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Prayer Over Persecution Of Christians

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  • Prayer Over Persecution Of Christians

    PRAYER OVER PERSECUTION OF CHRISTIANS

    Guelph Mercury
    http://news.guelphmercury.com/News/article/559543
    Nov 10 2009
    Ontario, Canada

    On this past Sunday, Nov. 8, Christians around the world participated
    in the International Day of Prayer for the Persecuted Church. Some
    half million Christians in 150 countries remembered the plight of
    believers who are suffering persecution because of their faith. Some
    may be astonished to hear that such a day was set aside for this
    purpose for they have the notion that persecution of Christians ended
    with the passing of the ancient Roman era. Alas, that is not the case.

    In a recent situation in Pakistan 37-year old Asia Bibi was accused of
    blaspheming Mohammed for allegedly saying, "Jesus is alive. Mohammed
    is dead." She was imprisoned for four months before her first meeting
    with a judge in Sheikhupura. She has been charged under section
    295-C of the Pakistani Criminal code that says in part, "Use of
    derogatory remarks, etc., in respect of the Holy Prophet . . . shall
    be punished with death, or imprisonment for life, and shall also
    be liable to fine." According to International Christian Concern's
    Pakistan analyst, Jonathan Racho, the penal code is extreme. It in
    fact penalizes Christians from holding to their most basic beliefs as
    Christians and threatens them with death if they express those beliefs.

    Though not often reported in the media, persecution is a daily fact of
    life for many Christians around the world. Italian journalist, Antonio
    Socci, in his book, The New Persecuted: Inquiries into Anti-Christian
    Intolerance in the New Century of Martyrs, estimates that more
    Christians (about 45 million) were killed in the 20th century than in
    all previous centuries combined. The estimates are taken from sources
    such as Oxford's World Christian Encyclopedia. Many of those murdered
    died in places like the former Soviet Union, and Nazi Germany. But
    the slaughter of some 1.5 million Armenian Christians at the hands
    of the Ottoman Empire in 1915 must never be forgotten as well.

    Persecution does not always involve martyrdom. Christians in different
    parts of the world are denied justice, discriminated against in their
    work, are in danger of losing their lives because they have converted,
    are captured and sold as slaves, and are forbidden to preach the truths
    of the Bible on penalty of fines or imprisonment. Indeed discrimination
    and maltreatment have a thousand and one different faces for those
    believers who find themselves out of favour with certain governments,
    and local citizens as well.

    Though persecution takes place every day in countries far away it is
    also beginning to happen in Canada. Many are ignorant of this fact
    for news media, apart from a few exceptions, simply has not covered
    the stories. Who knows for example that a diminutive, 60-year-old
    grandmother, Linda Gibbons, has been imprisoned in a Canadian
    penitentiary for seven out of the last fourteen years for the crime of
    quietly praying in front of an abortion facility? Who has heard about
    Father Alfphonse de Valk, the Catholic priest, who was subjected to a
    human rights investigation that cost his monthly magazine expenses to
    the tune of some $20,000? His crime -- defending traditional marriage
    and the biblical view of sexuality. Who has heard of Chris Kempling,
    of Quesnel, B.C., and the persecution he has experienced at the
    hands of his own school district and teachers union? Kempling's crime
    was to write a few letters to his local newspaper on the subject of
    homosexuality. For this he has been suspended from his work without
    pay for several months, and has been forced to pay out thousands and
    thousands of dollars to defend himself before the courts.

    Some may question whether the above examples qualify as religious
    persecution. Are they not simply examples of persons who find
    themselves politically out of sync with present cultural values? I
    would disagree with that assessment for I maintain that the church
    defines morality, not the state. And when the state upends Christian
    values and teaching and says that wrong is right and right is wrong,
    and then punishes the believer when they continue to speak and practice
    their faith--that appears like religious persecution to me.

    On the recent International Day of Prayer for the Persecuted Church
    Christians did well to pray for suffering believers in far off
    countries. After all Jesus warned that persecution was to be expected.

    I suspect however that most of us thought that Jesus was referring
    to Christians in far off places. Who knew? Who could possibly have
    known that one day we would be praying for persecuted believers in
    our own country of Canada?

    Royal Hamel is a member of the Guelph Mercury Community Editorial
    Board.
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