus Christ back to the Father, we need to remember that in Him the prophecy in Daniel 7:14 has been fullled: [One like a son of man] was given authority, glory and sovereign power; all nations and peoples of every language worshipped him. His dominion is an everlasting dominion that will not pass away, and his kingdom is one that will never be destroyed. The risen Jesus invests His disciples with authority from God. The gates of hell will not prevail against the Church (Matthew 16:18), for Christ is with His Church (Matthew 28:20) and it is the triune God (Matthew 28:19) who will reign. We sing the hymn The Lord is King, a hymn of af rmation. In the midst of the appalling suffering that exists today, emanating from the confusion of authorities and earthly powers, let us be assured that it is our God who reigns over His suffering people and over this world.
Contents
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Compassion in Action Training for ministry in wartorn DRC Spotlight The desperate plight of Christian refugees Living in Babylon How to handle unjust suffering
10
Analysis Violence in CAR: Are the Christians really retaliating? Project Update A loving, Christian education for Bethlehem children
14
Newsdesk New Egyptian constitution, but Christians still targeted In Touch Young Barnabas supporters reach out to persecuted Christians
4 8
Pullout
11 12
14 18
COMPASSION IN ACTION
Hungry to learn
Christian Sudanese refugees in Egypt have had a disadvantage turned into an opportunity with help from Barnabas Fund. Having ed persecution in the Nuba Mountains in Sudan, thousands of Sudanese Christians sought refuge in the relative safety of Egypt. Unable to nd sufcient work, many are very poor. But they do have time on their hands. A church in Cairo, whose membership includes over 650 Sudanese refugees, decided to tap into their potential and started a three-year Bible school to train them as future church leaders. The political upheaval in Egypt demonstrated the commitment of the students. Often they had to commute through streets that resembled a war zone to get to the school. Now 28 students are in their second year, four of whom came especially from Khartoum for leadership training and will return there again afterwards. The church also provides a weekly free meal to all the Sudanese refugee members, paid for by Barnabas Fund.
Support from Barnabas enabled this young Christian to attend nursing school
Radio is an invaluable tool to bring the Gospel across borders that might otherwise be closed. Barnabas Fund is enabling a strategically placed Christian radio station in North Ossetia, Russia, to bring the Good News to several troubled regions with Muslim majorities. It is the only radio station in the region that is broadcasting Christian programmes non-stop, covering an area of more than two million people. The staff do not know exactly how many people are coming to Christ through the programmes, but some certainly are, and the numerous positive letters and phone calls from listeners are an indication that many are touched. Barnabas annual donation covers most of the staff wages and other organisational costs.
Hundreds of former Muslims in Bufumbo, Uganda, who gave their lives to Christ are getting essential follow-up care to help them survive and stand strong in their new-found faith. Barnabas provided the funding. In seminars held in August last year 213 young converts were taught to abide in Christ. They were so red up by what they learnt that, under the supervision of their local leader, they started holding open-air meetings and doing house-to houseevangelism, undaunted by hostility from Muslims. A hundred married couples learnt about Christian home management and child rearing during three seminars. Afterwards many couples found that they argued less and were happier and stronger as families. Fifteen young people, whose Muslim parents refused them care after they became Christians, were enabled to continue with their studies thanks to Barnabas Fund.
i is s helping hel
1,262 for Christian school in Pakistan (US$2,098; 1,506)
COMPASSION IN ACTION Your support is making a vital difference in the lives of persecuted Christians. They tell us it also encourages them and strengthens their faith, because they know that Christians far away care about them. Thank you for your prayers and gifts. Below and on the following pages are just a few examples of the many ways we have helped recently.
This Christian boy is learning to pray before he studies, eats or goes to bed Barnabas has helped Christian widows in Kenya to start small businesses
Start-up capital from Barnabas Fund has given a Christian mother of three in Kenya a means of survival after disaster struck. Esther Kikipiyas life was shattered on 3 March 2013 when al-Shabaab terrorists gunned down her husband. He is one of many Christian victims targeted by the Islamist organisation in Kenya. Thanks to the resources from Barnabas, Esther could start a business of buying goats and cows, and selling them on market days. With the prot she is able to buy bread for herself and her children. Esther is one of ve Kenyan Christian widows who have received support from Barnabas to launch small businesses.
Project reference 00-345 (Victims of Violence Fund)
Christian parents in Multan, Pakistan, are seeing their childrens lives transformed through a Christian school that receives regular help from Barnabas Fund. The children have become more procient in the core skills of reading and writing, listening and speaking. They are learning English, which gives the children greater condence and could improve their future employment prospects. They are also encouraged in their Christian faith by the teachers, which is having a positive impact on their spiritual lives and their families.
Project reference 41-893
A couple active in ministry in their Central Asian homeland needed a new home. Rahmet and Nadira were sharing a small at with his non-believing parents, brother and nephew. It was hard for them to invite Christians to their place because Rahmets parents, the owners of the at, did not like them to. A grant from Barnabas covered their rental costs for a year. This gave them a base from which they could freely organise their full-time church work. It also gave them a place to rest and spend time with their two children. During the year Rahmet and Nadira visited church leaders around the country teaching them in seminars, discipled recent converts, prepared young church members in eight towns to serve the church and community and organised several youth camps. In a context where the government controls and suppresses Christian activity, the couples work is said to have strengthened the church locally and nationally.
A recent grant from Barnabas Fund paid for the salaries of four teachers and one assistant, furniture and books for 55 students. Without this support many of the childrens parents, who experience discrimination for being Christian, could not afford to send their children to school.
COMPASSION IN ACTION
bringing hope,
Escape
In January, Ibrahim phoned them with the hopeful news that the rebels had agreed to their release. He explained to them what route to take and how best to prepare for the escape. After some false starts due to the rebels not keeping to their word, many Christians managed to get out through an underground tunnel system on 10 February. Two days later, another 21 escaped through a similar route, having to crawl through parts of it. As many were elderly, it was a slow and arduous process. Ibrahim welcomed all who got out and tried to reunite them with their families. Soon after, he visited some who were in nancial difculties and provided them with aid from Barnabas Fund.
Walk to freedom
I havent seen that for two years, Wasim, an emaciated Syrian Christian, told Ibrahim, one of his liberators, who organised the distribution of aid from Barnabas. He was talking about a cucumber he had just been given. Wasim was one of a group of Christians who had managed to escape the besieged part of Homs in February after two years of virtual imprisonment by rebel forces. Their escape was facilitated through the tireless intervention of Ibrahim, whom Barnabas Fund supports.
Over 35,000 Christians in Syria are receiving food and other aid from Barnabas Fund every month
17,728 for aid for 100 Christian families in Homs, Syria (US$29,241; 21,000)
Christians of all ages in Kyrgyzstan enjoy reading the Christian childrens magazine
transforming lives
Healed to minister
COMPASSION IN ACTION
I had a broken heart and felt wounded from fear I imprisoned many people in my heart. When I released everyone, the chain that bound my heart fell off and I felt free, ready to dance, sing and do anything God asked me to do.
Irene, a trainee
witnessed how their congregations were caught up in the violence and how a staggering number of women were and continue to be targeted for rape. Many pastors have had to ee to safety alongside their congregations. Some were so burdened by the horrors they had witnessed that were considering leaving the ministry. The past month we were all like dead bodies, one of the trainees said. I was carrying a heavy burden.
raised from the dead. Another said, I give God thanks. I am now feeling fresh air waving on me even blowing on my heart. I am feeling good now and my hope is now with Jesus.
Reaching out
Many are now determined to use what they learnt to minister to their churches and communities. I want to teach this to the whole church, Jaques said enthusiastically. And Japhet added, The teaching has lifted the church up. We can walk together now. We have to take the message to others.
Over 200 pastors and leaders in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) received lifechanging training, which was funded by Barnabas, on ministering to victims of violence, with a focus on sexual abuse cases. Many came away not only with new pastoral skills but also with personal healing and a reinvigorated outlook on life.
Witnesses
The circumstances under which the pastors are working are traumatic. Eastern DRC, the area where many are ministering, has been ravaged by years of brutal ghting between the Congolese army and various rebel armies. The leaders have
SPOTLIGHT
Imagine for a moment that you are a Christian in Syria. You are surrounded by horric violence and in dire need of basic essentials. Your Christian community is a deliberate target for Islamist militants, and your family members and friends may have been kidnapped or murdered. You are vulnerable, unprotected and desperate. What would you do?
aced with this nightmare, around 600,000 Syrian Christians have ed their homeland, among two million Syrians who have sought refuge in other countries. These conict victims form part of a global population of 15.4 million refugees.1 Ofcial gures record a further 28.8 million people who are displaced within their own countries, although the actual total may be much higher. It is feared that if the migration of Christians from Syria continues, the country could become another Iraq. Since 1990, three-quarters of Iraqs Christians have left the country, escaping hostility and targeted violence. Some fear that the Church could be wiped out from both Syria and Iraq. Persecuted Christians in Syria and many other countries must often make a painful choice between remaining in their homeland and eeing abroad. This article examines the pressures that force our brothers and sisters to make this choice, the prospects facing those who ee and the reactions of the governments to whom they turn for asylum.
Barnabas Fund supports displaced Christians in Syria and Syrian Christian refugees in other countries with food and other essentials
SPOTLIGHT
and our family is still present. We as a family are so worried about our future. We have lost our jobs; we have lost our home despite all these problems we have faith in the Lord Jesus Christ who has saved us from the most difcult situation one could ever face. Farrukh and his family now live in a Barnabasfunded safe house in another country. Since December 2012, when an Islamist uprising began in the Christian-majority Central African Republic, more than a million people have been displaced by violence in the country.2 Thousands of Christians have ed, many of them to neighbouring countries. They may face desperate living conditions, where disease is rife, and annual food shortages in the region are set to compound their suffering. Barnabas Fund is providing emergency food rations to displaced Christians. Other countries from which Christian refugees are eeing include Iran, where Christians are severely persecuted by the authorities. Some are thrown into prison on false charges. Even in their countries of refuge, Iranian Christians, and especially converts, are sometimes at risk of persecution. Barnabas has supported the practical needs of Iranian Christian refugees.
made by refugees can be very dangerous, and they often face poverty and miserable living conditions in their new location. Host countries that are not signatories to the UNs international agreements on the treatment of refugees do not have to grant them legal status. Those who have not been ofcially recognised as refugees nd it very difcult to nd jobs or rent homes, and are sometimes not afforded the protection of the law. They may be in danger from fellow refugees from the majority religion of their homeland. This is the situation facing a group of Afghan Christian refugees in another Asian country. A Barnabas partner, referring to two girls in the group, wrote: Though they are happy and hopeful in their Lord Christ Jesus they are facing big problems in their lives, as their parents are not getting good and regular jobs, they are not even able to feed their family, they stay in a very dirty and crowded area in a small house. Applying for asylum in states that are signatories to the UN agreements can be a long-winded, complicated and frustrating process. Christians seeking asylum may well meet the criteria for refugee status, but because they are unable to express the facts clearly and persuasively, their applications are denied. Revealing their faith to those who process their asylum applications is a particular risk for converts from Islam. Muslim case workers may report converts to the local Islamic community and have been known to tell applicants to return to Islam. Translators, who are often nationals of an applicants home country and who may also belong to their former religion, may skew the process by not translating accurately. The same problems can affect Christians applying for refugee status from the UNHCR (United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees).
When Christian families gain asylum in the West, parents are often dismayed to see the negative effects on their childrens faith of growing up in a strongly secular culture.
An agonising choice
Not all persecuted Christians have the option of ight. Some are prevented from leaving their country by their geographical location, frailty or lack of resources. But those who are able to leave the country face an agonising decision. Should they maintain their Christian witness in a place where they are at risk of martyrdom, or should they ee in the hope of nding greater security elsewhere? A Biblical precedent exists for more than one course of action. In Acts, Paul escapes from Damascus when his life is endangered (Acts 9:23-25; cp. 2 Corinthians 11:32-33), reecting Jesus instruction to His disciples to ee when they encounter persecution (Matthew 10:23). On another occasion he makes use of his right as a Roman citizen to appeal to the emperor to avoid being handed over to his enemies (Acts 25:11). And he also bears witness to his endurance of persecution for the sake of Christ (2 Corinthians 4:8-12; 6:4-10; 11:2326), a response required elsewhere from all Gods people (Revelation 13:10). It is for each individual believer to be guided by God as to which of these actions to take. Those who do decide to leave have no guarantee of nding a better life. The journeys
2
The pastor of an Afghan refugee congregation in another country stands in the entrance to his church. The church meets in a discreet location to avoid persecution by Afghan Muslims in their local community
Please see p.11 for further information on the nature of this conict. BARNABAS AID MAY/JUNE 2014 9
SPOTLIGHT
with medical needs. The UN, which has asked that 100,000 resettlement places be provided, has stated that Refugees who face serious threats to their physical security, particularly due to political opinion or belonging to a minority group, may also be prioritised. This appears to recognise the vulnerability of Christians and members of other religious minorities. Similarly, in the debate over whether Western countries should accept refugees from Syria, some have argued that Christians, who are an especially vulnerable minority, should be considered a priority group. While Muslim refugees may be welcomed elsewhere in the Middle East, Christians have few safe havens in the region.
Barnabas Fund supports displaced children from predominantly Christian ethnic minorities in Burma (Myanmar)
with the UNHCR, which excludes many Christians who may face difculties registering, as we have seen, or who do not dare even to attempt the process. Excepting such resettlement cases, most Western countries grant asylum only to refugees who have managed to reach their shores. Even Sweden, the only country to offer residency to all Syrian asylum applicants, requires them to make their own way there, unsupported and without a visa. So, since the conict began, many Christians have attempted to reach safety by putting their lives in the hands of people trafckers or even escaping on foot to Greece and other European countries via Turkey. These journeys are very dangerous. Our brothers and sisters have endured crossings in unsafe boats and have been the victims of violence in Turkey and Greece. Some have died en route.
But the resettlement programme is likely to be targeted only at refugees already registered
Longer-term support for refugee communities. For example, Barnabas Fund is supporting a group of Afghan Christians, who have taken refuge in another country, with school fees for their children. Advocacy. Barnabas Fund campaigns on behalf of Christian refugees and has produced a handbook, The Essential Guide for Helping Refugees, for individuals, churches and organisations that seek to support refugees in their communities. Please see p. 2 for further details.
Pray. Lift up to the Lord Christian refugees (and IDPs) around the world; ask Him to provide for them and to surround them with His love and care. Give. Barnabas Funds support for Christian refugees relies entirely on donations. Projects that support refugees and displaced Christians include 00-1032 (Middle East Fund), 20-383 (Feeding Iraqi Christian refugees in neighbouring countries) and 01-901 (Afghan Christian refugees in other countries). Speak up. We encourage you to urge your government to recognise Christian refugees and those from other vulnerable religious minorities as deserving of asylum. For a sample letter to your elected representative, please visit www.barnabasfund.org/syria-asylum-letter or contact your nearest Barnabas ofce (addresses on back cover). Get involved. World Refugee Sunday, which takes place this year on 15 and 22 June,
is a wonderful opportunity to raise awareness about refugees in general and Christian refugees in particular. Please visit www.refugeehighway.net/resources/world-refugee-sunday for more information.
Living in Babylon
Faithful to Christ in a hostile world
In
The status of women
In the 1st-century Greek and Roman worlds, women were regarded as inferior to men and were subject to various legal disadvantages. By the late 1st century, their position had improved somewhat within the Roman Empire, but their subordination to men was still generally accepted. This convention extended to the submission of wives to husbands. The early Christians challenged the assumption underlying this practice by declaring that in Christ women and men have equal status in the eyes of God. But their churches still had to live in a strongly patriarchal society, and to out its norms on marriage was to put themselves under even greater pressure. This passage is a careful attempt to balance the Gospel truth of equality in Christ with sensible (though limited) respect for social norms. Christians today disagree over the proper roles of men and women within marriage. But in the context of 1 Peter 3, this debate is secondary to how wives and husbands should relate in an appropriate and prudent way in the context of a hostile society.
this issue, we are continuing our series of pull-out supplements reecting on how Christians are to live in a world that is basically opposed to our faith and discipleship. In the rst letter of Peter, this world is given the name Babylon (5:13), which is probably a symbolic reference to Rome and denotes the place of exile for Gods people. Christians are exiles and foreigners in a land that is not their own, and so we experience scorn and rejection from its citizens because our values and customs are different. This negative response is meant to bully and shame us into giving up on our Christian beliefs and lifestyle and reverting to our former ways. First Peter is written to encourage Christians to persevere in the face of such hostility and to guide us in how to do so. It speaks powerfully to the roughly 10% of believers around the world who suffer deliberate discrimination, harassment or violence because of their faith. But the context it addresses is in some ways even closer to that of Christians in the West today, who face more indirect forms of social pressure to turn back from the way of Christ. In this letter we can all nd teaching to sustain us and instruction to direct us as we strive to remain faithful to our Lord in a hostile world.
1 Peter 3
In previous studies we have seen that 1 Peter calls us in chapters 1 and 2 to a lifestyle that reects our status as Gods people and our hope of salvation in Christ. In the latter part of chapter 2, it brings this general appeal down to earth in practical guidance for specic social relationships. The opening verses of chapter 3 continue this section, with directions for wives and husbands (vv. 1-7), and it is then rounded off with a call to right conduct that applies to all Christians (vv. 8-12). In the latter part of chapter 3, the letter declares that nothing can ultimately harm us if we do the will of God; not even undeserved suffering can do that if we handle it correctly (vv. 13-17). It then bases this claim on the victory of Christ over evil powers, a victory that achieves and guarantees the salvation of His people (vv. 18-22). This assurance that we will emerge from present distress into future triumph motivates us to persevere in the face of persecution of whatever kind.
LIVING IN BABYLON But the submission required of Christian wives is limited. A non-Christian husband has no right to compel his wife to abandon her faith or to worship and serve his gods. Instead wives must hold fast to their Christian profession and practice (do what is right, v. 6) and not be intimidated by any threats that may be made against them as a result. As for Christian husbands, their life together with their wives is to be governed by the knowledge that Christian women have an equal status with them in the Christian community. So they are not to use their physical strength or social advantage to oppress and exploit their wives, but to show them honour as co-heirs of the life-giving grace of God. This is sufciently important to be a condition of their prayers being heard by God. Social expectations regarding the roles of men and women are very different across time and culture. But the principles of this passage still apply. Christian husbands and wives are to respect existing structures in marriage and conform to approved practices where these are consistent with our faith and lifestyle, to diminish the hostility that society shows towards us. Where they are inconsistent, we are to do what is right without fear of the possible negative consequences. And we are to treat each other with respect, recognising that within the Church we have equal standing; this is a bond that strengthens our unity and helps us to stand rm together in a context of persecution.
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LIVING IN BABYLON
Fleeing persecution
Many Christians today have ed from their homes and even their homelands because of threats, intimidation and violence. Hundreds of thousands of Christians have been displaced from Iraq and Syria after being told that they must leave, convert to Islam or be killed. Christians accused of blasphemy in Pakistan have had to take refuge in other countries because of the danger of reprisals. It is important to recognise that the clear command in these verses against fearing our enemies is not incompatible with such prudent evasive action. In Matthews Gospel, the Lord Jesus repeatedly tells His disciples not to be afraid of those who ill-treat them (Matthew 10:26, 28, 31), but only a few verses earlier, He has told them that when they are persecuted in one place, they must ee to another (Matthew 10:23). Our brothers and sisters from these stricken countries are courageously maintaining their Christian faith and discipleship in the face of extreme hostility. They are no less an example to us because they have ed to escape the worst of its ravages.
LIVING IN BABYLON Following His resurrection, Christ proclaimed His victory to the imprisoned spirits from Noahs time (see text box) and has thus announced the nal doom of all spiritual powers that disobey God. In those days, God waited patiently before executing His judgment on the world, just as He is waiting patiently now to execute the nal judgment. And just as then a few righteous people were saved by passing through water in the ark, so now we are saved by passing through the water of baptism. Baptism does not work as an outward ritual that removes dirt from the body. It is effective because in it we turn to God, by pledging ourselves to acknowledge Him properly and to behave accordingly. And it saves us through the resurrection of Jesus Christ, through His victory over the powers of evil; it takes us out of their control and places us under the dominion of God. The basis of all this is the taking up of Christ to heaven, to the place of divine authority and universal dominion, following His death and resurrection. By His exaltation, all the evil forces that control human and earthly life have been made subject to Him, and their malign power over His people has been broken. Those who have pledged themselves to God in baptism can no longer be ultimately harmed by them, and the powers that persecute us now will nally be destroyed altogether. So Christians can face the future with condence, whatever afictions we may face in the present. Through His own unjust suffering, Christ has triumphed over all evil, and through Him we who suffer as He did will also be victorious over all the evil that oppresses us. His dying and rising, and His resulting exaltation to heaven, ensure and guarantee that we will emerge from the crucible of persecution into the blessedness of Gods kingdom. The third chapter of 1 Peter continues to support Christians living as exiles in an alien land Babylon and subject to pressure and hostility from others. The letters earlier appeal for right conduct is applied to another social relationship, that of wives and husbands, and then renewed in terms of harmony among ourselves and blessing our persecutors. The chapter then assures us that the undeserved suffering that we experience cannot nally harm us but leads to our blessing, provided that we handle it properly, and offers guidance on how to do this. And it supports its claim by a bold proclamation of Christs victory over every evil and persecuting power. A notable feature of the chapter is the response to persecution that it requires. We are to maintain our Christian integrity without regard to the consequences, acknowledging the dominion of Christ in all that we say and do. But we are also to avoid provoking unnecessary antagonism from those around us, by respecting social customs and norms where possible and responding graciously to our oppressors. And we are to treat each other with respect within the Christian community, to strengthen our unity and help ourselves to stand rm. If we act on these directions, then our unjust sufferings will indeed work out for our blessing; we can be condent of sharing in Christs victory.
Spirits in prison?
First Peter 3:18-22 is a very hard passage to understand, and many different interpretations of it have been offered. The one followed here sees the spirits in prison of verse 19 as the fallen angels of Genesis 6, who disobeyed God by taking human wives for themselves. In some Jewish tradition they were the source (through their offspring) of evil on the earth, and they were put in prison to await nal judgment. Christs exaltation to heaven involves His victory over them; it spells their nal doom and that of all the evil they have spawned.
Conclusion
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ANALYSIS
Anarchy in CAR
How are the Christians responding?
Secular media reports from the stricken Central African Republic (CAR) tell a grim story of sectarian bloodshed. They portray two religious groups locked in conict: the Muslim Slka ghters, whose savage coup in 2013 ignited the current explosion of violence, and the Christian anti-balaka militias, who are now ghting back viciously against them. Muslims and Christians are presented as equally responsible for the tragic events that are now unfolding.
ut how accurate is this picture? In particular, in what sense if any can the anti-balaka rightly be called Christian? And how far is their response to the violence of the Slka typical of Christians in CAR?
they suppose will protect them from bullets, but which reveal that their basic religious allegiance is to fetishism rather than to Christ. While the great majority of their attacks are against Muslim targets, Christians too have been assaulted and injured by them. Their motivation appears to be more political than religious, as church leaders in CAR have insisted. Some of the groups have explicitly said that they are not Christian militias.
senior church leaders has invited the president of the countrys Islamic community to move into his church compound; I live alongside him and I ask Christians to do likewise, he said. People claiming allegiance to the anti-balaka have been expelled from their churches. The Church in CAR is bearing a powerful witness to the grace and love of Christ in a context of intense pressure and desperate suffering. It deserves not to be tarred with the same brush as the anti-balaka, whose cruelties reveal that they are Christian in name only.
Christ-like responses
But the most compelling proof that the anti-balaka are Christian in name only is the vastly different response to the crisis displayed by mainstream church leaders in CAR. They have repeatedly distanced themselves from the militias, declaring that the anti-balaka should not be labelled as Christian and that they are in no way mandated by the churches. They have also explicitly condemned the violence in the country, whatever its origin, and have called upon Christians to pursue forgiveness, reconciliation and healing.
These words have been matched by practical actions. Churches are hiding, defending and caring for thousands of Muslims endangered by the anti-balaka, and one of the countrys most
PROJECT UPDATE
A loving,
Christian education
in the birthplace of Christ
Barnabas has been supporting the school since these children were toddlers Photo credit: Raymond Dague
I cannot think my ve children could be better brought up, than in such a pure Christian setting when all else around them is not Christian by any means.
and societal discrimination have forced many believers to leave the area, and those who remain are often very poor. Many Christian businesses have closed down because the unstable political situation has led to a decline in tourism. Barnabas makes up the shortfall in the schools running costs, so that even children from the most impoverished Christian families who can afford only minimal fees, or no fees at all, are able to attend. But for our support, many of the children would be forced to attend other local schools that have a strongly Islamic curriculum. The school is unashamedly Christian despite its hostile surroundings. Every morning, the whole school gathers in the playground to praise God and sing Christian songs. The morning devotions end with the Lords Prayer in Aramaic, the language of Jesus. During the school day the students are also taught Aramaic by a local church leader, and they listen to Bible stories during regular religious education classes.
hese thankful words were spoken by a parent whose children attend a Barnabasfunded Christian school in Bethlehem. The school is renowned locally for its healthy, clean environment, and its atmosphere is so happy and loving that some children have been known to cry when it is time to go home. Demand for places at the school is high; it is currently providing 400 children aged 3-12 with a quality education. The school also provides employment for 40 Christians, as teachers, administrative staff and cleaners, in a context where many Christians are unable to nd work.
Recently, children from grades 2-6 took part in a wonderful project to create a copy of the Bible in which all the verses are handwritten by schoolchildren. Each child copied a number of verses in Arabic, their mother tongue, onto a piece of paper along with their name, age and school; the verses will now be collated with those written by children from other schools and published. The organisers of the project were amazed by how much the children at the school knew about the verses they were writing.
PROJECT UPDATE oors were used for classrooms, a computer lab, a science lab, an art room and a small space for children with learning disabilities. The quality education that the children are receiving at the school will help them to succeed in life despite the disadvantages they face. For example, by the age of ten the children are learning three foreign languages, including modern Aramaic. Right from the start of their school career, at age three, the pupils are exposed to English. For the rst three years, they are taught the language orally, through songs and the identication of words. Aramaic is taught from age seven, and Hebrew is added to the package by the time they reach the age of ten (grade ve). Older pupils are taught history and science classes in English to help them to prepare for future English-language exams. In the past, students have even had a taste of French as an extra-curricular activity. their home circumstances. The heating and hot water are a true luxury for those children who do not have them at home, and all the children are provided with a nutritious meal several times a month. Recently, the head teacher was able to arrange a school trip to the seaside for all the students; it was the rst time that any of them had ever seen the sea. The school does everything it can to support children from the neediest families. Three siblings at the school live with the six other members of their family, which includes seven children aged between six and 16, in three small rooms. The family mostly survive on rice. Their father, who reads the Bible to his children and loves to tell them stories, sometimes goes without food so that they can eat. As the family is unable to pay anything towards their childrens education, the three who attend the school are not charged any fees and are also provided with school uniform, textbooks and anything else they need. When times are so difcult for the family that the children come to school with only a very small piece of bread for lunch, they are provided with sandwiches. All the children at the school are encouraged to show Christ-like selessness in caring for the needy amongst their peers and in their wider community. Jack, a ve-year-old pupil, felt that his friend Abdo was less fortunate than himself and wanted to reach out to him. He said: I think my friend should be happy as I am. Because I do not see him smile often, I decided to help him to be happy as Jesus told us. Jack saved up all the sweets he was given and gave them to Abdo. Every Christmas, the school takes part in a charity collection. The head teacher is the rst to give, followed by the teachers and other staff and nally the children. Despite the hardship that many children endure, the amount given has increased again and again over the years. The offering collected last Christmas was donated to a Christian boarding school and day-care centre for children who are blind or who have learning disabilities. The Bethlehem school students also visited the centre to spend time with the children and to sing carols for them.
Please pray
Give thanks to God for the remarkable way in which He has blessed the Bethlehem school over the last decade. Pray that the school will continue to be a shining light for Christ in an environment where His people are not made to feel welcome, and that it will continue to grow and ourish.
Barnabas Funds support is vital if the neediest students are to continue their studies
Barnabas Fund contributes an average per child of 36 a month. A twice-yearly newsletter about the school is sent to regular sponsors, who also receive a prayer card with a photo and details of one child they can pray for. To begin sponsoring a child, please use the form on p. 19, giving the project reference 65-420 and using the I would like to give regularly box. You can also set up a regular gift by visiting www.barnabasfund.org/donate, selecting Direct Debit and selecting project reference 65-420, or by contacting your nearest Barnabas ofce (addresses on back cover). We will be glad to send a prayer card and the twice-yearly newsletter to supporters who are regularly contributing any amount.
Pray for all the children at the school, and ask Him to bless their studies and their home life. Ask that they will grow in their understanding and in their faith. Pray that the school will help to maintain Bethlehems Christian presence, which has been dwindling rapidly, and that the pressures our brothers and sisters face there and elsewhere in the Holy Land will be relieved.
NEWSDESK
businesses were looted and torched. Hundreds ed the area. This attack followed three separate acts of anti-Christian violence in the North in late January. Boko Haram ghters targeted a church and village in Adamawa state on 26 January; a total of 53 people were killed in the carnage.
Then on 30 January, a Christian family of seven in Kaduna state were murdered by Fulani herdsmen. The next day, eleven worshippers were killed by Boko Haram gunmen who stormed into a church and red at the congregation in Adamawa state. The incidents took place shortly
after Boko Harams leader, Abubakar Shekau, had restated in a video the groups agenda and threatened more violence: We are ghting a
religious war we are ghting Christians. We will kill because Allah says we should decapitate, we should amputate limbs, we
should mutilate.
Boko Haram has been ghting since 2009 to establish an Islamic state in Northern Nigeria. The group is believed to be responsible for around 3,500 deaths.
When the evacuations began, armed groups tried to prevent Christians from leaving
mobile phones so they could not communicate with one another. When the evacuations began, armed groups tried to prevent Christians from leaving. Meanwhile, a jihadist group in control of the northern city of Raqqa has given Christians there an online, the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIS) said it would give Christians protection if they paid the tax and agreed to its conditions, but that if they rejected the terms, they would be legitimate targets. This is the latest move by the group to establish a strict Islamic state in the
NEWSDESK
EGYPT Egypts Christians are rejoicing after the passage of a new constitution that replaces an earlier Islamist version and strengthens their rights and freedoms. Christians were rmly supportive of the new charter, but it was also approved by a huge majority of Muslim voters. One church leader described it as a vote against religious extremism, sharia and attempts by the Muslim Brotherhood to Islamise the society. The referendum on 14-15 January was boycotted by the Brotherhood, who tried to stop people from voting, using violence, intimidation and threats. Clashes between the group and police left eleven people dead, and a bomb was detonated outside a courthouse shortly before voting was set to begin. Christians were especially targeted, with most of the reported attacks taking place in Minya province, which is an Islamist heartland but also has a large Christian population. Militants climbed onto the roofs of some houses in Sohag and pelted passers-by with stones, shooting at some of them. In the city of Minya, a Christian-owned pharmacy was smashed by Morsi supporters, while an attempted robbery at the home of a prominent Christian businessman
was foiled. Text messages saying that voting would be extended for a third day were probably sent by Islamists to discourage people from voting on one of the two scheduled days. In some cases, the Islamists tactics worked, but on the whole people were determined to exercise their democratic right.
state have been removed. But although the new constitution gives Christians hope of better times, at present they remain vulnerable to acts of targeted violence by Islamists, including killings and kidnappings. Arabic media reported the murder on 17 February of a Syrian Christian family who had been living in Alexandria. A
Although the new constitution gives Christians hope of better times, at present they remain vulnerable to acts of targeted violence by Islamists
The new constitution enshrines the equality of all citizens and prohibits discrimination on the grounds of religion, belief, sex, race and other factors. Christians and other minorities are granted greater political representation. In a signicant shift, absolute freedom of belief is also granted, although the freedom to practise religion and establish places of worship is limited to the followers of Islam, Christianity and Judaism. Restrictions on church buildings have also been lifted. Provisions of the 2012 constitution that paved the way for the establishing of an Islamic 44-year-old man, his 35-year-old wife, their six-year-old son and the wifes brother were stabbed to death at their home. The attackers set the house on re. On 8 February a 30-year-old Christian woman, Madline Wagih Demian, was killed in an attack on a Christian community in Kom Ombo, Upper Egypt. A knife-wielding Muslim man went on a rampage, targeting two Christian-owned pharmacies. In one of these, he stabbed Madline in the neck; she died at the scene. The assailant then stabbed Marian Kamal Shak (19), who was walking along the street with a friend. The teenager
survived the injury. Since the violence, Christian women in Kom Ombo have been afraid to leave their homes alone. The suspected attacker has been arrested. Kidnapping for ransom remains a serious and persistent problem for the Christian community, and younger victims are now being targeted more frequently. In February, a 25-year-old Christian was kidnapped at gunpoint on his way home from Minya City. Over the past two years, there have been more than 150 reported kidnappings of Christians in Minya province. Payments extorted from families in exchange for their loved ones release range from US$7,000 to US$500,000. Egypt has been wracked by instability since the removal of former Islamist president Mohammed Morsi in July 2013, as his supporters use violence to undermine the new, armyled political transition. Hundreds of policemen and soldiers have been killed by Islamist militants, who are now also targeting tourists. On 16 February 2014, jihadist group Ansar Bayt al-Maqdis carried out a suicide bombing on a tourist bus carrying 31 South Korean Christians who were visiting historical Christian sites in Sinai. Four people were killed and 14 injured.
NEWSDESK
SUPPORT FOR CHRISTIAN SHARIA IMPOSED ON MINORITY, BUT NON-MUSLIMS IN ACEH? VIOLENCE CONTINUES INDONESIA Sharia laws that are in force in Aceh include the
IRAQ Moves are being made in
Iraq to help bolster the position of the countrys vulnerable Christian minority and stem the tide of emigration that could see the community disappear altogether. Hundreds of thousands of Christians have ed the country in response to targeted violence, which intensied following the 2003 US-led invasion. Many of those who have moved to safer parts of the country have been unable to nd stable jobs. Efforts to restore the Christian minoritys place in Iraqi society are being made at both regional and national levels. The governor of Basra has promised Christians a piece of land to cultivate as well as job opportunities to encourage them to come back. Consideration is also being given to an autonomous province for Christians in the Nineveh Plain, which would have its own police and army to guarantee their safety. Nationally, a draft law is being prepared on minority rights to improve the status of groups such as Christians. The legislation recognises their marginalisation and aims to ensure their participation in public life. It focuses on protecting their language and cultural education and supporting their appearances in the media. It also seeks to change attitudes among the wider population by revising school curricula in history and religion. Amid these positive developments, however, violence and instability continue to rock Iraq. January was the deadliest month in nearly six years, with more than 1,000 deaths. Sunni Islamist insurgents are gaining ground. The violence has displaced hundreds of thousands of people, and Christians are continuing to pour out of Iraq. may be extended to non-Muslims in the Indonesian province of Aceh under a controversial new proposal. Elements of sharia are already in force in the territory but are applied only to Muslims. On 13 December 2013, however, a new bylaw was approved by Acehs legislative council and signed by Governor Zaini Abdullah. According to a council member, it obliges everyone in Aceh without exception to follow sharia; he said, It would be unfair if Muslims
were punished while non-Muslims were not, just because sharia violations are not stipulated in the Criminal Code.
Sharia police have already started reprimanding non-Muslim offenders. Women were told to wear a headscarf, and men who were dressed in shorts were told to wear trousers. Threetime violators of the dress rules could be publicly caned. Other sharia laws
prohibition of alcohol and affectionate contact between unmarried couples. Non-Muslim violators of Acehs Criminal Code will be given the option of being tried by a sharia court or a regular court. But if the matter is not covered by the Criminal Code, they will automatically be tried in a sharia court. Even if acquitted by a sharia court, they will be required to undergo rehabilitation. The bylaw was submitted to the Home Ministry on 2 February; the central government department needs to verify it before it can be enacted. A more recent report in the Indonesian press also suggests that the governor is downplaying the signicance of the new bylaw for non-Muslims. But the head of legal affairs at the Aceh provincial secretariat has said that the administration will seek to implement a more comprehensive sharia-based criminal code in the future.
John Short was arrested for distributing Christian leaets in North Korea
by North Korea. American-Korean Kenneth Bae was sentenced to 15 years hard labour in April for carrying out similar activities. And North Korea has refused to release South Korean
Kim Jeong-wook, who was arrested in October, despite his confession and appeal for forgiveness. At the time of writing, 33 North Koreans are facing execution for allegedly
NEWSDESK
A church building in Omdurman was bulldozed without warning (Source: Morning Star News)
SUDAN A church in
Omdurman has been demolished and its land conscated by the Sudanese authorities, apparently as part of an ongoing campaign to rid the strict Islamic country of its Christian presence. The Church of Christ building in the Ombada area was bulldozed without prior notice on 17 February. Police and ofcials from the National Intelligence and Security Services, who oversaw the demolition work, said that the 300-member church was not wanted in a Muslim area. Since the secession of the majorityChristian South Sudan in July 2011, the Sudanese authorities have destroyed
numerous church buildings, clamped down on Christian activity and targeted individual Christians in various ways.
President Omar alBashir is carrying out his repeated promise to strengthen sharia law and make the country 100% Islamic and Arab
Believers have been subjected to harassment, arrests and death threats; foreign Christians have been deported. President Omar al-Bashir
is carrying out his repeated promise to strengthen sharia law and make the country 100% Islamic and Arab. A brutal campaign of ethnic and religious cleansing in the Nuba Mountains in South Kordofan state, which has one of the largest Christian populations in Sudan, is also part of this agenda. The Sudanese military has been attacking the territory since June 2011, claiming the lives of many civilians. On 10 February, a 30-yearold Christian man was killed in the bombing of Damardago village. Two other Christians, including a 13-yearold girl, sustained burns and other injuries in the attack.
Because R oya of UK coun l Mail no longer uses ties in posta th l addresses e names no longer in , we are i cluding c ounty nam mailings th es on th at we send he you.
you know that if yo u pay higher-rate ta x in the UK, you can claim addit ional tax relief on yo ur charitable donations? You can claim back the diffe rence between the basic rate of tax (20%) and the highe r rates (40 and/or 45%) on the total gross value of your donation to the charity (i.e. the donation plus Gift Ai d). If notied, H M Reve nue and Customs ca n include the gross amount of all your Gift Aid paym ents in your notice of coding, so that you can receive tax relief in the year that you make payments. You may be required to complete a Self-Ass essment tax return at the end of the year. For more information, visit www.hmrc.gov.uk/i ndividuals/giving/giftaid.htm#4
ess giving: Sea-swimming and sel out young suppor ters reach
ngest Some of Barnabas Fund UKs you to their out g chin rea n supporters have bee ginative ima in ers sist and persecuted brothers and sacricial ways. t for her friends to spend less on a presen o donation to a e mak ead ninth birthday and inst t est ues req us ero gen s girl Barnabas. The birthday feed help to d use be raised 75, which will hat er wrote that hungry Christian families. Her fath ed ited exc and give to d ghte the children were deli e. mak will s fund the about the difference
a girls After learning about persecution, gational Bible class at Cannon Park Congre ired to enoaks, Church in Middlesbrough were insp We also heard from Naomi, from Sev Lydia, mi, Nao as. nab Bar for ing rais start fund who wrote: e and sold Erin, Ola and Blessing have mad the girls cakes and bookmarks, and two of d Im dip in My name is Naomi an Day bravely took a sponsored Boxing been t s ju s It . nine years old nt involved the freezing North Sea! Another eve s of ot l ot g I d an my birthday vegetables, one of the girls, who does not like I d e d ci e d I s. t . The groups lovely presen being sponsored to eat her greens ney o m t e k c o p y didnt need m lous 191. efforts have altogether raised a fabu you! o t it ve i g o t and I wanted e wrote Separately, a Christian father in Hov her ed ask had r ghte to tell us that his dau
gregational non Park Con an C om fr fundraisers These girls id Barnabas come intrep be ve ha h Churc
essly We are so grateful to Naomi for sel support help to ey mon ket poc 2 giving her 5.4 also go out persecuted Christians. Our thanks recently been to all the young people who have fundraising on our behalf.
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A Gift of Love for the Persecuted Church
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A Gift of Love for the Persecuted Church
Please return this form to Barnabas Fund at your national office or to the UK office. Addresses are on the back cover. Barnabas Fund will not give your address, telephone number or email to anyone else. Supporters in Germany: please turn to back cover for how to send gifts to Barnabas Fund. Phone 0800 587 4006 or visit our website at www.barnabasfund.org to make a donation by Direct Debit, credit or debit card. From outside UK phone +44 1672 565031. *If the project chosen is sufficiently funded, we reserve the right to use designated gifts either for another project of a similar type or for another project in the same country. Registered Charity number 1092935 Company registered in England number 4029536
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What helps make Barnabas Fund distinctive from other Christian organisations that deal with persecution?
acting on behalf of the persecuted Church, to be their voice making their needs known to Christians around the world and the injustice of their persecution known to governments and international bodies
facilitate global intercession for the persecuted Church by providing comprehensive prayer materials
We believe:
we are called to address both religious and secular ideologies that deny full religious liberty to Christian minorities while continuing to show Gods love to all people in the clear Biblical teaching that Christians should treat all people of all faiths with love and compassion, even those who seek to persecute them in the power of prayer to change peoples lives and situations, either through grace to endure or through deliverance from suffering
We seek to:
meet both practical and spiritual needs encourage, strengthen and enable the existing local Church and Christian communities so they can maintain their presence and witness rather than setting up our own structures or sending out missionaries tackle persecution at its root by making known the aspects of the Islamic faith and other ideologies that result in injustice and oppression of non-believers inform and enable Christians in the West to respond to the growing challenge of Islam to Church, society and mission in their own countries
Whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers of mine, you did for me.
(Matthew 25:40)
How to nd us
UK 9 Priory Row, Coventry CV1 5EX Telephone 024 7623 1923 Fax 024 7683 4718 From outside the UK Telephone +44 24 7623 1923 Fax +44 24 7683 4718 Email info@barnabasfund.org Registered charity number 1092935 Company registered in England number 4029536 For a list of all trustees, please contact Barnabas Fund UK at the Coventry address above. Australia PO BOX 3527, LOGANHOLME, QLD 4129 Telephone (07) 3806 1076 or 1300 365 799 Fax (07) 3806 4076 Email bfaustralia@barnabasfund.org Germany German supporters may send gifts for Barnabas Fund via Hilfe fr Brder who will provide you with a tax-deductible receipt. Please mention that the donation is for SPC 20 Barnabas Fund. If you would like your donation to go to a specic project of Barnabas Fund, please inform the Barnabas Fund ofce in Pewsey, UK. Account holder: Hilfe fr Brder e.V. Account number: 415 600 Bank: Evang Kreditgenossenschaft Stuttgart Bankcode (BLZ): 520 604 10
International Headquarters The Old Rectory, River Street, Pewsey, Wiltshire SN9 5DB, UK Telephone 01672 564938 Fax 01672 565030 From outside UK: Telephone +44 1672 564938 Fax +44 1672 565030 Email info@barnabasfund.org
The Old Rectory, River Street, Pewsey, Wiltshire SN9 5DB, UK Telephone 01672 564938 Fax 01672 565030 From outside UK: Telephone +44 1672 564938 Fax +44 1672 565030 Email info@barnabasfund.org
www.barnabasfund.org
To donate by credit card, please visit the website or phone 0800 587 4006 (from outside the UK phone +44 1672 565031).