Wednesday, 29 June 2016

THE UNREACHED PEOPLE OF THE DAY




BELITUNG OF INDONESIA

The traditional Belitung house is built on a raised platform with bark walls and roofs of sago palm leaves. They also have temporary villages used during harvest. These houses are built at the edge of the forest and are usually lived in during the time the people work in the field. The Belitung adheres to Islam which came to the area around the 17th century. In spite of their dedication to Islam, many Belitung people are still influenced by animistic belief in spirits.

MINISTRY OBSTACLES
These people live on Belitung Island, making access somewhat a challenge.

OUTREACH IDEAS
Christians can help encourage and disciple the Christian believers in this people group, praying for them and providing discipleship materials. As these disciples grow they will be able to minister to their own people.

PRAY FOR THE FOLLOWERS OF CHRIST
Pray for the few followers of Jesus among the Belitung community. Pray they will fellowship together and grow strong in the nurture and admonition of the Lord.

PRAY FOR THE ENTIRE PEOPLE GROUP
Pray for the material and physical needs of the Belitung to be met. Pray they will be able to provide good schooling for their children.

SCRIPTURE FOCUS

"For I am not ashamed of the gospel, for it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes, to the Jew first and also to the Greek." Romans 1:16

Monday, 27 June 2016

BUDDHIST MONK DIED 3 DAYS AND WAS SHOCKED TO SEE BUDDHA IN HELL! NOW, HE BELIEVES IN JESUS AFTER…




This is an account of a Buddhist monk named Athet Pyan Shinthaw Paulu who was dead for 3 days and visited hell that changed his life forever.

He was very disturbed to see Gautama Buddha in hell that he protested, “Gautama had good ethics and good moral character, why is he suffering in this lake of fire?”

The king of hell answered him, “It doesn’t matter how good he was. He is in this place because he did not believe in the Eternal God.”


“Jesus answered, “I am the Way and the Truth and the Life. No one comes to the Father except through Me. If you had known Me, you would know My Father as well. From now you do know Him and have seen Him” (John 14:6-7).

200,000 TIBETANS INCLUDING 62 BUDDHIST MONKS CAME TO JESUS WHEN THEIR FORMER LEADER FOLLOWED CHRIST!




The Good News about Jesus Christ has spread all over the world and will continue spreading until the end will come “And this Gospel of the Kingdom will be preached in the whole world as a testimony to all nations, and then the end will come.” (Matthew 24:14)

The seed of Christian faith has tremendously grown every year. Most of the Christian converts are from Muslim countries that Jesus has personally encountered through dreams and visions.

Now, we will hear from Tibetans who were Buddhists and monks who accepted Jesus Christ as their LORD and Savior.

 Handley reports that 62 other Buddhist monks have decided to follow the footsteps of the former Buddhist lama and are now following Christ as well.
And that’s not all. “Just within the last year alone, [church leaders] are estimating that more than 200,000 people have come to Christ as a result of the labours of the Christian community there,” Handley says.

What is causing this avalanche of Christian conversions?

Handley says this is all due to the work of Christian workers who provided hope and healing to the people of Tibet in the aftermath of last year’s devastating quake. “They haven’t seen Buddhists, Hindus, or other religious groups helping in the midst of the rubble. Rather, week after week, it is the followers of Jesus who have proved the test of time, sacrificed their own lives to serve and been the hands and feet of Jesus,” he says.

Asian Access is playing a key role in this spiritual movement by training church leaders with the aim of establishing long-term spiritual growth in the region.

“Asian Access just has the privilege of coming alongside key pastors like the ones that have invested in this Tibetan priest’s life,” Handley says. “We invest deeply, building their capacity so they can reach their communities.”



“God does amazing things when you invest in people and see them grow deeper in Him, grow stronger as leaders, learn how to reproduce other leaders, and then it spreads through church planting efforts in ways that are simply remarkable,” he adds.

Asian Access is now seeking the prayer and financial support of Christians worldwide so that the organization could nurture the spiritual movement in South Asia.

BREXIT: CONFUSION, CONCERN, CHAOS -BY RUTH KRAME





Now that Brexit has a mandate, the phrase should be ‘keep calm and carry on.’

It’s anything but calm in Europe, though.

TeachBeyond’s President George Durance explains, “There’s been an increasingly concerned group of people in the United Kingdom who feel that a lot of power, authority, [and] control has devolved to Brussels, to this government that has been set up to oversee the European Union affairs.”

‘Brexit’ is the term used to describe a referendum in which British voters decided to leave the European Union.  It signals the end of a 43-year old partnership between Britain and more than two dozen nations in Europe, but also triggered two countries that chose to ‘Remain’ in the EU.  Scotland and Ireland are now talking about an independence referendum from the UK.

In response to the results, Britain’s Prime Minister David Cameron resigned. He’ll step down in the fall.  The fallout is just beginning.

Says Durance, “There are hundreds of thousands of people who are there on visas that are not immigrant visas. They’re work visas, religious work visas, volunteer visas—all kinds of visas that are used to bring people in. The economy relies on it and that’s now all up for grabs.”

The stock market also reacted violently, he adds.  “This is going to be a serious problem for us because we’re deploying people to another country and all of a sudden, they’re going to need 15-percent more money because the world has said ‘we don’t like this’ and the pound, the British currency, has plummeted.”

United_Kingdom_EU_referendum_2016_area_results.


Analysts think it could take up to two years to exit the EU, although it may take considerably longer. That could stymie any plans for growth.

Durance had been considering the need for a Christian university in the UK (there currently are none) founded on the same principles as Wheaton to serve as a beacon of light in that nation.

“We felt we could go ahead and plan on relocating people to the United Kingdom and setting up centers there, and doing a variety of people-rich activities”, he says. Post-Brexit, “We don’t really know what England and Great Britain are going to do with regard to immigration: can our people get visas to live there even for six months or a year?  The Brexit voters are anticipating there are going to be new rules, new laws brought in that limit migration and this just leaves us stunned.”

TeachBeyond connects teachers, administrators, resident assistants, dorm parents, and support staff with global educational opportunities.  They also equip teachers to reach their full potential as Christian educators.  All of this is with an eye cast toward changing whole communities through the Gospel, one person at a time.


In what are sure to be confusing days ahead, Durance asks for prayers for wisdom.  “We just need Him to overrule in the plans human beings have so the deep, eternal things God has in mind for us will, in fact, happen.”

TURKEY: POPE’S GENOCIDE REMARKS IN ARMENIA WON’T HELP PEACE EFFORTS




 Pope Francis with Catholicos Karekin II and Armenia's President Serzh Sargsyan at Tzitzernakaberd Memorial Complex in Yerevan, Armenia (AP)

Turkey says Pope Francis’s recognition of the Ottoman-era killings of Armenians as genocide during his visit to Armenia won’t help efforts to establish peace and stability in the Caucasus region.

A Turkish Foreign Ministry statement said Monday that the Pope had again “disappointed” the Turkish people with remarks and accused him of “bias” and “religion-based discrimination” against Turkey.

Francis has said the 1915 slaughter by Ottoman Turks of an estimated 1.5 million Armenians constituted planned “genocide” during his three-day visit.


Turkey rejects the term genocide, saying the death toll cited by historians is inflated and that people died on both sides of the conflict. When Francis first used it last year, Turkey recalled its ambassador for 10 months and accused the Pope of spreading lies.

‘CHRISTIANS MUST ASK GOD’S FORGIVENESS FOR TREATMENT OF GAY PEOPLE,’ SAYS POPE FRANCIS -by Catholic News Service



The Pope spoke to reporters on his flight back to Rome from Armenia

Catholics and other Christians not only must apologise to the gay community, they must ask forgiveness of God for ways they have discriminated against gay people or fostered hostility toward them, Pope Francis said.

“I think the Church not only must say it is sorry to the gay person it has offended, but also to the poor, to exploited women” and anyone whom the Church did not defend when it could, he told reporters at a press conference on the way back from Armenia yesterday.

Pope Francis was asked to comment on remarks reportedly made a few days previously by Cardinal Reinhard Marx, president of the German bishops’ conference, that the Catholic Church must apologise to gay people for contributing to their marginalisation.

At the mention of the massacre in early June at a gay nightclub in Orlando, Florida, Pope Francis closed his eyes as if in pain and shook his head in dismay.

“The Church must say it is sorry for not having behaved as it should many times, many times – when I say ‘the Church,’ I mean we Christians because the Church is holy; we are the sinners,” the Pope said. “We Christians must say we are sorry.”

Changing what he had said in the past to the plural “we,” Pope Francis said that when a gay person “has good will and is seeking God, who are we to judge him?”

The Catechism of the Catholic Church is clear, he said. “They must not be discriminated against. They must be respected, pastorally accompanied.”

The Pope said people have a right to complain about gay pride demonstrations that purposefully offend the faith or sensitivities of others, but that is not what Cardinal Marx was talking about, he said.

Pope Francis said when he was growing up in Buenos Aires, Argentina, part of a “closed Catholic culture”, good Catholics would not even enter the house of a person who was divorced. “The culture has changed, and thanks be to God!”

“We Christians have much to apologize for and not just in this area,” he said, referring again to its treatment of gay people. “Ask forgiveness and not just say we’re sorry. Forgive us, Lord.”

Too often, he said, priests act as lords rather than fathers, “a priest who clubs people rather than embraces them and is good, consoles.”

Pope Francis insisted there are many good priests in the world and “many Mother Teresas, ”but people often do not see them because “holiness is modest.”

Like any other community of human beings, the Catholic Church is made up of “good people and bad people,” he said. “The grain and the weeds – Jesus says the kingdom is that way. We should not be scandalized by that,” but pray that God makes the wheat grow more and the weeds less.

Pope Francis also was asked about his agreeing to a request by the women’s International Union of Superiors General to set up a commission to study the historic role of female deacons with a view toward considering the possibility of instituting such a ministry today.

Both Sister Carmen Sammut, president of the sisters’ group, and Cardinal Gerhard Muller, prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, have sent him lists of names of people to serve on the commission, the Pope said. But he has not yet chosen the members.

As he did at the meeting with the superiors, Pope Francis told the reporters that his understanding was that women deacons in the early Church assisted bishops with the baptism and anointing of women, but did not have a role like Catholic deacons do today. He downplayed the issues: “They said: ‘The Church opens the door to deaconesses.’ Really? I was a bit annoyed because this is not telling the truth of things.”

The Pope also joked about a president who once said that the best way to bury someone’s request for action was to name a commission to study it.

Turning serious, though, Pope Francis insisted the role of women in the Catholic Church goes well beyond any offices they hold and he said about 18 months ago he had named a commission of female theologians to discuss women’s contributions to the life of the Church.

“Women think differently than we men do,” he said, “and we cannot make good, sound decisions without listening to the women.”

During the inflight news conference, Pope Francis also said:

– He believes “the intentions of Martin Luther” were not wrong in wanting to reform the Church, but “maybe some of his methods were not right.” The Church in the 1500s, he said, “was not exactly a model to imitate.”

– He used the word “genocide” to describe the massacre of an estimated 1.5 million Armenians in 1915-18 because that was the word commonly used in his native Argentina and he had already used it publicly a year ago. Although he said he knew Turkey objects to use of the term, “it would have sounded strange” not to use it in Armenia.

– Retired Pope Benedict XVI is a “wise man,” a valued adviser and a person dedicated to praying for the entire Church, but he can no longer be considered to be exercising papal ministry. “There is only one pope.”

– “Brexit,” the referendum in which the people of Great Britain voted to leave the European Union, shows just how much work remains to be done by the EU in promoting continental unity while respecting the differences of member countries.

– The Great and Holy Council of the world’s Orthodox churches was an important first step in Orthodoxy speaking with one voice, even though four of the 14 autocephalous Orthodox churches did not attend the meeting in Crete.


– When he travels to Azerbaijan in September, he will tell the nation’s leaders and people that the Armenian leaders and people want peace. The two countries have been in a situation of tension since 1988 over control of Nagorno-Karabakh, a predominantly Armenian enclave in Azerbaijan.

THE UNREACHED PEOPLE OF THE DAY




Cocos Islander, Kukus of Australia

The Cocos Malays are the majority population of the Cocos (Keeling) Islands, a territory of Australia. The Malay were the first permanent inhabitants of the island, along with Alexander Hare. They were brought as slaves and members of his harem. When a previous claimant, John Clunies-Ross, arrived a year later in 1827, he took the island back, employing the existing population in the harvest of coconuts. Because of the unbroken European rule of the islands, the culture has been mostly Western. The majority of the group is Muslim.

Ministry Obstacles
The majority religion in this small island territory is Muslim. There may be resistance to attempts to share the gospel.

Outreach Ideas
Aside from coconut harvesting and a bit of tourism the Cocos Islands have little sustainability. Perhaps the believers there could create a micro-business that would benefit their Muslim neighbors as they simultaneously share Christ with them.

Pray for the followers of Christ
The Christians living on the islands are in the minority and may feel very isolated. Pray they will meet together in joyful unity.

Pray for the entire people group
Pray the Cocos Islanders will continue to feel empowered in making decisions that affect them. Pray they will not be exploited by interests external to the island.

Scripture Focus
"The LORD reigns, let the earth rejoice; Let the many islands be glad." Psalm 97:1


Sunday, 26 June 2016

KUMUYI URGED EVERYONE TO TURN TO GOD AS THINGS FALL APART IN NIGERIA




The General Superintendent (GS) of Deeper Life Bible Church, Pastor William Kumuyi has asked Nigerians to turn to God in prayers as  He remains the only one capable of turning revitalizing the ongoing decadent paralysis in Nigeria.

The cleric made the call while speaking with journalist on arrival at Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja for a crusade organized by Deeper Christian Life Bible Church.
In the crusade tagged ‘Night of Extraordinary Wonders’, the General Overseer told Nigerians to go closer to God and reassured that when His face is genuinely  sought would never disappoint anyone.

On the hardship ravaging Nigeria, Kumuyi said there is God in heaven that answers prayers and urged Nigerian not to lose hope.
His words:

“I do not think we (Nigerians) should lose hope; there is God in heaven who answers prayers, there is Jesus Christ our Lord and Saviour who wants the best for everyone of us; and there are some of us who are praying and we believe that God answers prayers and so we are not going to lose hope in our country. Things are going to turn around.”

God, he reassured FCT residents will visit and tough each and every one of them during the one-day crusade.
“It will bring blessings to the people of the Federal Capital Territory and the country at large”, he stated.


The man of God said that there was need for dialogue that would bring the various groups in the country; their demands and expectations to the the table instead of throwing ‘stones’ at one another.

'NEARLY 200 REFUGEES DIE OF STARVATION' IN NIGERIA CAMP




MSF says "a catastrophic humanitarian emergency" is unfolding at a camp in Bama, where 24,000 people have taken refuge.

Nearly 200 refugees who fled Boko Haram attacks have died of starvation and dehydration in the northeastern Nigerian city of Bama in the past month, Doctors without Borders said on Wednesday.

The refugees "speak of children dying of hunger and digging new graves every day", according to a statement from the global medical charity group, also known by its French acronym MSF.

"A catastrophic humanitarian emergency" is unfolding at a makeshift camp on a hospital compound where 24,000 people have taken refuge, it said.

The doctors referred 16 emaciated children at risk of dying to their special feeding centre in Maiduguri. One in five of the 15,000 children are suffering severe acute malnutrition, the group found.

"We see the trauma on the faces of our patients who have witnessed and survived many horrors," said Ghada Hatim, head of the Doctors without Borders mission in Nigeria.

Her team reached Bama on Tuesday following a military convoy from Maiduguri, the Borno state capital that is the headquarters of Nigeria's military campaign.

Though Bama is just 70km southeast of Maiduguri, ongoing clashes between the rebels and government troops make travel unsafe and farmers have not planted crops for 18 months, Dr Christopher Mampula of MSF explained by telephone from Paris.

Boko Haram fighters routinely burn down homes and destroy wells, leaving few water sources in an area where temperatures often soar above 40 degrees.

The armed group seized Bama in September 2014 and Nigerian troops recaptured it in March 2015.
 
Nigeria's military has greatly curtailed the seven-year-old armed rebellion that has killed some 20,000 people, but fighters still attack villages and deploy suicide bombers.

Boko Haram has also staged attacks across Nigeria's borders in Chad, Niger and Cameroon.


The refugees in Bama are among 1.8 million Nigerians forced from their homes and living inside the country, with another 155,000 in neighboring countries, according to the UN.

Saturday, 25 June 2016

KILLING OF CHRISTIANS IN NIGERIA HAS INCREASED BY 62%



The killing of Christians in northern Nigeria has increased by 62% in just one year.

The 2016 World Watch List show a staggering 62% increase in violent killings of Christians in northern Nigeria as churches in Nigeria unite to highlight this problem for the first time. A report to be released in Abuja by Open Doors and the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), ‘Crushed but not defeated, the impact of persistent violence on the church in northern Nigeria’, makes a detailed study of the violence that has occurred.

A partner director for West Africa says: “This report shows that extent and impact of the persistent violence on the church in northern Nigeria is much more serious than previously expected. Once Boko Haram is defeated, the problem will not be solved. Christians living under Sharia law are facing discrimination and marginalization and have limited to no access to federal rights. We hope that this report will prompt the Nigerian government and international community to take the real suffering of persecuted Christians seriously and act on their behalf. Next to that, I hope that Nigerian Christians will become more involved with their brothers and sisters; that they will stand in the gap for them.”

The report looks at persecution from three main sources: Boko Haram, Muslim Fulani herdsmen and the Muslim religious and political elite that dominate government in northern Nigeria.

In 2015, there were 4,028 killings and 198 church attacks that Open Doors was able to record. The figures recorded for the previous year were 2,484 killings and 108 church attacks.

An estimated 30 million Christians in northern Nigeria form the largest minority in a mainly Muslim environment. They are at risk of violent persecution, as the report states: “For decades, Christians in the region have suffered marginalization and discrimination as well as targeted violence.”

Open Doors works in northern Nigeria, funding development projects such as clinics, community health training, provision of waterholes, schools and teacher training, vocational training for farmers and micro-loans for orphans and widows. Trauma work is also done with people who have suffered violent persecution; emergency relief is provided for these people.


Nigeria is 12th on the Open Doors World Watch List which ranks countries according to how difficult it is to be a Christian. Please continue to keep this nation in prayer as violence and persecution reaches unprecedented levels.

THE UNREACHED PEOPLE OF THE DAY



JULA, DYULA OF CTE D'IVOIRE



The Dyula live in clans, and the clan is the most important aspect of their lives. The people are fiercely loyal to their clans, defending them proudly. They express their history and devotion through the oral traditions of dance and storytelling. The Dyula have great respect for the elderly, especially if a man is an Islamic scholar. The moral principles of the Dyula are based on obedience, honesty, and dedication to their people. Such precepts are motivated by a driving sense of human dignity.

MINISTRY OBSTACLES
To follow Jesus is to risk losing clan support, and family support.

OUTREACH IDEAS
Christians should care for the material and physical needs of the Jula community, earning the right to be heard as representatives of Christ.

PRAY FOR THE FOLLOWERS OF CHRIST
Pray for the handful of followers of Christ among the Jula people, that they will cling strongly to the truths of Scripture, resting upon the finished work of Christ. Pray they become strong enough in the faith to represent the Lord well among their own people.

PRAY FOR THE ENTIRE PEOPLE GROUP
Proper sanitation and health care are lacking among the Dyula. Medical missionaries are needed to live and work among the Dyula, showing them the love of Jesus in practical ways.

SCRIPTURE FOCUS
"Truly I say to you, to the extent that you did it to one of these brothers of Mine, even the least of them, you did it to Me." Matthew 25:40

THE SHOCK OF THE REFERENDUM COULD SIGNAL A NEW POLITICS – OR SOMETHING DARKER

 The sun rises on the Houses of Parliament the morning after Britain vote to leave the EU

Two things drove the anger behind Brexit: a decline in living standards, and a feeling of powerlessness

Who won the referendum? It has plenty of losers apart from the EU – David Cameron and Barack Obama, the experts and the financial elites, and that orthodoxy defined by Orwell as “a body of ideas which it is assumed that all right-thinking people will accept without question”. Our present orthodoxy, which had included support for the EU, looks fragile.

But it is harder to say who or what has been vindicated. As Ben Ryan wrote earlier in the week, the campaign has divided the country in many directions:

Whatever the result it is a mistake to think this will be a true victory of the majority – because there simply isn’t one. A referendum that was supposed to provide clarity and unity has instead exacerbated and confirmed a far more divided Britain. Young versus old, urban versus rural, populist versus technocratic, England and Wales versus Scotland and Northern Ireland, and many other stark dividing lines have emerged. In the wake of this vote even the winning side will be hopelessly divided, and the losing side will no doubt feel disappointed, even betrayed.

The biggest division, as many observers have suggested, is between those who have gained from globalisation and the free movement of people, and those who have lost out. In John Harris’s film on British voters, there is a moment that sums it up. Harris, coming from Merthyr Tydfil and Birmingham’s Handsworth district – where the mood is deeply pessimistic – drops into a careers fair at Manchester University. The students are intensely relaxed, indeed visibly excited, about the future. Harris asks one: what about those voting leave from anger about immigration and jobs? The reply: “You know what, we live in in the 21st century. Get with it.”

Harris confesses to “having a moment here… I feel that those people we met in Merthyr are at the bottom of a great big escalator down there that’s not working; and these people are getting on an escalator which is going up at speed.”

Two things above all seem to have driven Eurosceptic anger at the bottom of the escalator. First – and closely related, of course, to concerns about immigration – is the decline in living standards. Its features include a job market where conditions at Sports Direct are not as abnormal as might be hoped; an increasingly merciless benefits system; a housing crisis which leaves people lucky to rent an overpriced property with poor conditions.

Second, a sense of powerlessness: that “something has got to change” and that taking a pair of scissors to our EU membership card would at least achieve that.

It may seem quaint to invoke Pope Leo XIII, but what he wrote in 1891, which has formed the basis of Catholic social teaching ever since, is as pertinent as ever. “Working men have been left, isolated and helpless, to the hardheartedness of employers and the greed of unchecked competition”.

Leo thought the way to deal with inequality (which includes the mistrust between haves and have-nots) was not only state regulation, but the forming of small associations, especially trade unions. This idea has caught on recently – that the state’s role is not just top-down reform, but to actively support local groups of people working together for change. Apart from being less unwieldy than big government, that kind of politics empowers people – gives them the chance to reform their block of flats or their workplace.

But there is no doubt what Leo would have thought our deepest social problem. When God is sidelined, the human being, whose dignity comes from being a child of God, is inevitably degraded. We continue to kill 700 small people in the womb every working day. The benefits system has filled jobcentres with scenes of appalling cruelty. An influential movement to “assist” the lonely and unwell to commit suicide is itself seeking assimilation into the right-thinking orthodoxy. The number of homeless people in England has surged. The ill-treatment of workers by employers, and tenants by landlords, is yet another symptom of our loss of a supernatural horizon. Talk of “Independence Day”, the arrival of freedom, etc., rings a bit hollow in this context.

And yet the shock of this referendum, which has swept away the Tory leadership and left the Labour leadership looking irrelevant to traditional Labour voters, could be an opportunity for a new politics. In Blue Labour and in some movements on the right – notably Phillip Blond’s ResPublica think tank – you see the desire for a reformed politics which secures the rights of the poorest, while nurturing local, spontaneous efforts to get together and change things. These movements are still working out what that means at the level of policy. But at a moment when nobody knows what is coming next, this is an opportunity for them to make their case.


That could be over-optimistic. As Leo XIII also said, there is a danger in times of economic stress: “Crafty agitators are intent on making use of these differences of opinion to pervert men’s judgments and to stir up the people to revolt.” Crafty populist agitators are still with us. Project Fear may have failed to convince the nation, but that doesn’t mean there is now nothing to be frightened of.

Friday, 24 June 2016

EXTREMIST MOB BURNS 80 CHRISTIAN HOMES IN AL-BEIDA VILLAGE, EGYPT



Last Friday, a Muslim mob looted and torched 80 Christian families’ homes in Egypt’s Al-Beida village. Christians were forced to flee the area.

The mob was angry because of a rumor that a building under construction in the village was going to become a church. The Christians in the Al-Beida village currently have to travel four miles away to worship at the Holy Virgin and the Archangel Michael Coptic Orthodox Church.

MORE THAN 60 CHURCHES ATTACKED IN EGYPT.

When the nearby church’s priest, Father Karas Naser, heard of the violence he rushed to the scene. The mob set upon Father Naser’s car when he arrived. However, he was rescued by other moderate Muslims who protected him from the mob and got him out of the car.

Open Doors USA’s Emily Fuentes says this type of violence, while not definitive of the whole country, tends to flare in rural areas where extremists incite some of the villagers against minority Christians.

“It really does vary throughout Egypt. You might see a little bit more tolerance in cities, but in more rural areas or villages like this, you’re going to see a bit more tension, some misunderstanding; especially from neighbors [towards] Christians and what a threat they are as a minority group.”

CHRISTIAN ORGANIZATIONS HELP REBUILD
Open Doors works through partner ministries in Egypt. Fuentes says a few years ago, their partner ministries responded to a similar violent extremist mob attack.

In that situation, 200 Christian homes were destroyed, and several churches and Christian buildings were looted and burned down. This mob was also incited with an inflammatory rumor against Christians started by the Muslim Brotherhood.

“It was a horrific situation for these Christians. Not only did they lose their house and churches, but some lost their lives and then some lost their very livelihood. Many were farmers so they lost their livestock and had nothing to help them survive,” says Fuentes.

“Through our partner organizations we were able to help rebuild many of these houses, farms, churches so the Christian community could restart again and continue to be a light even after a horrific attack like this.”

EGYPTIAN CHRISTIANS MAINTAIN GOSPEL WITNESS
Christians make up 10 percent of Egypt’s population, while the other 90 percent is Muslim. Although Christians are a minority and suffer from these flares of violence, they do not respond with violence.

Fuentes says, “These Christians who are not retaliating violently after a mob attack, but really just rebuilding; people are saying, ‘Oh, they’re not as evil as maybe the Muslim Brotherhood or some of these extremists have said.’ So it’s really reshaping stereotypes that many of these neighbors had because they were ignorant of what Christians really were about.


“It is amazing because there are little aspects and different ways that Christians continue to be a light in spite of the persecution that really amazes their neighbors. They’re beaten down, but not destroyed. They remain resilient, they remain a light. They’re not fleeing, and they’re choosing to remain strong in their country.”

The persecution doesn’t always lead to violence, however. Sometimes the discrimination is subtle and still hard on Egyptian believers.

Fuentes says, “Day-to-day life is also very difficult for them. Christian women, often it’ll take several hours for them to be picked up by a public bus because many bus drivers will just ignore them standing on the road. Christian children are often mistreated by their teachers or not given the same opportunities as their Muslim counterparts.”

Another one of Open Doors’ partner ministries provides additional tutoring for kids, and especially Christian kids because of the discrimination they may receive in the classroom.

“We kind of do an after-school program that helps meet where they’re falling behind, and help them get ahead academically. It really stands out to these teachers and they notice, ‘Wow, these are actually some of our greatest scholars and have the strongest work ethic.’”

PRAYER GUIDE
You can visit Open Doors’ website and sign up for their weekly prayer guide. They have information on Egypt and other countries where Christians face persecution.

Meanwhile, Fuentes shares, “What we’ve really heard from Egyptian Christians is just to be praying for them to be the light of Christ in these situations. It’s so hard not to want to retaliate or just get up and leave. So pray for strength to stand through the persecution they face.”


Pray for the Christians hurt and affected by last week’s attack, that they would find the resources to rebuild, and that the Holy Spirit would give them courageous compassion on their neighbors. Pray for others to come to Christ as a result of the Egyptian Christians’ witness.

THE UNREACHED PEOPLE OF THE DAY

Lematang of Indonesia
The Lematang people are very hospitable and friendly when welcoming newcomers. They have a strong sense of community togetherness proven by their adherence to "gotong royong" (neighborhood mutual service and assistance), not only to the Lematang community itself, but also to outside communities. They currently embrace Islam, yet still hold to ancient beliefs concerning magic and mystical powers.

Ministry Obstacles
Scripture is not available in the language of the Lematang, requiring other means to convey Biblical truth.

Outreach Ideas
Christians may be able to minister to the Lematang through schooling for the children, and through micro-enterprise.

Pray for the followers of Christ
There are only a few known believers among the Lematang. Pray the eyes of their hearts may be enlightened in order that they may know the hope to which they have been called, the riches of their glorious inheritance.

Pray for the entire people group
Pray for improved schools for the children of the Lematang, and that parents will place priority on education for their children.

Scripture Focus
"He will have compassion on the poor and needy, And the lives of the needy He will save." Psalm 72:13


Thursday, 23 June 2016

POPE FRANCIS INVITES REFUGEES TO JOIN HIM ON STAGE AT GENERAL AUDIENCE


The Pope calls for Europe to grant asylum to more refugees as he addresses the faithful at the Vatican


Pope Francis invited a number of refugees to join him on stage during his general audience.
The Holy See called a dozen male refugees to stand with him on the steps of St Peter’s Basilica earlier today.
The men are being cared for by a charity at the Vatican. They carried with them banners of the organization as well as Vatican flags. The group sat in front of the pontiff as he delivered his weekly address.
As he welcomed the refugees, the Pope emphasized to the audience how much the men had suffered in their homelands. He called for Europe to welcome more migrants.
The Pope said: “Please they are our brothers. A Christian excludes no one. I ask all of you: Let everyone come.”
Pope Francis remains a passionate supporter of refugees. In April, he brought twelve refugees back to the Vatican from Greece. Recently, the Vatican brought a second group to Rome from the Moria Refugee Camp based on the island of Lesbos.
During his address, the Pope focused on the records of the healing of lepers in the Gospels. Francis proclaimed that like Jesus, we shouldn’t be afraid to reach out to the most vulnerable in our society.
“Saint Luke tells us that one leper, moved by faith, did not fear to pass among the crowds and beg Jesus to cleanse him,” the Pope said, according to Vatican Radio.
“If this leper broke the law, Jesus did likewise by touching the man and cleansing him of the disease. The Lord’s example teaches us not to be afraid to reach out and touch the poor and the needy in our midst.”

He added: “Significantly, the encounter does not end there. Jesus tells the healed leper to present himself to the priest to make the prescribed offering, and as a testimony to his healing. In this way, he shows us that his miracles of healing aim at the rehabilitation of sinners and that t

Wednesday, 22 June 2016

MARTYRS ARE WITNESSES OF FAITH, NOT JUST VICTIMS OF GENOCIDE, SAYS POPE

Pope Francis spent more than an hour responding to questions during an afternoon visit to Rome’s villa Nazareth

Using the word “genocide” to describe the persecution of Christians in the Middle East risks downplaying the courage and witness of those who boldly profess faith in Jesus Christ even in the face of death, Pope Francis said.

“i want to say clearly that I do not like it when people speak of a ‘genocide of Christians,’ for example in the middle east,” the pope said, responding to questions on June 18. Calling the persecution “genocide,” he said, is using a juridical and sociological category to speak of “something which is a mystery of the faith: martyrdom.”

Jesuit father Federico Lombardi, Vatican spokesman, said pope Francis “was not speaking about the use of the term ‘genocide’ on a political level, but on a level of faith. When applied to the persecution of Christians in the Middle East, the dimension of faith is essential,” particularly when victims are murdered for not renouncing faith in Christ.

Pope Francis spent more than an hour responding to questions during an afternoon visit to Rome’s villa Nazareth, a residence for university students and headquarters of a foundation dedicated to helping gifted students who do not have the financial resources to continue their studies.

Asked how young people can find courage to live their faith, Pope Francis said the gospel calls Christians to give witness to their faith in Christ and to the reality that he died to redeem sinners “but is alive,” working in the lives of individuals and communities.

Martyrdom is the fullest expression of Christian witness, he said. “It’s the maximum, heroic.”

Recalling Isis’s martyrdom of 21 Egyptian Christians on a Libyan beach in 2015, pope Francis said none of them were theologians, “but they were doctors of Christian consistency; they were witnesses of the faith.”


Fidelity to Christ and being living witnesses requires sacrifice, though usually not to the point of death, he said. It requires many little acts of martyrdom, “the martyrdom of honesty, the martyrdom of patience, of raising your children, of fidelity in love when it’s easier to take another path.”

“We are sinners who Jesus loves and has healed, or who are in the process of being healed,” the pope said. Recognizing one’s own sinfulness and the unfathomable depths of god’s mercy are essential for being an authentic witness.

Asking forgiveness in advance, Pope Francis said those who strut around like peacocks may look impressive, but from behind you see the mess they leave. “Pardon me,” he said, “but that’s the truth of the peacock.”

Asked about the economy, unemployment and migration, Pope Francis repeated what he had written in the joy of the gospel, his 2013 exhortation: “today there is an economy that kills.”

“In the world, globally, at the centre of the economy, there is not man and woman, but the god money. And this is killing us,” he told the students.

Finding work that pays only under the table or being offered only successive short-term contracts without health insurance, pension contributions and vacation time — “this is slave labour,” the pope said. employers who know they can always find people willing to work under those conditions and so take advantage of people are committing “great injustice and we must speak clearly: this is a mortal sin.”

“War is the business that is making the most money now,” he said. “Why? Because it’s big business. It’s the god money.”

The fact that it is so difficult to deliver humanitarian aid to the innocent victims of war, yet weapons move easily across borders shows that money is more important than people’s lives, he said. “The economic system as it operates in the world today is immoral.”

a young man with a question about facing doubts in one’s faith life, asked the pope if he ever struggled with his faith.

“This is a question you ask the pope? What courage!” pope Francis said with a smile.

“Many times I’ve found myself in a crisis with the faith,” either asking god why he lets something happen or even wondering if it’s all true, he said. “This happened as a young man, a seminarian, a priest, as a religious, as bishop and as pope.”

“a Christian who has never felt this once in a while, one whose faith never entered in crisis, is missing something” and is probably too content, the pope said. a crisis brings questions and growth.



“I’ve learned that a Christian should not be afraid to experience crisis. it’s a sign that one is moving forward, that one is not anchored to the shore, but has set out and is moving forward,” he said.