WASHINGTON — One-hundred percent of Christians in 21 countries around the world experience persecution for their faith in Christ as over 215 million Christians faced “high levels” of persecution in the last year, a leading human rights watchdog group reports. Continue reading “100% of Christians Face Persecution in These 21 Countries | re-blog CP World by Samuel Smith”
Tag: Iraq
02 Nov, International Day of Prayer: The Persecuted Church (Voice of the Martyrs)
The International Day of Prayer for the Persecuted Church / 2014
PLEASE PRAY: The most common request of persecuted Christians is “PRAY FOR US.” One of the ways we answer their request is through participation in the International Day of Prayer for the Persecuted Church (IDOP), which we observe on the first Sunday of each November. Our goal is simple: We want EVERY CHURCH to “Remember them that are in bonds …” on IDOP Sunday (Heb. 13:3).
Watch VOM’s IDOP videos – click here … share with your friends … and pray for the persecuted.
Liena and her family turned down offers of asylum in Western countries after civil war broke out in Syria. They knew the cost that might be required, but they chose to remain as witnesses to their Muslim neighbors and as an encouragement to other Christians.
Liena was a dedicated Christian, faithful wife and mother of two. In her prayers, she asked God to use her to reach more people. And then God asked her to make one more commitment.
Watch the dramatic testimony of Liena’s Prayer, as she struggles with the difficult decision of how much she can offer God.
You may never pray the same again.
IRAQ: PRAYER FOR IRAQ
VOM received these prayer points from a church in the Kurdistan region of Iraq, with whom VOM is partnering to help Christians in Iraq. Please join with your brothers and sisters in the Middle East to pray for the region. For security reasons, we have removed the name of the church.
- That we would reach the community and meet its spiritual as well as physical needs.
- That the Church would experience an unprecedented presence of the Holy Spirit throughout this crisis to change the region, country and Middle East.
- That individuals and the Church would experience our Almighty God’s unity and power, open heavens, and rivers flowing from the Holy Spirit to give us one shared Vision.
- That God would grant us favor in the government’s eyes, to acquire permission for establishing a school.
- That God would send workers for his Kingdom, as many of our services and relief deliveries have been delayed due to a shortage of workers.
- That God would grant us wisdom in handling the Internally Displaced People (IDP) projects, and strength to those who work with them directly.
- That God would send confusion and disagreement to those in the IS group, to stop them from inflicting more violence to the region, and that their hidden cells would be uncovered by local authorities.
- That God would save misled young people from IS and judge the leaders who are aware and yet still misleading youth with their evil desires and ideologies.
- That all ISIS’ financial resources would be cut off.
- That God would comfort and encourage the Yezidi people amidst their heartbreaking genocide; that the Lord would reveal Himself to them with dreams and visions; that he would burden missionaries to serve among the remaining Yezidis.
- That God would encourage the believers who fled from Mosul, that they’d be strong in Him, be bold to witness and never lose hope in Him.
- That God would raise up faithful leaders in the Central Government who fear God rather than men of power and use their authority for justice.
- That God would give wisdom to the Kurdistan Regional Government, to manage the crisis, to defend the region faithfully, and that they would realize that God raised them up to serve Him at this time – that He would reveal Himself to them.
- That the church would pray with one heart: “Thy Kingdom come, thy will be done, in Heaven as well as in Kurdistan.”
- That God would send visitations to the Shi’a in central and south Iraq, to heal their hearts and release them from idolatry.
Thank you for reading this far… and for praying for persecuted Christians around the world. May God bless you.
“Silence and Solidarity” – ReBlog: Timothy George First Things
By Timothy George, http://www.firstthings.com
View Original
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“It would indeed be awful to think,” Rabbi Jonathan Sacks said, “that the West might remain silent as violence rages purely out of a failure to recognize that Christians can be victimized, or out of a reluctance to cast aspersions on certain brands of Islam. It would make this the first genocide in history to be tolerated out of social awkwardness.”
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Many colleges and universities open the new academic year with a special assembly or convocation that is generally an upbeat occasion of welcome and new beginnings. The Catholic University of America held such an event several days ago, and it included, appropriately enough, a beautiful mass led by Washington’s Cardinal Donald W. Wuerl. The music was sublime and the liturgy well ordered. Dr. John Garvey, the president of CUA, was presented with an award by the Archdiocese of Washington. It was an altogether appropriate and uplifting event. But just before the dismissal, the tone was changed as Cardinal Wuerl, speaking without notes, delivered this admonition with a sense of urgency:
We hear so much today of the word solidarity. It has become a part of our vocabulary in the past twenty or thirty years. Today our solidarity with brothers and sisters of our faith, and of other faiths, in a part of the world where there is clearly an effort to eliminate them is something that we simply cannot in conscience ignore. Often we are asked: “How was it possible that in human history atrocities occur?” They occur for two reasons: because there are those prepared to commit them, and then there are those who remain silent. And the actions in Iraq and in Syria today are happening to women, children, men—their displacement not the least. Things happening to them is something that we really are not free to ignore, and sometimes all we have to raise is our voice. . . .
I ask myself: Where are these voices? Where the voices of parliaments and congresses? Where are the voices of campuses? Where are the voices of community leaders? . . . Why a silence?


Until quite recently, there were a few—though just a few—who did speak out about the atrocities against Christians and other religious minorities carried out by the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS). Back in July, columnist Kirsten Powers referred to the religicide of Christianity in the Middle East: “Iraq’s Christians are begging the world for help. Is anybody listening?” she asked. And there was the estimable Frank Wolf, a member of the House of Representatives from Virginia, who came to the House floor on seven consecutive legislative days to protest the “convert or be killed” policy of Muslim militants in the Middle East. He called on President Obama to take five steps that could have made a difference in that dire situation, none of them involving additional funding or American “boots on the ground.” The response from the leader of the free world, seemingly oblivious to the problem, was an ungolden silence.
Two events in August prompted a growing number of religious and political leaders to begin to speak. One was the onslaught against the Yazidi people, including the abduction and rape of hundreds of Yazidi women and girls, and the stranding of tens of thousands of others on the craggy heights of Mount Sinjar—a humanitarian crisis that prompted limited U. S. airstrikes against ISIS. The other event was a 4-minute, 40-second video depicting the beheading of American journalist James Foley, a devout Catholic, who was brutally put to death at the hands of a jihadist-export from Great Britain. This gruesome video was flashed around the world on YouTube before it was taken down. Last week the serial beheadings continued with the taped execution of 31-year-old Steven Sotloff, a Jewish journalist from Miami and the grandson of Holocaust survivors. Today, we live with another ISIS threat: This time, the promised murder of a British hostage.
“Crimes against humanity” is a euphemism for the wanton killing and horrendous acts of evil being committed in the name of God in the region of the world that gave birth to Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. And yet it is not difficult to see why many thoughtful people are reluctant to encourage yet another military occupation in the region. Twenty-five years of the off-and-on Bush-Obama land wars in Asia have not made the streets of Baghdad safe, nor brought peace between Israel and her neighbors, nor eradicated the virulence of religious violence. ISIS itself was spawned in part through America’s ambivalent connivance in the recent (and ongoing) sectarian wars in Syria where some 200,000 people have been killed and more than 6.5 million others internally displaced or exiled. Libya is yet another country where the quick-fix use of force without a sustainable strategy has not alleviated but rather increased human suffering.
And yet—and yet—there are times in human history when persons of faith cannot play neutral or simply stand by on the sidelines. There are times when they are compelled by conscience to call evil by name and speak out against it with conviction. And they must do this not merely out of a concern for their own personal or national self-protection but precisely as persons of faith—in the name of decency and love and of all that is human and humane. Today is such a time.

The sentiments expressed by Cardinal Wuerl have been taken up in recent days by many of the world’s religious leaders. Pope Francis has offered to undertake a personal peace mission to northern Iraq. Pastor Rick Warren spoke to the crisis from Rwanda, a country where, in the course of just three months in 1994, genocide left one million Rwandans dead and one million children orphaned—while most of the world looked the other way. Warren said that there were lessons from Rwanda for the crisis in the Middle East. He encouraged African pastors to pray for the persecuted Christians in Iraq and Syria.
Rabbi Jonathan Sacks has called radical political Islam the “face of tyranny” today and has compared the suffering of Christians in the Middle East with violence against Jews in the past. “It would indeed be awful to think,” he said, “that the West might remain silent as violence rages purely out of a failure to recognize that Christians can be victimized, or out of a reluctance to cast aspersions on certain brands of Islam. It would make this the first genocide in history to be tolerated out of social awkwardness.” Some Muslim leaders have also felt it their duty to speak out, including Shawki Ibrahim Abdel-Karim Allam, the Grand Mufti of Egypt. He has said that ISIS is a danger to Islam and has accused it of violating “all the Islamic values, the higher objectives of Islamic law as well as universal values shared by all mankind.”

Justin Welby, the Archbishop of Canterbury, has called for “solidarity of prayer and love” with the Christians in Iraq. “Ever since the war to end all wars ended in 1918, humankind has been saying ‘never again,’ then we wring our hands as genocide unfolds in some distant corner. But what is happening right now in northern Iraq is off the scale of human horror. In a globalized world where even distant nations are our ‘neighbor,’ we cannot allow these atrocities to be unleashed with impunity. . . . We cry to God for peace and justice and security throughout the world, and especially for Christians and other minority groups suffering so deeply in northern Iraq.”
Perhaps no one has done more to alert the world of the atrocities carried out in Iraq and Syria than Canon Andrew White, the Vicar of St. George’s Cathedral in Baghdad. In his 2013 book, Father, Forgive, he wrote:
The sad fact is, religion is very much tied up with violence. As Archbishop William Temple said during the II World War, ‘When religion goes wrong, it goes very wrong.’ The apostle John, recording the words of Jesus in his gospel wrote, ‘the time is coming when anyone who kills you will think they are offering a service to God. They will do such things because they have not known the Father or me’ (John 16:2-3). This is what we have witnessed in our time.
In the midst of such distress, Canon White carries on a ministry of reconciliation and hope among the dwindling number of Christians who still remain in the region. “Here our people have nothing, most have lost everything, yet the presence of Jesus is so real. We talk about love all the time and in love we see the beginning of reconciliation.”
Cardinal Wuerl was right: Atrocities happen because there are those who commit them, and those who simply remain silent. Dietrich Bonhoeffer, whose own life ended on the gallows, knew this very well. “Silence in the face of evil,” he said, “is evil itself. God will not hold us guiltless. Not to speak is to speak. Not to act is to act.”
Timothy George is dean of Beeson Divinity School of Samford University and general editor of the Reformation Commentary on Scripture. His email address is tfgeorge@samford.edu.
Iraq: Christians Under Fire. A Special from Christian World News (YouTube)
Peanut Gallery: Special thanks to Agnus Dei for bringing this video to our attention.
The mass exodus of Christians from the Muslim world | Fox News
By Raymond Ibrahim Published May 07, 2013 / FoxNews.com
Link to original: The mass exodus of Christians from the Muslim world | Fox News.

A mass exodus of Christians is currently underway. Millions of Christians are being displaced from one end of the Islamic world to the other.
We are reliving the true history of how the Islamic world, much of which prior to the Islamic conquests was almost entirely Christian, came into being.
The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom
recently said: “The flight of Christians out of the region is unprecedented and it’s increasing year by year.” In our lifetime alone “Christians might disappear altogether from Iraq, Afghanistan, and Egypt.”
Ongoing reports from the Islamic world certainly support this conclusion: Iraq was the earliest indicator of the fate awaiting Christians once Islamic forces are liberated from the grip of dictators.
In 2003, Iraq’s Christian population was at least one million. Today fewer than 400,000 remain
—the result of an anti-Christian campaign that began with the U.S. occupation of Iraq, when countless Christian churches were bombed
and countless Christians killed, including by crucifixion and beheading.
The 2010 Baghdad church attack, which saw nearly 60 Christian worshippers slaughtered, is the tip of a decade-long iceberg.
Now, as the U.S. supports the jihad on Syria’s secular president Assad, the same pattern has come to Syria: entire regions and towns where Christians lived for centuries before Islam came into being have now been emptied, as the opposition targets Christians for kidnapping, plundering, and beheadings, all in compliance with mosque calls telling the populace that it’s a “sacred duty
” to drive Christians away. Continue reading “The mass exodus of Christians from the Muslim world | Fox News”

