Praying, siding and standing up for the persecuted church...
I have received the following eye-opener in my e-mail box this morning. It is written by Dr Peter Hammond, a missionary whom I came to respect in his service to the persecuted Church. Maybe a good theme for the Sunday morning service or for a lecture? It is well worth reading...
SERVING the PERSECUTED
To listen to the audio, click here.
Sunday, 14 November is International Day of Prayer for the Persecuted.
Visit www.idop-africa.org for resources to mobilise prayer and action on behalf of those suffering for Christ.
Serving the Persecuted
During more than 39 years of missionary work, I have had the privilege of serving persecuted Churches in Mozambique, Angola, Romania, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Albania, Rwanda, Sudan, Northern Nigeria, the Congo and Zimbabwe. During this time, I have endured aerial bombardments, ambushes, artillery and rocket barrages and I have been arrested and imprisoned for missionary work.
Speaking up for the Persecuted
Some of what Christians suffer in Marxist and Muslim lands has been documented in; Faith Under Fire in Sudan; Holocaust in Rwanda; In the Killing Fields of Mozambique; Going Through; Going On and Slavery, Terrorism and Islam - The Historical Roots and Contemporary Threat and in documentary films that we have helped to produce such as: Sudan: The Hidden Holocaust; Terrorism and Persecution - Understanding Islamic Jihad and Behind Enemy Lines and Mission to the Nuba Mountains of Sudan film in English, German or French.
Angola's Agony
On numerous occasions, communist Cuban soldiers in Angola have placed the heads of cattle, or an AK47, on altars or pulpits demanding that the Christians commit idolatry and bow before them. They have walked into services and taken the Bible off the pulpit and thrown it by the door and demanded: “You may all leave - one by one - just spit on the Bible and you can go free. If you don't - we will kill you!”
Communist troops have burst into church services declaring: “You Christians - you say that you worship the Lamb - well here is a lamb!” The Cubans taunted the worshippers as they started pouring the blood of this lamb over the believers saying the blood of the lamb is shed amongst you - worship the lamb! The head of the lamb was placed mockingly on the pulpit and people were dragged and forced to their knees to bow down before it.
Christians who have escaped from communist concentrations camps and prisons have told how they were often tortured by the Marxists. One prisoner told me of a time in Angola when they were near breaking point and one of them shouted out: “Why don't you just kill us and get it over with?”
The response of the communist concentration camp guards was most enlightening: “Oh no, we do not want to kill you! We do not want to send you to Heaven to be with God! No, we want you to curse Christ and to come to hell with us, for all eternity!”
The Aim of Persecution
The aim of persecution is not to kill Christians. There is no victory to the kingdom of darkness for Christians to go to Heaven. The aim of persecution is to intimidate Christians into silence. To persuade believers to compromise. To terrify Christians, to giving in to cowardice. If the devil cannot stop us being converted, he at least wants to divert us and distract us so that we are not effective in fulfilling the Great Commission and winning other souls to Christ. As long as you refuse to be intimidated into silence, neutrality and compromise, persecution fails.
"Then Jesus said to His disciples, 'if anyone desires to come after Me, let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow Me. For whoever desires to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for My sake will find it. For what profit is it to a man if he gains the whole world and loses his own soul? And what will a man give in exchange for his soul?'" Matthew 16:24-26
Sabina Wurmbrand
The wife of Romanian Pastor Richard Wurmbrand, Sabina Wurmbrand, testified that before she went to prison, she was very poor. But once she went to prison, she became very rich. This was because she was poor in the things of the world, but rich in the things of God. When she came to prison, she had the only currency that was of any value, she had much of the Word of God memorised and stored up in her heart and mind. Therefore, in prison she was able to make many people rich!
After years in the slave labour camps of Romania, Sabina was finally released. Sometime later, a man came to her claiming to have been in prison with her husband and having a message from him to share with their congregation. Knowing how the communist state sought to infiltrate congregations by infiltrating spies and blackmailing members into being informers, Sabina was cautious. Please, before we go any further, would you lead us in prayer? She bowed her head.
There was an awkward silence and then the man, who claimed to have a message from her husband, stuttered and stammered. Sabina Wurmbrand looked up and, gazing directly into the man's eyes, said: “Now then, aren't you ashamed of yourself? Wouldn't you like me to explain to you how you can become a real Christian?”
What can we do to help these persecuted believers?
To Prison with Praise
In 1987, while leading a Frontline mission team across the border, we were arrested. This was my first prison experience. We were stripped and beaten. Thrown into cells covered with human filth. Deprived of water and food, blindfolded and transported from Livingstone to Lusaka. There we were thrown into an overcrowded prison. The cells, which were 15 feet by 25 feet, were crammed with an average of 60 prisoners per cell. There were no beds, furnishings, plumbing, or electricity in these cells. The whole prison seemed to be one big stinking disease factory. With our shoes taken away, walking barefoot, with cut and bleeding feet, amongst this filth, we could only imagine how many infections and diseases God protected us from.
Falsely Accused
In our prison cell, there was Isaiah Moyo, a 26-year old black South African, who had been imprisoned on trumped up charges of being a South African spy! Actually, he had lent money to some ANC refugees in Lusaka, who had decided, rather than repay him, to accuse him of being a spy!
Tortured
Isaiah had been severely tortured. He had 26 pussy sores on his body where red-hot pokers had been pushed into his skin. His knees were calloused from the many hours he spent kneeling on the concrete floor praying to the Lord.
领英推荐
When, by God's grace, international prayer and pressure forced the Zambian government to open the prison doors and let us free, I determined to campaign for the release of Isaiah Moyo.
Publicising the Plight of the Prisoners
American Christians that I met in Cape Town encouraged me to come overseas and testify of the reality of communist persecution in Africa. I received an invitation to speak at the International Society for Human Rights Conference in Frankfurt, Germany and used that as the launching pad for my first overseas ministry trip. This involved radio and TV ministry in the USA, testifying to government officials of the atrocities I had witnessed and documented in communist Mozambique and Angola and speaking on the BBC World Service.
Later I heard that prison wardens had rushed with their radios to Isaiah Moyo in Lusaka Central Prison shouting: “Isaiah, that white South African missionary who was locked in here, he is speaking on the radio - and he is talking about you!”
Isaiah heard the tail end of my interview as I gave people his prison address and requested people to send care packages, with salt, soap, sugar, vitamins, pens, pencils, paper, etc.
Isaiah told us later that from that time on he was never mistreated again. Mail sacks of letters and parcels were dragged into the cell. He became the most popular person in prison. He had so many trading items, which everyone wanted. People could not do enough favours for him.
The BBC World Service radio programme had raised him to celebrity status in the prison. The prison guards treated him with great respect and soon he was set free and allowed to travel back to South Africa to be reunited with his wife and two children.
Publicity Provides Protection for the Persecuted
This was my first experience of seeing what an influence Western Christians can have through prayer and pressure. Publicity provides protection for the persecuted. As our Lord Jesus taught in Luke 18:1-5, even an unjust judge will do what is right, in response to persistent prayer and pressure.
As virtually every Marxist dictatorship in the world is a beneficiary of vast amounts of foreign aid from Western nations, this provides leverage. Most dictators prefer foreign aid to foreign prisoners. If given a choice, they will let the prisoners go free in order to continue to receive the Western dollars, pounds, or euros.
Setting Captives Free
Whatever we bind will be bound, whatever we lose will be loosed. By the power of prayer and through persistent pressure, we can see the powers of darkness limited, prison doors opened and captives set free.
Jesus said: "For I was hungry and you gave Me food; I was thirsty and you gave Me drink; I was a stranger and you took Me in; I was naked and you clothed Me; I was sick and you visited Me; I was in prison and you came to Me. Then the righteous will answer Him, saying, Lord, when did we see You hungry and feed You, or thirsty and give You drink? When did we see You a stranger and take You in, or naked and clothe You? Or when did we see You sick, or imprisoned and come to You? And the King will answer and say unto them, 'Assuredly, I say to you, in as much as you did it to one of the least of these brethren, you did it to Me.'" Matthew 25:35-40
"And if one member suffers, all the members suffer with it; or if one member is honoured, all the members rejoice with it. Now you are the Body of Christ and members individually." 1 Corinthians 12:26-27
Over 400 million Christians live under 66 governments, which severely restrict religious freedom and persecute believers. Every year an average of 200,000 Christians are killed for their Faith.
"Remember the prisoners as if chained with them - those who are mistreated - since you yourselves are in the Body also." Hebrews 13:3
Click here for a 3-minute video: Remember the Persecuted, which you can share and show your friends, family, school and church, this week.
You can also join the International Day of Prayer for the Persecuted event on the Frontline Fellowship Facebook page. Please like, link and share it with your family and friends.
Visit www.Idop-Africa.org for articles, news, PowerPoints, videos and more resources and updates to help you mobilise your church, or school, to prayer and action for the persecuted.
Dr. Peter Hammond
Frontline Fellowship