Online: | |
Visits: | |
Stories: |
Apirl 20, 2015
PERSECUTION RISING
The growing abuse, imprisonment,
torture and murder of Christians worldwide
Recent video of 21 orange-clad Egyptian Christians being simultaneously beheaded by ISIS thugs – along with a steady stream of other horrifying reports of their crucifying, decapitating and burying Christians alive, including children – have shocked the world.
But while ISIS is unquestionably a nightmare-come-true, when it comes to the alarming increase in Christian persecution worldwide the “Islamic State” is just the tip of the iceberg.
As WND’s acclaimed Whistleblower magazine reveals in its powerfully moving April issue, “PERSECUTION RISING,” today’s treatment of Christians in a great many nations is disturbingly reminiscent of the brutal persecution of the early followers of Christ.
Yet such is the harsh reality confronting millions of Christian believers – men, women and children – in many parts of our world, right now, in the 21st century.
In North Korea, thousands of Christians and their families are imprisoned in penal labor camps, with up to 80 executed last year for possessing Bibles and similar “transgressions.” In Sudan, hundreds of Christian women and girls are flogged annually for “indecent dress,” though what constitutes indecent dress is not defined by law. Iran raids church services and threatens believers, punishing Christians with prolonged detention, torture and executions – with some 400 Christians detained throughout the country since 2010, including Iranian-born American pastor Saeed Abedini.
Even America’s “allies” are home to outrageous persecution of Christians: In Egypt, at least seven Coptic Christians were killed and more than 200 churches and other Christian buildings, homes and businesses recently attacked. In Pakistan, Christian women and girls experience violence daily, many targeted for rape, sexual abuse and kidnapping, and a mob beat and burned to death a Christian couple last year for alleged “blasphemy.” In Saudi Arabia, not a single Christian church is allowed to exist in the entire country.
Learn more about “PERSECUTION RISING” here.
What about emerging superpower China – on which the U.S. government relies financially, and Americans rely for a large share of manufactured goods they purchase? Christians face the “worst persecution since the Cultural Revolution of Mao Zedong,” explains Bob Fu, former leader of the student movement crushed by the Tiananmen Square massacre and now a Christian underground church pastor. “There has been forced demolition, the removal of crosses, over 300 churches have been attacked and government sanctioned church pastors sentenced to 12 years in prison.” One pastor who dared even question authorities about the forced removal of the crosses was sentenced to prison, and a court recently sentenced two Christian bookstore owners to five and two years’ imprisonment for “illegal business operations.” Adds Fu, “Multiple believers have been attacked and hospitalized, and thousands of police were mobilized to attack a church. That has not been seen since the time of the Cultural Revolution. It’s overwhelming.”
Nevertheless – and here emerges the other, redemptive theme of this issue of Whistleblower – Fu expresses optimism about the long-term future of the Chinese church, noting that despite 60 years of persecution, the number of Christians has grown from less than 1 million to more than 100 million.
That’s right, around the world, amid the violence, persecution, civil war and mass death, a growing number of people are converting to a belief in Christ.
Highlights of “PERSECUTION RISING” include:
• “Brave nun warns world of Islamic threat to Christians: ‘ISIS is real Muslim believers who like to follow the Quran’” by Leo Hohmann
• “Country by country: The world’s worst persecutors of Christians”
• “In Egypt, Christians attempting to rebuild their church face violence”
• “Understanding and responding to Christian persecution”: Why in 2015, abuse of believers “is only going to worsen around the world”
• “My Middle East peace plan” by Joseph Farah, a radical solution to the region’s top two problems: the security of Israel and the persecution of Christians
• “Top 50 Christian persecutors” – Islam spawns the biggest spike in violence against believers on record
• “North Korea’s century of persecution” by Art Moore, on how the “Jerusalem of Asia” suffered long before communist rule came along
• “Not a single Christian church exists in Saudi Arabia”
• “Up close and personal: The human cost of ethnic cleansing” by William J. Murray, talking to Iraqi Christians forced out of Mosul at the point of ISIS’ sword
• “Niger Christians: ‘God found us worthy’”
• “China sees its ‘worst persecution since the Cultural Revolution’”: Despite decades of change, the communist regime maintains tight control
• “Why some Christian leaders in the Holy Land blame Israel for their troubles” by Art Moore: “It is safer to feel good thoughts about Islam, than to have to deal with hard truths”
• “HOW YOU CAN HELP: Agencies to help you stay informed and provide needed aid to persecuted Christians.”
“Fortunately, this issue of Whistleblower is not all about darkness and misery,” says Whistleblower Editor David Kupelian. “In fact, there’s an amazing, transcendent theme woven into it. That theme is perfectly expressed by the courageous Romanian pastor, Richard Wurmbrand.
![]() |
Pastor Richard Wurmbrand |
As this issue of Whistleblower recounts, Wurmbrand spent 14 years in a Romanian prison suffering starvation and torture for the crime of boldly preaching the Gospel of Christ in what was then a brutally repressive communist nation. When, after his release from captivity, Wurmbrand testified before the U.S. Senate’s Internal Security Subcommittee, he stripped to the waist to reveal 18 deep wounds covering his torso, the result of years of unspeakable abuse.
And yet, as Wurmbrand proclaims in his classic book “Tortured for Christ,” he and his fellow Christian prisoners well understood that the communists, especially those who imprisoned and tortured them, “knew not what they did.”
His message, carried forward after his death by the international ministry he founded, Voice of the Martyrs, has always been: “Hate the evil systems, but love your persecutors. Love their souls, and try to win them for Christ.”
So genuine was Wurmbrand’s concern for the souls of his tormentors that, during his incarceration, many of them were converted to the Christian faith, ending up in prison with him – and glad for it! Moreover, consider the courageous pastor’s last act before finally leaving his native country.
“In December 1965, my family and I were allowed to leave Romania,” he writes:
How is such an attitude possible? Says Wurmbrand:
Finally, in words reminiscent of some of the Christian martyrs of the first century, Wurmbrand shares with the reader the presence of God he experienced in his filthy prison cell:
[email protected] NESARA- Restore America – Galactic News