Tuesday, June 30, 2015

Numerical Expositions: Genesis 2:25

And they were both naked, the man and his wife, and were not ashamed.

-- Gen. 2:25 (KJV)

The reason that neither of them were not ashamed was due to sin not being in the picture at that time.  That will change in Chapter 3 when mankind fell.  Shame is a byproduct of guilt.  If you choose not to hold on to the mistakes that you made in the past, then shame will leave your life.

Numerical Analysis:  The numerical pattern for this verse is 2,7,9,5.  (2) Walk in God's kingdom or lack protection.  (7) To be complete, find a suitable spouse.  (9) To overturn evil, do not be ashamed.  (5) To stay in God's presence, do not be ashamed.

Monday, June 29, 2015

Numerical Expositions: Genesis 2:24

Therefore shall a man leave his father and his mother, and shall cleave unto his wife:  and they shall be one flesh.

-- Gen. 2:24 (KJV)

In this verse, marriage is defined as being between a man and a woman.  Notice that the text does not state that a man shall leave his parents to marry another man.  Notice that the text does not state that a woman shall leave his parents to marry another woman.

Numerical Analysis:  The numerical pattern for this verse is 2,6,8,4.  (2) To be delivered, become an independent person.  (6) To expose evil, find a good spouse that is of the opposite sex.  (8) To have a new beginning in God, realize that marriage is between a man and a woman.  (4) To stay in God's Word, realize that marriage is between a man and a woman.

Friday, June 26, 2015

Hindu radicals attack citizens in Kerala

Christians in India continue to face the brunt of Hindu extremism. A fresh outburst of violence against Christians was unleashed when a group of worshippers was brutally attacked at a church service on Sunday, June 14 in India's Kerala state. Kerala, one of India's southern states, boasts the densest populations of Christians in India who represent over 40% the state's population. This fact led many Christians in Kerala to believe they were insulated from the growing religious intolerance India has witnessed over the past year.

"I was literally terrified," said Pastor Shiju, the senior pastor of Reaching the World with Love Ministries Church. "I did not know what was going on as a mob of 30 people advanced towards me while I was preaching the message. They hit me in the face and then kicked me all over the body. They first targeted me and then the congregation. I had to flee and ran away from the church as I could make out that I was their prime target."

Over 400 Christians, the majority of whom are converts to Christianity, gather at a community hall in Attingal, Kerala every Sunday for worship for Reaching the World with Love Ministries. Around 12:30 pm on June 14, more than 200 people from radical Hindu organizations came to the community hall shouting loud slogans including, 'Bharat Mathaki Jai' (Hail mother India).

Radicals then forced themselves into the hall and started beating the pastor, causing severe internal injuries. Later, the assailants turned on the congregation. 40-year-old Girija, narrowly escaped with a broken finger when she dodged a blow that would have smashed in her head when a radical attempted to beat her with a motorbike helmet.

The radicals went onto desecrate the communion elements and broke the wooden table that was used to display them during worship services. The radicals also damaged the pulpit, microphones, and cables used by the worshipers to conduct their services. The Christian worshippers fled in different directions but were further assaulted outside of the community hall many of the 200 radicals were waiting for them.

Upon witnessing the attack, Mr. Deepu, one of the Christian worshipers, immediately ran to the police station and reported the ongoing assault. Even though the police station was only yards away, police took 30 minutes to arrive on the scene.

Quickly, news of the attack spread and the state home minister visited the pastor and the community where the attack took place. The minister, in charge of the state's law and order, promised that the attackers would be booked and brought to justice.

The next day, Christians in Attingal organized a peaceful protest march in the town. More than 500 people participated in a march to protest the attack on the Reaching the World with Love Ministries Church. Local MLA (Member of Legislative Assembly) and other community leaders also took part in the protest, condemning the acts of the radical Hindu groups.

At the same time, the 'Hindu Ikya Vedi,' (Hindu United Front) a local Hindu radical group, led a counter protest against the Christians brandishing placards carrying anti-Christian slogans. The anti-Christian protestors threatened the Christians of Reaching the World with Love Ministries Church with dire consequences if they met again, particularly on that following Sunday. They said they would wipe out Christians in Attingal and burn Pastor Shiju alive if they continue to hold prayers in Attingal.

An eye-witness told ICC that, "The Hindu radicals are gathering almost every day since the attack in Attingal took place. The slogans on the placards that read wiping the Christians away from the town was a huge threat to the Christians of that area. The Hindu radicals vowed to burn pastor Shiju if he continued the church in Attingal."

As Christians in Attingal continue to recover from this latest incident of persecution, Christians across India remain vulnerable. No matter where they are in India, the real potential of physical violence being metered out by the Hindu hard-line groups seems inevitable. Unless the BJP led government of India starts confronting the issue of Christian persecution, religiously motivated violence, like that endured by the Christians of Reaching the World with Love Ministries, will continue to spread and multiply. 
For interviews, contact William Stark, Regional Manager for South Asia: 

# # #
You are free to disseminate this news story. We request that you reference International Christian Concern (ICC) and include our web address, www.persecution.org. ICC is a Washington D.C.-based human rights organization that exists to help persecuted Christians worldwide. ICC provides Awareness, Advocacy, and Assistance to the worldwide persecuted Church. For additional information or for an interview, contact ICC at 800-422-5441.

Saeed Abedini still waits to be released from prison in Iran

International Christian Concern (ICC) continues to call for the release of Iranian American pastor Saeed Abedini. He has been imprisoned in Iran since September 2012 where he has suffered intense physical and psychological torture. As the United States and other Western countries are negotiating with Iran regarding its nuclear program, the continued confinement of Saeed, along with three other Americans, raises serious concerns about the trustworthiness of Iran's negotiations.

 
Saeed Abedini was imprisoned on September 26, 2012. On the morning of January 27, 2013, Pastor Saeed stood before Judge Pir-Abassi in Tehran to receive his verdict from a show trial. He was convicted of "undermining national security" for his work among house churches in Iran from 2000 to 2005 "Mr. Abedini's attorney had only one day (January 21) to present his defense, so we remain deeply concerned about the fairness and transparency of Mr. Abedini's trial," State Department representative Darby Holladay reported shortly after the trial.

 
Naghmeh Abedini, Saeed's wife, appeared before the House of Foreign Affairs Committee earlier this month and pleaded for a greater effort to be made on behalf of her husband. That same day, House Resolution 233, sponsored by Rep. Daniel Kildee (D-MI), was passed with a vote of 391-0. The resolution calls for the immediate release of imprisoned U.S. citizens and the disclosure of any information regarding U.S. citizens that have disappeared within the borders of Iran.

 
The American Center for Law and Justice (ACLJ) has been advocating on behalf of Saeed for some time and recently collected over 1 million unique signatures for Saeed in a social media campaign entitled #SaveSaeed. The global campaign on behalf of Pastor Saeed has brought his case before Congress, the White House, the United Nations and other world leaders.

 
Saeed's father was able to visit his son in prison on Wednesday, June 24 and carried out a message of hope. Having just spent his 1,000th day in prison, Saeed gave his father a message to share. "He wanted us to know that for 1000 days he has experienced utter darkness and has died, yet for 1,001, he has been resurrected with Christ," Naghmeh said. "For 1,001 days he has learned to forgive over and over and over again. That for 1001 days he has chosen Christ over what they have tried to force on him and he has stood on His faith in Jesus Christ despite the pressures, tortures and threats."

 
Saeed has faced intense abuse these past 1,001 days. "He has been tortured, especially the first few months he was beaten badly when internal bleeding started," Naghmeh testified at the hearing on June 2nd. Time is of the essence, despite Saeed's resolute endurance. Saeed has experienced both physical and psychological abuse in prison. He has been put in and out of solitary confinement repeatedly and has suffered beatings at the hands of prison guards and even fellow inmates for his faith.

 
The release of Saeed and other U.S. citizens imprisoned in Iran is of upmost importance as the June 30th deadline for Iranian nuclear deal approaches.  If President Rouhani wishes to have constructive interaction with the international community, he must take into account the demands of Resolution 233 and the unjust imprisonment of American citizens for nothing more than exercising their fundamental rights. International pressure should continue and expand on behalf of these U.S. citizens.

 
Organizations and governments have advocated on behalf of Pastor Saeed, though more remains to be done. Secretary of State John Kerry first called for his release on March 22, 2013 and again on July 28, 2014 in addition to citing Saeed's case in the U.S. State Department's most recent report on international religious freedom. President Obama mentioned the case in his first phone call with Iranian President Hassan Rouhani but additional steps have not been taken, despite international pressure.

 
ICC's Regional Manager for the Middle East, Todd Daniels, said, "The continued imprisonment of Saeed Abedini on charges of threatening Iran's national security for meeting together with those who share his faith demonstrates the fragility of the Iranian regimes hold on society and the lack of a true commitment to basic rights and freedoms. The ability to hold a religious belief, to meet together with others who share that belief, and to live publicly in accordance with it is among the most fundamental of freedoms. Iran continues to regularly violate that, not only in the case of Saeed Abedini but for the dozens of other Iranian Christians who are also suffering in Iran's prisons. As a citizen of the United States, President Obama and his administration should exert the utmost effort to see him returned to his family. As a country that claims to promote religious freedom as a core value of our foreign policy, the United States must boldly condemn those who would imprison its citizens simply for their religious beliefs."
For interviews, contact Todd Daniels, Regional Manager for the Middle East:

# # #
You are free to disseminate this news story. We request that you reference International Christian Concern (ICC) and include our web address, www.persecution.org. ICC is a Washington D.C.-based human rights organization that exists to help persecuted Christians worldwide. ICC provides Awareness, Advocacy, and Assistance to the worldwide persecuted Church. For additional information or for an interview, contact ICC at 800-422-5441.

Modi's first year of power in India

The first year of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's rule has been a difficult one for Christians. Increased levels of religious intolerance and radical Hindu nationalism over the past twelve months have made the lives of Christians increasingly difficult in India. Under the Modi regime, many radical Hindu nationalist groups have escalated their activities, infringing upon religious freedom and causing terror among the Christian community. Human rights groups have documented over 600 cases of religiously motivated violence against religious minorities in the first year of Prime Minister Modi's rule. Of these 600 cases, Christians were targeted in 194.

Modi's First 100 Days

The first 100 days of Prime Minister Modi's rule saw instances of persecution against Christians and Muslims, two of India's largest religious minority groups, skyrocket. The Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP), the Bajrang Dal, and other radical Hindu nationalist groups increased their intimidation campaigns during this time period and as a result there was a dramatic increase in the number of attacks on religious minorities' places of worship.

Over 600 instances of religiously motivated violence were recorded in India's northern state of Uttar Pradesh alone. In almost all of these cases, the violence was perpetrated by Hindu radicals against religious minorities.

Despite this spike in violence, Prime Minister Modi remained silent regarding the religious violence spreading within his country's borders. Prime Minister Modi's silence in particular upset India's religious minorities because it was perceived as tacit approval of the Hindu radicals violent activities.

Dr. John Dayal of the United Christian Forum told International Christian Concern (ICC) that, "The sad part is that the Prime Minister does not speak either in public or in his party against hatred."

Christianity Made Illegal

As the violence in Uttar Pradesh continued to spread, an anti-Christian campaign led by radical Hindu nationalists concluded in a ban on of non-Hindu religions, specifically targeting Christianity, in over 50 villages in Chhattisgarh. Essentially, Christianity was made illegal by village ordinance in these 50 villages.

Suresh Yadav, the area president of a local Hindu radical group, said that, "Over 50 gram panchayats (village councils) have passed orders banning 'all non-Hindu religious propaganda, [including] prayers and speeches in the villages."

This resolution, which was widely covered by the media, created a great deal of fear among the Christian communities in Chhattisgarh. It also dramatically impacted the ability for these communities to practice their Christian faith.

Pastor Abhimelek Sona, a local pastor, said, "The situation is very sensitive and alarming. The Christians are fearful as the series of incidents are taking places in this region."

Following the passing of this resolution, local Christians were told to either recant their Christian faith or face a social boycott. In this particular case, Christians who refused to recant their faith were denied access to drinking water from the village's public well and were blocked from harvesting from their own fields. Despite this development, Prime Minister Modi continued to remain silent on the increase of religious intolerance in India.

Christmas Cancelled for Good Governance Day

As India approached December, the BJP led government declared that December 25 was to be observed as "good governance day" instead of Christmas. This was interpreted by India's Christians as a deliberate effort to substitute Christmas, which had been celebrated under previous regimes, with a secular government holiday.

The Archbishop of Bangalore, Dr. Bernard Moras, came out strongly against the good governance day announcement, questioning the motivation for scheduling it on the same day as Christmas. While speaking on national television, Dr. Moras said, "[The] 25th of December is universally accepted as Christmas - the birth of Jesus Christ and the whole world celebrates the day as Christmas. Now, to announce in India, the 25th of December as good governance day, I personally feel it is not a good decision. It is hurting the sentiments of Christians definitely and not only of Christians, but also of others. I feel good governance is a necessity today everywhere but why fixes it on [the] 25th? Christmas is coming down over the last 2,000 years, not just 100 years." 

The hard times for Christian minorities continued through December and into the New Year as five churches in New Delhi were attacked and vandalized within two months. Included in these attacks was the burning of St. Sebastian Church which was set on fire in the early morning hours of December 2, 2014 by unknown suspects likely motivated by an anti-Christian agenda.  

Hundreds of Christian Protestors Arrested

On February 5, 2015, hundreds of Christians were arrested in New Delhi for demonstrating against a series of attacks against churches and Christian institutions in the city, including the burning of St. Sebastian Church. Demonstrators were arrested by police as they marched from the Sacred Heart Cathedral to the home of the Home Minister. According to eye-witnesses, police dragged nuns, priests, and women into buses as they protested during the march against growing intolerance towards religious minorities and police inaction.

Dr. John Dayal, said that he was among the 200 people who were arrested by police when they started the march. Dayal said, "Our protest demanded that the government inquire into the violence against Christians because we [no longer] trust the police to investigate it properly."

India's International Reputation Tarnished

While traveling to India in January 2015, U.S. President Barack Obama's remarks on religious freedom came as comfort to the suffering Christian community. President Obama, while admonishing the growing religious intolerance in India, said, "India will succeed as long as it's not splintered along religious lines...nowhere is it more important to uphold religious freedom than in India.

President Obama's statement on religious freedom in India was followed by him remarking on growing religious intolerance in India at the National Prayer Breakfast in Washington, D.C. These statements, coupled with the international media's coverage of Christian protests, finally forced Prime Minister Modi to break his nine months of silence on religious intolerance since becoming prime minister.
 
In all, the increased religious intolerance and violence India has witnessed under the first twelve months of Prime Minister Modi's rule convinced the U.S. Commission for International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) to maintain India's status as a "Tier 2" Country of Concern in its 2015 Annual Report on religious freedom. USCIRF's 2015 report marked Hindu radical groups' reconversion programs, attacks on churches, and the continued hate campaigns being openly waged against India's religious minorities as particular points of concern.

Prime Minister Modi's first year in the office has coincided with a dramatic increase in religious intolerance and violence against India's religious minorities, particularly Christians. The reconversion campaigns, the anti-Christian policies, and continued attacks and hate speeches against religious minorities continue to make life difficult for many Christians. Though Prime Minister Modi has made promises to fight religious violence, so far he has failed to translate his words into actions. What will the next twelve months of Prime Minister Modi bring for India's Christians? More persecution or change? 
For interviews, contact William Stark, Regional Manager for South Asia: 

# # #
You are free to disseminate this news story. We request that you reference International Christian Concern (ICC) and include our web address, www.persecution.org. ICC is a Washington D.C.-based human rights organization that exists to help persecuted Christians worldwide. ICC provides Awareness, Advocacy, and Assistance to the worldwide persecuted Church. For additional information or for an interview, contact ICC at 800-422-5441.

Wednesday, June 24, 2015

Numerical Expositions: Genesis 2:23

And Adam said, This is now bone of my bones, and flesh of my flesh:  she shall be called Woman, because she was taken out of Man.

-- Gen. 2:23 (KJV)

Notice that he did not call her "homemaker."  Notice that he did not call her "whore."  He called her a woman.  Men, stop degrading women.

Numerical Analysis:  The numerical pattern for this verse is 2,5,7,3.  (2) To be delivered, speak correctly.  (5) To stay in God's presence, realize that every human being is equal.  (7) To be complete, remain unbiased.  (3) To stay in the Spirit, do not verbally degrade women.

Tuesday, June 23, 2015

Numerical Expositions: Genesis 2:22

And the rib, which the Lord God had taken from man, made he a woman, and brought her unto the man.

-- Gen. 2:22 (KJV)

In this verse, God creates woman from the rib of the man.  Also, God brings the woman to the man, which more or less, begins the first relationship between men and women.

A few relationship tidbits can be garnered from this verse.  The woman is intended to be at the side of a man in a relationship.  The relationship is not supposed to be fashioned in a way in which the man controls the woman with verbal and physical abuse.  Also, the relationship is not supposed to be fashioned in a way in which the woman manipulates the man with a conniving demeanor of a Jezebel.

The plight of the single woman can be solved if the woman allows for God to present her to the man instead of the woman presenting herself in a way to lure the man with seduction.

Numerical Analysis:  The numerical pattern for this verse is 2,4,6.  (2) To be delivered, stay away from manipulating others.  (4) To stay in God's Word, realize that women are His creation.  (6)  Expose evil in order for new relationships to develop.


Monday, June 22, 2015

Numerical Expositions: Genesis 2:21

And the Lord caused a deep sleep to fall upon Adam, and he slept:  and he took one of the ribs, and closed up the flesh instead thereof;

-- Gen. 2:21 (KJV)

This verse lists the first recorded surgery in history.  The Lord puts man to sleep and takes one of his ribs out.  God uses this rib to make a woman in the next verse.  Putting a person to sleep before surgery is widely used today with the use of anesthesia.  Once again, science takes something from religion without any gratitude or acknowledgement.

Numerical Analysis:  The numerical pattern for this verse is 2,3,5,1.  (2) To be delivered, remain under the influence of the Lord.  (3) To stay in the Spirit, rest in Him.  (5) To stay in God's presence, allow for Him to work on you.  (1) Stay in the anointing for your wounds to be mollified.

Saturday, June 20, 2015

No progress in China's human rights in 2014

On June 8, China's government released a glowing report on human rights in an attempt to push back criticism of its recent crackdown on human rights activists as well as the outcry against its campaign of church destruction and cross removals. The white paper, entitled "Progress in China's Human Rights in 2014" was issued by the Information Office of China's State Council in Beijing.
In stark contrast to China's claims of 'progress' on the human rights front in 2014, International Christian Concern (ICC) received almost daily reports detailing the government's destruction of churches and the forced removal of crosses from hundreds of others, despite the strong public response of local Christians.

 The report makes no mention of the Chinese government targeting meetings of Chinese believers, including even services of China's government-controlled and recognized "Three Self Patriotic Church." Contrary to the report, persecution and harassment of Christians have increased over the last year. Many Christians have been put in jail often on trumped-up charges. The widespread breadth of the persecution indicates that it has tacit approval from the highest levels of the Chinese government. The current administration has taken a hard line when it comes to human rights.

 As reported by ICC, the "Three Rectifications and One Demolition" campaign in Zhejiang Province was created to fight alleged "illegal structures," but it has been used to justify the demolition of Christian churches and to remove Christian crosses from Chinese city skylines.  According to local reports by China Aid, as many as 1000 crosses have been removed and approximately 50 churches destroyed in the Zhejiang campaign.

 William Nee, China researcher at Amnesty International, says the report is a work of government fiction.  "In certain areas, especially related to freedom of expression, civil society, and the protection of the rights of ethnic minorities-the white paper seems to have been written in an alternate reality," he said in an  email to AFP.

 Chris Warner, ICC's Regional Manager for Southeast Asia, laments, "If China would spend as much time on actually improving its human rights record as it does on defending itself against legitimate criticism, it could greatly improve the lives of Chinese citizens who only seek rights guaranteed to them in the Chinese constitution. In recent months, Chinese Christians have been detained and sentenced to multi-year jail sentences for daring to question the legality of the harassment conducted by local authorities. This is the reality that China does not want to accept."
For interviews, contact Sooyoung Kim, Regional Manager for Southeast Asia: 

# # #
You are free to disseminate this news story. We request that you reference International Christian Concern (ICC) and include our web address, www.persecution.org. ICC is a Washington D.C.-based human rights organization that exists to help persecuted Christians worldwide. ICC provides Awareness, Advocacy, and Assistance to the worldwide persecuted Church. For additional information or for an interview, contact ICC at 800-422-5441.

Thursday, June 18, 2015

Four people kidnapped by Islamic extremists still missing in Libya

February 15, 2015. The world was shocked as a video entitled "A Message Signed with Blood to the Nation of the Cross" showed the brutal execution of 21 Christians on a beach in Libya. The images of the 21 men dressed in orange jumpsuits spread quickly across the world. This video was a vivid picture of the brutal tactics that the Islamic jihadists of ISIS, or the so-called Islamic State, will use in their campaign to exterminate Christianity in the areas that they control.

What many have forgotten is that the 21 are not the only Egyptian Christians who have been abducted by Islamic militants. Over nine months have passed since the abduction of four other Egyptian Christians in Libya by Islamic State affiliates, Ansar Al-Sharia. Three brothers and a cousin are missing, and the anxious families have received no word about them. This is the situation for many of the relatives of missing Christians. International Christian Concern (ICC) is working with at least eight families in similar situations. While they can imagine the possible fates of their beloved sons, husbands and fathers, no one can be sure of their location or if they are alive.

No help
Gamal Matta Hakim, Raafat Matta Hakim, Romany Matta Hakim, and their cousin Adel Sedky Hakim disappeared on August 25th when ordered off a microbus near Sirte, Libya. The bus was stopped by Islamic militants who took the four Christian men from the bus and forced the driver to continue with the remaining three Muslim passengers.

Wagih Matta Hakim, brother of three that were taken and cousin to the fourth, has repeatedly reached out to government officials who have by and large ignored his requests. "None of them has helped us since the kidnapping of my brothers," Wagih said in regards to the Foreign Ministry of Egypt.

"There isn't any positive step from them to solve our crisis or to reassure us." In a recent interview, Wagih explained to MCN how the Egyptian government paid the family pensions in January and February and then stopped. They only received two months pension out of the nine months that the men have been missing. The situation now seems grave for the Hakim family as they sit and wait in silence for any information regarding their loved ones.

"I don't know what to say..."

Shenouda Samy Adly Attia, 31, is a father of two and has been missing since September 15, 2014. His wife, Jacqueline Samir, 26, along with her brother in law, have sought out help in vain from the foreign ministry. Sadly, as more and more time passes, any possible investigation becomes more complicated.

"My son Samuel, 5, asks me always, 'When [will] my father come back to us? I miss him so much.' I don't know what [to] say to him," Jacqueline told the ICC.

Attia was kidnapped in Misrata, Libya by extremists from Ansar al-Sharia. The group has been a consistent threat in Libya in the recent past and was deemed a terrorist organization by the United Nations Security Council in November 2014 (Al Arabiya). The group is at large in the region and has repeatedly expressed its dedication to the destruction of the Christian world. Foreign workers like Attia and the Hakim brothers are some of the many Christians that have been targeted by Ansar al-Sharia.

Waiting still
Mina Shehata Awad Hanna, 26, is another who was kidnapped by the extremists in Libya en route to Egypt, his home. There has been no information to follow his disappearance. His family expresses their desperation to know of his circumstances.

There seems to be minimal hope for those waiting for answers. The trek of foreign workers in Libya back to their home countries has been almost impossible for Christians to make thus far. Many have already been executed by the extremists while others are never heard from again. Eight men, including those mentioned in this article, are known to be missing at this time from Egypt. The families' yearning to know their fates has warranted no responses from any governing figure either in Egypt or Libya.

Civil society groups like the Egyptian Commission for Rights and Freedoms have campaigned for greater assistance from the Egyptian Foreign Ministry for those Forgotten in Libya but so far little action has been taken and families remain without answers.

"We ask God to show us the fate of Mina," Sayeda Hanna Massad, Mina's mother told ICC, "If Mina is alive and existent we ask God to bring him back to us and if we make sure that he was martyred, we will be happy because he kept the faith and he died on the name of the Lord Jesus Christ and his fate will be in The Heaven."

ICC's Suffering Wives and Children fund helps to support families who have lost their income as a result of situations like these. We are currently working with the families to help care for their needs in both the short term and for the future.

To learn more about this fund and how you can support families like these, visit: Suffering Wives and Children
For interviews, contact Todd Daniels, Regional Manager for the Middle East: 

# # #
You are free to disseminate this news story. We request that you reference International Christian Concern (ICC) and include our web address, www.persecution.org. ICC is a Washington D.C.-based human rights organization that exists to help persecuted Christians worldwide. ICC provides Awareness, Advocacy, and Assistance to the worldwide persecuted Church. For additional information or for an interview, contact ICC at 800-422-5441.

Numerical Expositions: Genesis 2:20

And Adam gave names to all cattle, and to the fowl of the air, and to every beast of the field; but for Adam there was not found an help meet for him.

-- Gen. 2:20 (KJV)

This verse states that Adam designated names for all of the cattle, for all of the birds, and for all of the other mammals upon this earth.  If the Bible was not true, then animals would presently not have any names.  If the Bible was not true, then there would not be a division of science known as taxonomy.

Notice that Adam named all of these animals before he was married.  A quick lesson for men would be to make your mark upon this earth before finding a woman to share in your endeavors.

Numerical Analysis:  The numerical pattern for this verse is 2,4.  (2) To follow after God's kingdom, learn how to designate things properly.  (4) To stay in God's Word, learn how to designate things properly.

Tuesday, June 16, 2015

Pastors facing death penalty in Sudan

Court proceedings were scheduled to resume today in Khartoum, Sudan in the trial of two South Sudanese Christian pastors who could face the death penalty for their faith in Christ.

*Pastors Peter and Michael stand charged with undermining the constitutional code, waging war against the state, spying, and other charges, and last appeared in court on May 31.  At that time, the judge granted a continuance so that the prosecution could build their case because they had reportedly produced scant evidence against the pastors.

The pastors have remained in prison since their arrests in December 2014 and January 2015. On June 4, security officials transferred them from low-security Omdurman Men's Prison to Kober Prison, a high-security prison in North Khartoum where the men wait in solitary confinement, unable to receive visits from family and friends.

In the face of possible death sentences, Pastors Peter and Michael remain hopeful with their faith grounded in Christ. "I am never afraid of anything because it is my love... because I believe. God chose me to suffer," Pastor Peter explained.

Concerns over the treatment of the pastors have only increased since their transfer to Kober Prison.  "They already endured extended detention without access to their families at the beginning of this year and they and their families should be spared further emotional distress,"noted Mervyn Thomas, Chief Executive of Christian Solidarity Worldwide.

Sadly, harsh treatment toward Christians is nothing new in Sudan, especially towards pastors. "Almost all pastors [have] gone to jail under the government of Sudan. We have been stoned and beaten. This is their habit to pull down the church. We are not surprised. This is the way they deal with the church," said Rev. Tut Kony from the South Sudan Presbyterian Evangelical Church where Pastors Peter and Michael serve.

Additionally, the Sudanese government has broken international law with respect to legal trial procedures. "The refusal of access to [the pastors'] legal representatives is in violation of article 14 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), to which Sudan is party, and which guarantees the right to right of those charged with a crime to communicate with counsel of their own choosing," Thomas said.

The story of Pastor Peter and Pastor Michael highlights the continued opposition that the Sudanese government regularly shows towards Christians.

 "The trial of Revs. Michael and [Peter] is a clear example of the Sudanese government's persecution of the country's small Christian community.  They are on trial simply for demanding and urging their congregation to remain strong in the face of restrictions on their constitutional right to religious freedom," said USCIRF Chair Dr. Katrina Lantos Swett.

The injustice surrounding the case has prompted international outcry.  Both Christian and secular media outlets have publicized the case. International Christian Concern has partnered with other like-minded organizations to co-sign a letter to Sudan's President Omar al-Bashir requesting the release of Pastors Peter and Michael and calling for an end to the persecution of Christians in the country.

Bashir is wanted by the International Criminal Court for genocide and crimes against humanity related to the war in Darfur, Sudan in 2003.  This past weekend, he traveled to Johannesburg, South Africa for an African Union summit where he reportedly managed to fly back to Sudan after the meeting, despite a South African court order barring him from leaving the country along with international calls for his arrest.

The United States Commission for International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) has designated Sudan a "Country of Particular Concern" in its 2015 Annual report. This means that, "severe violations of religious freedom are tolerated or perpetrated," in Sudan.

ICC's Regional Manager for Africa, Troy Augustine, said, "We must continue to apply pressure to the Sudanese government for the immediate release of Pastor Peter and Pastor Michael. Since their last court appearance, their treatment has worsened as they are no longer allowed to see their families. The international community must not stand quietly by while Sudan commits another injustice against Christians. ICC urges all concerned readers to make your voice heard by calling the Sudanese Embassy at +12023388565 to demand that the pastors be set free."

*The names "Pastor Peter" and "Pastor Michael" are simplified versions of their full names Peter Yein Reith and Yat Michael Ruot, which carry a variety of spellings. The names used in the article were chosen for clarity and consistency.
For interviews, contact Troy Augustine Regional Manager for Africa: 
You are free to disseminate this news story. We request that you reference International Christian Concern (ICC) and include our web address, www.persecution.org. ICC is a Washington D.C.-based human rights organization that exists to help persecuted Christians worldwide. ICC provides Awareness, Advocacy, and Assistance to the worldwide persecuted Church. For additional information or for an interview, contact ICC at 800-422-5441.

Sunday, June 14, 2015

Escaping torture in Eritrea

For three days, "Yohan's" joints throbbed as the muscles in his arms and legs had stretched in directions human limbs are not intended to bend. His stomach was empty, except for the scraps that fell from the table of his captors after they had eaten their fill.

Yohan had been tied up like an animal, imprisoned, tortured, and starved for his faith in Christ in Eritrea. He was forced to eat trash mixed with dirty rain water that collected during the three days when prison guards bound him and left him outside, exposed to torrential rains, burning desert sun, and bitter cold nights.

"They take you outside in the hot sun with nothing to make you suffer and leave you out in the cold at night ... I was praying and God told me, 'Don't be afraid. It will pass. Stand in your faith,'"Yohan told International Christian Concern (ICC).

Yohan had been thrown in jail in 2003 because he was a zealous evangelist. In Eritrea, preaching the gospel is illegal, but that didn't stop Yohan from constantly testifying about Jesus Christ in the military after he was forcibly conscripted at age 18.

Eritrea's Atrocious Human Rights Record

Yohan's story of abuse and survival in Eritrea is not unique. The government rules its country with an iron fist, perpetuating a climate of fear and arbitrarily detaining, imprisoning, torturing, and often executing its opponents. Among the people, the state considers its enemies to be Christians who practice their faith outside of the three legal denominations: Catholic, Lutheran, and Orthodox.

Eritrea gained its independence from Ethiopia in 1993 and President Isaias Afwerki remains the country's only head-of-state since then. His administration is paranoid that Ethiopia will recapture Eritrea, so the state suppresses any groups which they feel could become a rebel movement.

"They don't allow preaching and they don't allow religious movements," Yohan said. "They are afraid always if people get together in groups ... They know if they gather to make fellowship, they think it will turn into a movement to end their power. They don't allow very large groups of people to gather for any reason," he added.

The United Nations (UN) released a scathing report on June 8, detailing the kinds of abuse that Yohan experienced that exist in Eritrea at a scale the document called "systematic, widespread, and gross." The report suggest that the Eritrean state may be guilty of "crimes against humanity."

"The religious gatherings of non-authorized denominations are prohibited. Religious materials are confiscated. Adherents are arbitrarily arrested, ill-treated or subjected to torture during their detention, and prisoners are coerced to recant their faith. Many religious followers have been killed or have disappeared," the report said.

The study compiled more than 700 testimonies from Eritreans who have similar stories to Yohan. Other prisoners like him testified about, "extreme forms of restraint, beatings or rape ... intended to inflict severe physical and psychological pain."

The United States Commission for International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) also designatedEritrea as a "Country of Particular Concern," in its 2015 Annual Report, corroborating the kinds of systematic abuses mentioned in the UN report and in Yohan's story.

The Dreadful Choice Facing Eritrean Christians

In the face of such terror perpetrated by their own government, scores of Eritrean Christians are fleeing the country, headed for Europe or the United States. On June 3, Islamic State (ISIS) militants kidnapped 88 Eritrean Christians in Libya, headed for Tripoli. According to reports, ISIS separated Christians and Muslims and let the Muslims go free.

On June 4, unknown gunmen, suspected to be from the Sudanese Islamist Rashaida tribe,reportedly opened fire on a convoy of between 49 and 70 Eritrean refugees traveling from Wadi Sharifey near Kassala to Shagarab refugee camp, kidnapping 14 Christians. In Sudan, Shagarab refugee camp is commonly known to be a favorite target of Rashaida, who is regularly involved in illegal human trafficking.

This unimaginable choice that Eritrean Christians face highlights the pervasive and understandable terror that permeates the country. The horrifying reality is that many Christians find it more hopeful to risk death by leaving for countries filled with Muslim extremists bent on their extinction, than to remain in their homeland.

"Faced with a seemingly hopeless situation [that] they feel powerless to change, hundreds of thousands of Eritreans are fleeing their country. In desperation, they resort to deadly escape routes through deserts and neighboring war-torn countries and across dangerous seas in search of safety. They risk capture, torture and death at the hands of ruthless human traffickers," the UN report concluded.

Suffering under the fiercest persecution in Eritrea, Yohan decided the same.

Yohan's Perseverance and Escape

In jail, Yohan became acquainted with suffering, just like his Savior was. Yohan pointed to God's grace, which sustained him through the torture and intimidation. He faced regular interrogations where officials tried to coerce him to recant his faith, even at gunpoint. Through all of it, Yohan's faith was strengthened. Like the Apostle Paul, Yohan was confident, and he was ready to die.

"If we believe in Jesus, and we live for Him, we die for Him. We are ready to die in every situation, in every moment. This is the story of our life. It is daily life," he said.

Despite continuous beatings and torture, Yohan refused to deny Christ. "I am nothing, but God is Alpha and Omega. I am not afraid of you because someday you are going to die, so I'm not afraid to die from you," he told his captors.

In 2004, after nearly a year in prison experiencing unspeakable persecution, Yohan made the same decision scores of his fellow Eritrean brothers and sisters are making today. He was determined to escape the country through Sudan. Yohan was provided a military uniform from a friend outside of the prison and disguised himself to escape.

Once he made it outside the gates, he sprinted for the Sudanese border, running for four days. Finally, he reached Sudan where officials interrogated him regarding his identity and then jailed for three days before releasing him. Ironically, Yohan found in Sudan a government that was more sympathetic to him as a refugee than the way his own government had treated him, even though Sudan's president Omar al-Bashir is wanted by the International Criminal Court for "crimes against humanity" for perpetrating genocide in Darfur.

From Sudan, Yohan traversed his way through different parts of Africa from Zimbabwe to South Africa, to Egypt, before finally reaching the United States where he lives under asylum. Yohan's story is one that accentuates the grace of God to persevere His people through the worst of suffering in this world.

Through it all, whether they survive like Yohan, or give their lives standing for Christ, Eritrean brothers and sisters have been counted worthy to suffer the way Jesus did. "We believe in Christ. The way of Christ is to suffer," Yohan said.
For interviews, contact Troy Augustine, Regional Manager for Africa: 

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You are free to disseminate this news story. We request that you reference International Christian Concern (ICC) and include our web address, www.persecution.org. ICC is a Washington D.C.-based human rights organization that exists to help persecuted Christians worldwide. ICC provides Awareness, Advocacy, and Assistance to the worldwide persecuted Church. For additional information or for an interview, contact ICC at 800-422-5441.