Mainstream Islam has Bloody Claws and Teeth

Christians Suffer ‘Extreme Persecution’ . . .

. . . in Countries with Majority Muslim Populations

by Thomas D. Williams, Ph.D. 
10 Jan 2015
BreitbartNews

According to the newly released World Watch List for 2015, nine out of the top ten countries where Christians suffer “extreme persecution” have populations that are at least 50% Muslim.

The World Watch List (WWL) is a ranking of the 50 countries where persecution of Christians for religious reasons is most severe. It is compiled by Open Doors USA, a human rights organization which has monitored Christian persecution worldwide since the 1970s.

The 2015 report found that “Islamic extremism is by far the most significant persecution engine” of Christians in the world today and that “40 of the 50 countries on the World Watch List are affected by this kind of persecution.”  The Watch List states that in the world today each month, on average, 322 Christians are killed for their faith, 214 Christian churches and properties are destroyed, and 772 acts of violence occur against Christians.

The ten worst countries for Christian persecution are, in descending order, North Korea, Somalia, Iraq, Syria, Afghanistan, Sudan, Iran, Pakistan, Eritrea, and Nigeria. Of these ten, only North Korea is less than 50% Muslim, and only North Korea had a primary “persecution engine” that wasn’t “Islamic extremism”—it was atheistic Communism.

The report found that the Middle East is still one of the most violent areas of the world for Christians, particularly in areas afflicted by aggression from the Islamic State. More than 70% of Christians have fled Iraq since 2003, and more than 700,000 Christians have left Syria since the civil war began in 2011.

Prior to the US invasion of Iraq in 2003, Iraq was home to one of the largest Christian communities of the Middle East. Christians have lived in Iraq for nearly two millennia but are currently on the verge of extinction. In July 2014, ISIS began marking houses owned by Christians with the Arabic ‘N’, which stands for ‘Nazarene.’ These houses were taken over by ISIS militants. The militants gave Christians in Mosul an ultimatum to convert to Islam by July 19th, pay a tax, or be executed.

Somalia, with its 99.8% Muslim population, ranks second on the Watch List and has only a few hundred Christians. In Somalia, Islamic religious leaders publicly maintain that there is no room for Christianity, Christians, or churches in Somalia, a view “upheld and reinforced” by government officials. In the country’s very recent history, Muslim converts to Christianity have often been killed on the spot when discovered.

Pakistan, with its extreme majority of Sunni Muslims, has also registered an uptick in anti-Christian violence, especially under the aegis of Pakistan’s blasphemy laws. According to reports, churches in Pakistan are frequently vandalized, and Christians are beaten, raped, abducted, and murdered with impunity. Christians also face discrimination in employment and education, which keep them in the lower classes.

This year’s WWL was independently audited by the International Institute of Religious Freedom (IIRF).
Open Doors defines Christian persecution as “any hostility experienced from the world as a result of one’s identification as a Christian. Beatings, physical torture, confinement, isolation, rape, severe punishment, imprisonment, slavery, discrimination in education and employment, and even death are just a few examples of the persecution they experience on a daily basis.”

Rising Persecution in China

“God Is With Us”

The Chinese government is ratcheting up its persecution of Christians and churches.  Yet, the church continues to grow.  While estimates are only that–estimates–the generally accepted figure is that Christians number more than 100 million in China.

The sad thing is that Christians are not a threat to the government or civil rulers.  But it troubles an insecure government to realise that a substantial group of people have a higher loyalty to a Ruler that they regard as above and beyond the Communist regime.  Christians, of course, believe that Christ is the ultimate Lord and Ruler of not just China, but of all the heavens and the earth.

But it has always been the way: Unbelief must persecute and attack Christians, or it must itself become Christian. There can be be no middle ground.  Unbelief proclaims the absolute sovereignty of Man; Christians proclaim the absolute sovereignty of one Man, risen from the dead and living eternally–the Lord Jesus Christ.

The very Name of Christ, then, is a threat to the sovereignty of man over the world.  In the ancient Roman Empire this conflict was not settled until the Emperor’s themselves became Christians, and the organs of state ceased to persecute the Church.  We expect that it will be the same in China.  Meanwhile the power and claims of the Lord Jesus Christ are extending over the Middle Kingdom and millions of people are responding to God’s irresistible grace.  “Everyone whom the Father has given me will come to me, and I will never cast out anyone who comes to me,” said the Lord. (John 6:37)

The ultimate sanction of Unbelief is to kill the body.  Man cannot kill the soul.  Christians fear God above man, because God can destroy both body and soul in Hell.  And thus the Gospel spreads in  China and people are converted, despite the earnest endeavours of the pagans.
 Christians Now Outnumber Communists in China

By Thomas D. Williams, Ph.D. 
29 Dec 2014
BreitbartNews

Though the Chinese Communist Party is the largest explicitly atheist organization in the world, with 85 million official members, it is now overshadowed by an estimated 100 million Christians in China. It is no wonder Beijing is nervous and authorities are cracking down on Christian groups.

Christianity is growing so fast in China that some predict that it will be the most Christian nation in the world in only another 15 years. By far, the greatest growth is coming outside the official state-sanctioned churches, which are rightly considered subservient to the Communist Party. Numbers are increasing, rather, in unofficial Protestant “house churches” and in the underground Catholic church.

“By my calculations China is destined to become the largest Christian country in the world very soon,” said Fenggang Yang, a professor of sociology at Purdue University and author of Religion in China: Survival and Revival under Communist Rule.

Although at least on paper the People’s Republic of China recognizes freedom of religion since 1978, party members are explicitly forbidden to believe in any religion. In 2011, Zhu Weiqun, executive vice minister of the United Front Work Department, wrote, “Party members shall not believe in religion, which is a principle to be unswervingly adhered to.”

According to the annual report of the human rights group China Aid, persecution of Christians worsened dramatically in 2013, in line with a constant trend of deteriorating religious freedom over the past eight years. Most recently, the oppression of Christians has especially targeted Protestant groups, leaving most Catholics alone, which many feel reflects Beijing’s strategic goal of reestablishing diplomatic relations with the Vatican.

According to reports, hundreds of Protestant churches in the eastern province of Zhejiang have been targeted for demolition in the past year.  Unrecognized Christian groups have been subject to crackdowns for years, but observers say the atmosphere is getting worse as their numbers increase and the governing Communist Party takes a more nationalist tone under President Xi Jinping.

Particularly hard hit has been a Beijing Christian group called Shouwang. “Things have got worse this year because the police started to detain us. I was detained for a week,” said Zhao Sheng, 54, musical organizer for the group’s Christmas service.  “But Christmas is still a happy time. No matter what happens, God is with us,” he added with a smile.

Persecution Helps Confirm the Christian Faith

 You Either Serve God or the Alternative

Amongst the many supporting evidences for the verisimilitude of Christian faith is the repeated persecution of Christians.  This phenomenon has been repeated throughout the AD aeon.  It has been universal.  This is all the more singular insofar as Christian doctrine proclaims a Gospel of peace and goodwill towards all men.  The historical praxis of Christians has been largely consistent with this doctrine.

Tacitus records that in 64-5AD, Nero persecuted thousands of Christians, putting them to death under the worst forms of public torture, on the grounds that they were “haters of the human race”, which, of course, justified the rest of the human race hating Christians in turn.  But things moved on.  The correspondence between Pliny the Younger and Emperor Trajan fifty odd years later in 109AD about how to deal with Christians focused upon their implicit sedition because they would not honour the Roman state gods.  Different reasons, same outcome.

It is reported that 80 percent of religious persecution in the world today is focused upon Christians.
  The persecutors are predominantly Islamic, but not exclusively.  Hindus, Buddhists, Communists (China, Cuba) and totalitarian states (North Korea) have all joined in.  In the West, the persecution is thus far largely “soft”, restricting Christian human rights and freedoms and attempting to remove any semblance of the Christian faith from public places.  The signs of increasing intolerance towards Christians and their beliefs are more evident every year in the secularist West.

The universal nature of Christian persecution confirms fundamental Christian doctrine.  Jesus said, “in the world you shall have persecution.  But be of good cheer.  I have overcome the world.” (John 16:33)  It highlights and illustrates the fundamental truth that the world is divided into two types of people–those who belong to Jesus Christ and are His disciples, and those who are remain under the thrall of the Satan.  Universal persecution of Christians and the Christian Church provides evidence of the binary nature of humankind: we are either of God or of God’s adversary, the father of lies.  Unbelief, regardless of its manifold manifestations, has one thing generally in common: animus towards Christ, and His people.  It is the one thing Buddhists, Hindus, Communists, Muslims and secular humanists all agree upon.

One person described the systemic disdain of the Christian faith in our modern secular state as follows:

Overall, we are not a religious society and, truth be told, it is difficult to remain an observant Christian in our present age. Changing times have eroded the faith’s once privileged position in our social order. The informal pressures that kept them in place have been washed away. People no longer feel duty-bound to go along with the extraordinary claims of Christianity and its often-demanding moral injunctions.  Instead, the wider culture is now hostile to orthodox Christianity, which is held to a much higher standard of scrutiny than other religions and cultures.

Those who are quite happy to casually sneer at Christians around the office coffee machine seldom have the courage to do the same when other minority identities are concerned.  Where media commentators are purposely respectful of other faiths, they are seldom afraid to propound ignorantly about Christian doctrine or issue bone-headed advice to Christian leaders.

He goes on to the sentiments and attitudes of one electoral candidate of a major New Zealand political party:

Last month one of Labour’s candidates at the election took to a popular Left-wing blog to publish a tirade against Christians in the party.  The Bible was repeatedly denounced as “snake-oil” and the Christian God was described as “a mean Mutha” who “nailed up his only son as a lesson to other wrongdoers”.

It’s a free country and those kinds of screeds should not be censored.  But just picture the outcry that would have followed a major party candidate writing anything as remotely incendiary about Islam, Buddhism or Hinduism. Can you imagine the high-dudgeon and editorial hand-wringing such an outburst would occasion?

The sentiments expressed by the Labour Party candidate, and the double standards which allow their promulgation without recrimination, confirm the truth of Christian doctrine and of  Jesus Christ Himself.  There are kindred spirits of that particular Labour Party candidate in every place and every age since Nero.  This universal hostility confirms authority and truthfulness of the Son of God as well as the existence and influence of one, universal, malevolent Evil Spirit.

As for us, and our households, we will merrily serve the Lord, having been rescued from the domain of the Satan–the accuser and enemy of all men.

Cry the Beloved Country

Vicar of Baghdad: Christian Children Are Being Beheaded by ISIS for Refusing to Convert to Islam

2 Dec 2014

Canon Andrew White, the Vicar of Baghdad, has told of how Christian children in Iraq were beheaded by ISIS forces for refusing to convert to Islam. Around 250,000 Christians have fled northern Iraq in the face of ISIS. They were the last remaining Christians in a region that had been home to more than one and a half million Christians before the war.

White, who has been ordered by the Archbishop of Canterbury to leave Baghdad for fears over his safety, spoke movingly of the plight of the Christians during a recent interview with the Christian Broadcasting Network, Christian Today has reported.

“Things were bad in Baghdad, there were bombs and shootings and our people were being killed, so many of our people fled back to Nineveh, their traditional home,” he said. “It was safer, but then one day, ISIS – Islamic State. They came in and they hounded all of them out. They killed huge numbers, they chopped their children in half, they chopped their heads off, and they moved north and it was so terrible what happened.”

He told of how ISIS militants were forcing people, including children, to convert to Islam under threat of death. “They came to one of our people the other day, one of the Christians. They said to one man, an adult, ‘Either you say the words of conversion to Islam or we kill all your children.’ He was desperate, he said the words. And then he phoned me and said, ‘Abouna [Father], I said the words, does that mean that Yesua [Jesus] doesn’t love me any more?’ I said, ‘Yesua still loves you, he will always loves you.’

“Islamic State turned up and said to the children, you say the words that you will follow Mohammed. The children, all under 15, four of them, said ‘No, we love Yesua, we have always loved Yesua, we have always followed Yesua, Yesua has always been with us.’ They said, ‘Say the words.’ They said, ‘No, we can’t.’ They chopped all their heads off. How do you respond to that? You just cry.”

The Western Mien of "Holocaust Denial"

We Must Speak Up for Persecuted Christians in the Islamic World

2 Dec 2014

Just a few weeks ago Prince Charles, a man sometimes criticized for being too supportive and praising of Britain’s Muslim community, made a passionate speech calling for the Islamic world to stop persecuting its Christian minorities. It was entirely coincidental but hugely significant that the same day of the royal statement, it was reported that a Christian couple had been beaten to death in Pakistan for allegedly defacing a copy of the Koran.

Whether they did such a thing is doubtful but, anyway, irrelevant. Only barbaric regimes and barbaric religions believe in killing people for marking inanimate objects.

The victims were a young couple, hoping to build a life for themselves even though their country, Pakistan, routinely persecuted Christians. As such they were moving into a new house and in clearing out the possessions of the family who had previously lived there they may have moved a box that contained a copy of The Koran. That’s all. But it was enough.

First their legs were broken so that they could not run away. Then they were beaten to death. Then their bodies were burned beyond recognition. I wish I could say that this grotesque incident was unique or even rare; tragically it is not, and has been repeated and replicated in almost every country where followers of Islam form a majority of the population.

There were times when I was writing my new book, Hatred: Islam’s War on Christianity, when I felt like giving the whole enterprise up. It was a dark, depressing exercise but also a vital one and one I am proud to have achieved.

But we must also stand up and admit end expose that the slaughter of the innocents is taking place. I am tired, so tired, of the denial and the obfuscation. There are only so many tears one can see and so many moans of pain one can hear.

The call of Christians persecuted in Islamic countries is, if you will, a silent scream – a roar of pain and suffering ignored as if noiseless by so many in mainstream media and the political and religious establishments of North America and Europe.

I have even heard clergy dismiss this bloodbath as “overblown” or to argue that to expose it would be “damaging to ecumenism.” God forgive them.

I shouldn’t have to re-state the case but, for the uninitiated, Christians are the most persecuted identifiable group in the world. I do not mean culture clashes and legal battles in the West, I mean the daily slaughter, rape, literal crucifixion, forced conversion and exile of Christians in Egypt, Pakistan, Iraq, Syria, Nigeria, Indonesia, Sudan, Turkey, Iran and pretty much anywhere else in the Islamic world.

There are some exceptions, and Jordan and parts of North Africa are trying to protect their Christian minorities, but the trend is all in the wrong direction.

Christians are also oppressed in China and North Korea but this is about control rather than anti-Christian theology and nobody believes these nations’ Communist regimes have a long-term future.India has also seen examples of appalling violence against Christians, but these are rare, and are contrary to Hindu culture, and both the Indian regional and central government intervene immediately.

This is not about individual Muslims, we must never react to anti-Christian oppression with hysteria and violence, and we must build bridges with those with whom we disagree. But we must also stand up and admit end expose that the slaughter of the innocents is taking place. I am tired, so tired, of the denial and the obfuscation. There are only so many tears one can see and so many moans of pain one can hear.

The standard response from many Muslims is that it’s not happening or that if it is happening it has nothing to do with Islam. The former claim is so hideous as to be reminiscent of Holocaust denial; the latter is yet to be proven but I am more than happy to dialogue with Muslims who believe this and to work out ways to make matters better. But then there are non-Muslims who out of anti-Christian animus, ignorance, of rigid relativism are indifferent to or frightened to believe the facts.

What happens next is uncertain. The persecution is increasing, those Muslim-dominated nations where Christians were not badly treated are falling to fundamentalism, and because of oil, money and power struggles the west generally prefers to say nothing. This is not due to turning the other cheek but turning a blind eye, this is not about reconciliation but moral and political cowardice.

We have to demand that Pakistan remove its blasphemy law; if not, we remove aid and support. We have to put enormous pressure of our alleged allies in Saudi Arabia and the Gulf to allow Christians to worship freely. We have to condemn the concept of violent jihad and call for it to be condemned by Muslim leaders. We have to insist that Christians, women, gays, minorities are allowed the same – not more and not less – rights within the house of Islam as in the world outside. Then a civilized conversation can at least begin. We might, however, be waiting quite some time. 

Letter From America (About Godless Schools)

One Nation Under Godlessness

A high school in Colorado Springs bans students from meeting outside class for prayer and fellowship.

By Michelle Malkin
November 14, 2014

Flowers of Islam

Asia Bibi’s Death Sentence Upheld by Lahore High Court

Supreme Court appeal likely to delay outcome for 3 more years

Asia Bibi's Death Sentence Upheld by Lahore High Court
Asia Bibi
Asia Bibi’s death sentence was upheld by the Lahore High Court in Pakistan on Thursday. Bibi, a Roman Catholic mother of five also known as Aasiya Noreen, was sentenced to die in 2010 after she was convicted of blasphemy. Bibi’s Muslim coworkers accused her of drinking the same water as them and verbally challenging their faith.

“I met Asia in prison a month ago. She’s fine and was hoping to hear good news, but, alas, our ordeal is not over yet,” Bibi’s husband, Ashiq Masih, told Morning Star News after yesterday’s decision.  World Watch Monitor reports that Bibi’s attorney Naeem Shakir challenged the testimony of the women who feuded with Bibi, arguing to the appellate court that their testimony had been hearsay because the complainant in the case had not heards Bibi’s words himself. The judges ignored Sharkir’s critiques, suggesting he should have raised them the trial level.
S. K. Chaudhry, the attorney who represented Bibi at her trial, explained that he had not cross-examined the only two eyewitnesses to the alleged blasphemous words. He told the judges it would violate his Muslim faith to repeat the words. “In the process of administration of justice we need to be ‘secular,’” one judge responded.
“Pakistan being a Muslim majority nation, where Christians and those of other religions are a tiny miniscule minorities, it is all the more incumbent on them (the government) to be vary (sic) of such accusations of blasphemy,” wrote Thomas Dabre, the Roman Catholic Bishop of Pune, an Indian diocese. “The Pakistan government there should be very careful in applying such laws and the International community should hold the government of Pakistan accountable. The Pakistan government cannot disown responsibility of this death sentence and should overturn immediately the death sentence of innocent Christian woman Asia Bibi.”
A staff editorial for Pakistan’s The Nation also criticized the law, but stopped short of calling on the government to repeal it:
The flaws in the blasphemy law, the repercussions they have against anyone who has been accused of blasphemy and the amount of cases that have little or no evidence proving that blasphemy was committed, mean that a revision of the laws is due. The law is based on the principal (sic) of innocent until proven guilty, yet in the case of blasphemy charges, the guilt of those that have been charged is accepted as fact, long before the case even goes to court, with the public often stepping in to execute their own brand of vigilante justice.
“This vile attack on a Christian wife and mother cannot stand. Like the case of [Sudanese woman Meriam Ibrahim], who is now a free woman because the world spoke out with one voice, it’s time for the international community to condemn Pakistan’s barbaric violation of Asia Bibi’s human rights,” wrote Jordan Sekulow of the American Center for Law and Justice. “She’s done nothing wrong, and these trumped up charges are merely because she is a Christian.”
David Griffiths of Amnesty International also condemned the attacks against Bibi, the first Pakistani woman to be sentenced to death for blasphemy. “Her mental and physical health has reportedly deteriorated badly during the years she has spent in almost total isolation on death row,” Griffiths added.
Morning Star News notes: “Death sentences have rarely been carried out in blasphemy cases, but that is in part because such allegations have frequently led to deadly vigilante attacks on the accused or their lawyers.”
Bibi’s lawyer Naeem Shakir told MSN that they plan to appeal the decision to Pakistan’s Supreme Court, though because of backlogs, the case will not likely be seen before 2017. After receiving her death sentence, Bibi’s case attracted international attention, including that of Pope Benedict, who personally called for her freedom. In her own country, two Pakistani politicians were assassinated in 2011 after speaking out against anti-blasphemy laws.
In 2013, French journalist Anne Isabelle Tollet and author of Blasphemy: A Memoir: Sentenced to Death over a Cup of Water told CT that she had little hope that Pakistan would repeal its blasphemy law.
“With the new group (Sharif’s administration) it is impossible. I don’t have any hope,” she said. “The blasphemy law fits the definition of terrorism. It’s a terror law. It’s a way to instill terror. Everybody is scared of this law.”
Earlier this year, Open Doors moved Pakistan up to number eight (from 14), on a list ranking the worst countries in the world for Christians. In 2013, more than 80 Christians lost their lives after bombs went off following a church service at All Saints Church in Peshawar. Previous high-profile attacks against Christians came that same year at Lahore’s Joseph Colony and Gojra in 2009. Last year, four Christians were acquitted of blasphemy charges.

It Would Never Happen, They Said

Leviathan Showing His Claws

When the homosexual “marriage” bill was passed in New Zealand, faithful Christians could clearly see God’s handwriting on the wall.  Like that ancient writing which appeared amidst a pagan feast during the days of Daniel, we knew that the days of our nation were numbered.  We knew that God had weighed us and found that our sin was grossly abhorrent.  We knew that our nation had already been given over to enemies.  We warned that homosexual “marriage” would soon morph into the persecution of Christians and the Church.

Christians have always been an ornery people.  They quaintly claim to believe in God and His Messiah.  They assert that their highest, deepest, and ultimate loyalty is to the God of gods.  They will not transgress His law, even unto death.  Now, in “ordinary circumstances” Christians get along just fine with their neighbours.  They seek to do good to all men.  They care for and serve the poor and the oppressed.  They live peaceable lives.  They mind their own business.  They raise their children to be decent citizens.  So far, so good.  But militant Unbelief cannot help itself.  In the end, it will brook no opposition.  In the end, Christians will be made to conform–or, more accurately, the attempt to make them conform will break out.

When the homosexual “marriage” law was passed, anyone who suggested that it was only a matter of time before Christians were persecuted for their resistant unbelief in the secular religion and for their rejection of illicit sex and perverse “marriage” were mocked as extremists and alarmists.  But Unbelief is implicitly totalitarian.  Given enough opportunity, it will brook no opposition.  Given half a chance, Unbelief will be militantly oppressive, demanding total conformity to its apostate religion.

New Zealand is a small country.  When Unbelief becomes more godless and militant, the very smallness of the country can act as a restraint.  People know people.  Politicians can be approached.  Blogs can influence an entire election campaign.  Avenues are open for redress and correction.  But these things will not protect the faithful when the militant, secular Left get back into power–as it inevitably will..  We have seen their form.

Under the last Labour administration, believers were openly mocked in Parliament as “chinless scarf wearers” because they dared to oppose the relentless secular juggernaut being imposed upon the country by Helen Clark and her cabal.  At that time, Clark crossed more than a few bridges that were too far, and “mainstream” New Zealand dumped her unceremoniously.  It was evident that “mainstream” New Zealand (that is, moderate secularists) did not appreciate being told which light-bulbs they were permitted to buy, and the length of time they would be permitted to occupy a shower to conduct their ablutions.  But note the oppressive, militant spirit that was revealed.  “Ve hav vays of making you konform.”  The animus will come back.  We predict that homosexual “marriage” will be a field of skirmish, then open battle.  And note that the mainstream has, in this instance, applauded the passage of homosexual “marriage” perfidy. 

In the United States, the cause of homosexual “marriage” has been taking over with all the relentlessness of the Borg.  The nation appears to be assimilating at pace.  Whether this is the product of a rogue judiciary or the manipulation of elites, and whether it will eventually be rolled back by peaceful means, remains to be seen.  But the prediction of the persecution of Christians has rapidly emerged into reality.

City officials in Coeur d’Alene, Idaho have informed two ordained ministers that they must perform same sex marriages or face jail time and a fine.

City officials told Donald Knapp that he and his wife Evelyn, both ordained ministers who run Hitching Post Wedding Chapel, are required to perform such ceremonies or face months in jail and/or thousands of dollars in fines. The city claims its “non-discrimination” ordinance requires the Knapps to perform same-sex wedding ceremonies now that the courts have overridden Idaho’s voter-approved constitutional amendment that affirmed marriage as the union of a man and a woman.

“The government should not force ordained ministers to act contrary to their faith under threat of jail time and criminal fines,” said ADF Senior Legal Counsel Jeremy Tedesco. “Many have denied that pastors would ever be forced to perform ceremonies that are completely at odds with their faith, but that’s what is happening here – and it’s happened this quickly. The city is on seriously flawed legal ground, and our lawsuit intends to ensure that this couple’s freedom to adhere to their own faith as pastors is protected just as the First Amendment intended.”

It is likely that eventually judicial appeals will smite the city officials in Idaho on the face.  We shall see.  But expect many more cases like this.  Secularism and Unbelief is becoming unmasked.  It is as oppressive in spirit as all godless, secular governments have been when they have taken control–as the regimes of Lenin, Stalin, Mao, Pol Pot, Hitler, and Castro eloquently testify.  Secularism has motive–serious motive.  All it needs is the opportunity and the means.  Then evil will be unmasked in all its diabolical horror.  

For Christians this will be a time of great struggle and hardship.  But, because the Spirit of God dwells amongst us, we will not lose heart.  True–there will be departures.  There will be those who, under foul weather, will prove that they were always fair-weather Christians.  They will leave and prove thereby that they were never really of us, as the Apostle John notes (I John 2:19).  The true Church will be purified and sanctified by going through the deep waters.  But Christ will not leave us.  He will enable us to persevere.  Our Saviour–as always–will command secularist evil to integrate into the void.  Its end is sure and certain.

I have said these things to you, that in me you may have peace. In the world you will have tribulation. But take heart; I have overcome the world.  (John 16:33)

Hear No Evil, See No Evil

Age of intolerance

The War on Religion

Barney Zwartz
November 2, 2013

As Christian villager Asia Bibi languished in a Pakistani jail awaiting death by hanging for drinking water from a Muslim cup, two suicide bombers killed 85 worshippers in a Peshawar church.

For Egypt’s Copts, who risk having the small cross-tattoos many wear on their wrists burnt off with acid by militant Muslims, the Arab Spring has been wintry. In August it got worse: Muslim Brotherhood supporters, blaming them for the army’s removal of president Mohamed Mursi, attacked more than 100 Christian sites – 42 churches were razed.

In Somalia, al-Shabab, which slaughtered scores of people at a Kenyan shopping mall in September, has reportedly vowed to kill every Somali Christian.

In northern Nigeria, Boko Haram has butchered thousands of Christians, as well as Muslims they consider inadequately ideological – such as those seeking an education.

Four of every five acts of religious discrimination in the world today are directed against Christians, according to the Germany-based International Society for Human Rights. The secular US think tank the Pew Forum says Christians face harassment or oppression in 139 nations, nearly three-quarters of all the countries on earth.

It is not just Muslims, who themselves often face horrendous persecution, who attack Christians. In the Indian state of Orissa, Hindu nationalists attacked Christians in a vicious pogrom in 2008, killing 500, injuring thousands with machetes, and leaving 50,000 homeless. A nun was raped and paraded naked through the streets, watched by police who arrested no one.

In Burma, Bhutan, Nepal and Sri Lanka, Buddhist militants have murdered Christians, Muslims and Hindus. In 2010 the Burmese military attacked Christian minorities from helicopters, reportedly killing thousands.

These cases are horrific, certainly, but surely they are disconnected and accidental acts of cruelty and violence? Not so, rights observers say: they are all part of the biggest human rights challenge now facing the globe – religious intolerance – and also part of a largely unobserved global war on Christians. Things may be worse now for more Christians than at any time in history, including under the Roman Empire.

”War” does not mean a unified campaign directed by a single co-ordinating mind. But it is no exaggeration, Vatican analyst John Allen argues in his new book, The Global War on Christians, because it represents a ”massive, worldwide pattern of violence and oppression directed against a specific group of people, often explicitly understood by its perpetrators as part of a broader cultural and spiritual struggle”. If we are not honest enough to call it a war, we will not face it with the necessary urgency, he says.

What is happening? Why are Christians especially at risk, and why are Western governments, media and churches so reluctant to acknowledge it, let alone act? And, as some observers suggest, is religious persecution heading back to the West?

Religion is often only one factor in this violence, part of a combustible cocktail of racial, ethnic, economic and linguistic motives, but increasingly – such as with the rising tide of puritanical Muslim Salafists – it is the main or only reason. And in the countries where the problem is most severe, persecution has accelerated and deepened in the past two years.

The international Catholic charity Aid to the Church in Need last week launched its 191-page report Persecuted and Forgotten, challenging the international community’s willingness to stand up for religious freedom.  The report calls the flight of Christians from the Middle East an exodus of almost biblical proportions. ”Incidents of persecution are now apparently relentless and worsening: churches being burnt, Christians under pressure to convert, mob violence against Christian homes, abduction and rape of Christian girls, anti-Christian propaganda in the media and from government, discrimination in schools and the workplace.”

Kendal is scathing about Western churches, saying they often deliberately avert their eyes. ”The Western church is so happy having a nice time in celebratory worship, they don’t want the burden of this knowledge (of what is happening to their brethren). Pastors feel under pressure to have their congregations leave the church feeling upbeat.”

Long-time religious liberty analyst and advocate Liz Kendal says when she began monitoring religious violence 15 years ago, ”I was reporting on an attack here or there, usually a militant who came in and attacked a missionary. Now it’s pogroms where people massacre their neighbours with machetes and with impunity”.   Kendal is the Melbourne-based advocacy director of Christian Faith and Freedom.

This is a frightening new feature, that neighbours join or lead the brutality. ”One of the disturbing things about Syria is not just all the al-Qaeda-linked groups, but that local Muslims welcome them. They want their Christian neighbours to leave,” Kendal says.

Persecution can be a nebulous term. Both Christians and Muslims in the West have used it to refer to non-life-threatening discrimination. American scholar Charles Tieszen’s definition is a good one: any unjust action of mild to intense levels of hostility, directed at people belonging to a religion resulting in varying levels of harm, in which the victim’s religious identification is the main motive.  Todd Johnson, of Gordon Conwell’s Centre for the Study of Global Christianity, estimates 70 million Christians have died for their faith, 45 million of them in the 20th century.

John Allen notes that ”this boom in religious violence is still very much a growth industry. Christians today are by some order of magnitude the most persecuted religious body on the planet,” suffering not just martyrdom but all forms of intimidation and oppression in record numbers.  The US Commission on International Religious Freedom, which monitors religious persecution and names the worst offenders in an annual report, listed 16 nations guilty of ”heinous and systematic” offences in its 2012 report.

Only one group is under attack in all 16 nations: Christians. (The countries are Burma, China, Egypt, Eritrea, Iran, Iraq, Nigeria, North Korea, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Tajikistan, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Vietnam.)  Open Doors lists 25 countries as most hazardous, 18 of them Muslim-majority nations – six in Asia, seven in Africa, eight in the Middle East, and four in the former Soviet empire. As Allen notes, this shows that it really is a global war.

The Middle East, the birthplace of Christianity, may soon be emptied of its adherents, and of other religious minorities. In Iraq, which had 1.5 million Christians before the first Gulf War, the total is now possibly as little as a 10th of that. Most have fled, but unnumbered thousands have been killed.

Muslims also suffer greatly – in Buddhist Burma and Thailand, in Hindu India and communist China, and in Muslim countries where their particular form is a minority. Hindus are persecuted in Buddhist countries, such as Sri Lanka. Iranian authorities, brutal against Christians, are even more vicious when it comes to Baha’is. Persecution seems an equal-opportunity affair.  Nor are Christians immune from perpetrating violence, as the world has seen in Rwanda, the Congo and Yugoslavia in the past 20 years. Yet when it comes to victims, they are well out in front. Why?

World Evangelical Alliance spokesman Thomas Schirrmacher says a number of factors combine. Christianity is much the biggest religion, so its numbers are likely to be large, and it is experiencing enormous growth in dangerous places where it makes established groups feel threatened. Religious nationalists tend to identify Christianity with Western colonialism. Christians, supported by better international networks, also tend to be more outspoken in advocating rights and democracy and in opposing corruption.

Dictators fear that Christians do not give them the undivided allegiance they demand (think North Korea, China or Vietnam), while some commentators even suggest Christians help bring suffering on themselves because of their willingness to turn the other cheek – militant Muslims might be more wary if they didn’t have impunity, if Christians too adopted suicide bombing.

Why, 1700 years after the Edict of Milan, in which Constantine decreed religious tolerance in the Roman Empire, is religious intolerance so savage? A number of cross currents have come together, including rising religious nationalism, Islamic fundamentalism driven particularly by Saudi Arabia’s petrodollars, victory for Islamists against Russia in Afghanistan, which sent the jihadis back to their various homes with ambitions entrenched, and the loss of American political influence after the global financial crisis.

This has been encouraged by a shameful apathy or denial by First World leaders. When it comes to secular politics, the victims are too Christian to matter much to the left, who are much more comfortable bashing the doubtless legitimate but comparatively minor target of Israel. And they are too brown or too foreign to matter much to most on the right.

Secularists also tend to think of Christians as the oppressor, not the oppressed. When they picture persecution, they turn to history: the crusades, the Inquisition, Europe’s savage 17th century religious wars, and colonial exploitation. But, as John Allen observes: ”Today we do not live on the pages of a Dan Brown potboiler, in which Christians are dispatching mad assassins to settle historical scores. Instead, they’re the ones fleeing assassins others have dispatched.”

He also cites two sets of ”blinders”. Christians in the West can overstate the struggles they face from an increasingly post-Christian state, which diminishes sympathy for the Christians in real danger. Second, Western powerbrokers tend to underestimate the role religion plays in persecution in the Third World, its consistency as a driver.  Liz Kendal says there was a brief period when the US made a difference through its religious freedom bill. Introduced in 1998, it worked well for a decade, but collapsed with the global financial crisis in 2008 when the US economic clout ”evaporated overnight and religious liberty was affected immediately, especially in China and Iran”, she says.  ”Now the gloves are off. Persecution with impunity is the order of the day and no one can stop it. America could threaten sanctions, and things would settle down, but those days are over. ” 

Kendal is scathing about Western churches, saying they often deliberately avert their eyes. ”The Western church is so happy having a nice time in celebratory worship, they don’t want the burden of this knowledge (of what is happening to their brethren). Pastors feel under pressure to have their congregations leave the church feeling upbeat.”  She says the churches have to stop expecting political solutions. ”The cavalry is not going to come over the hill, and it’s not where the church’s faith should be anyway.”

Her pessimism runs deep. Not only is religious persecution unstoppable in Islamic and other Third World countries, but it is on the way in the West, if in a different form, she says.  Where Christian social conservatism was once mainstream, she predicts Christians will face jail and other sanctions if they do not toe the fast-changing secular line on such issues as condoning homosexuality and same-sex marriage.  Cardinal Francis George, the Catholic Archbishop of Chicago, made a similar prediction, noting in 2010: ”I expect to die in bed, my successor will die in prison, and his successor will die a martyr in the public square.”

And why does mainstream Western media miss the big picture? ”That’s the million-dollar question, and I don’t know,” Kendal replies. She suggests it is a combination of ignorance by journalists about the historical and political context of persecution and a political correctness that will not allow them to criticise Muslims for fear of being labelled racist or Islamophobic. ”It’s just too hot to handle,” she says.  ”Turn on your TV and there is a young BBC reporter in Syria saying ‘these freedom fighters are fighting for democracy’. And behind him are bushy-bearded jihadists waving a black flag and shouting ‘Allahu akbar’ [God is great], fresh from cutting throats.”

Cardinal Francis George, the Catholic Archbishop of Chicago, made a similar prediction, noting in 2010: ”I expect to die in bed, my successor will die in prison, and his successor will die a martyr in the public square.”

In Burma, Kendal says, Western journalists believe the regime’s talk of reform and don’t realise Aung San Suu Kyi has been silenced, or the religious hatred that is directed against ethnic minorities. In Sudan, the Islamic regime is running a declared jihad against the African Christians, who are sitting on the last of the country’s oil. ”It’s genocide taking place before our eyes, and we’re not talking about it.”

Paul Marshall, author of Blind Spot – When Journalists Don’t Get Religion, thinks another factor is that so few journalists are Christian. Thus they tend to think that religion doesn’t have any intellectual content, it is merely feelings and emotion, so it’s not worth the effort to learn about it.  Marshall, a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute for Religious Freedom in Washington, says the churches, in turn, are not very good at talking to journalists. It’s easy, too, to overlook that opponents such as Osama bin Laden have had a coherent, intelligent view of the world, even if we disagree with it.

Meanwhile suffering Christians might find scant consolation in the knowledge they were warned – Jesus says, in the Gospel of John: ”In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world.”

Barney Zwartz is religion editor.

Secularism and the Borg

Its  Doom is Sure

Here is yet another case exposing how the Borg-like mind of secularism works.  A couple in New York State who rent the use of their farm for social events, including weddings, is now shutting that part of their business down.  Why?  Aren’t people getting married any more?  Not at all.  Rather–and you know what’s coming next–the couple, Cynthia and Robert Gifford are Christians and they do not want their premises to be used to sanctify homosexual “marriage”. 

They were approached by two women who wanted to rent their facilities to mark their faux-marriage.  The Gifford’s refused.  The “couple” complained to New York’s Division of Human Rights, asserting that they had been discriminated against because of their homosexuality.  The judge ruled in their favour.  The Giffords were fined $13,000.  They have been required to teach “classes” of their employees the state’s definition of marriage and non-discrimination.  A nice bit of state imposed re-education.  Shades of 1984.  The Giffords have shut that part of their business down, stating they will no longer hold any wedding ceremonies on their property.

What can we learn from cases such as this?

Firstly, the incidence of such faux discrimination cases will multiply greatly.  The logic of secularism is closed and operates within four windowless walls.  The only operating deity is the state.  Marriage is defined by the state, legalised by the state, and defended by the state.  Whatever the state says, goes.  If the state says that couples of the same sex can enter marriage, then the Borg has spoken; the hive must obey and think and act as they have been told.  Secularism allows no other view inside its four walls.  Christians will never comply.  Their room is open and answers to the Living God.  The state is but a servant of God–in this case, a rebellious servant.  Christians will traduce the illegalities of the secular state, and suffer the consequences if necessary–as the Gifford’s have done.  It’s called persecution.  It will become increasingly common.

Secondly, the secular state will end in ignominy.  The logic of the Borg is relentless.  If two people of the same sex must be allowed to marry, so must half a dozen people.  Welcome to polygamous “marriages”, polyandrous “marriages”, bestial “marriages”, and the sanctioning of relationships promoted by the “Man-boy Love Association”.  The secular state defines marriage to be a human right–but its definition of human rights embraces whatever someone wants to do as a human right.  Since marriage is a coalition of the willing, by definition all who are willing to get married have a human right to get married.   The secular mind is a universal acid: it will progressively burn through everything, including itself.

Thirdly, notice how private is now defined by the Borg.  In more Christian days, privacy and what deemed private was offset against the state.  A private business was one not owned and operated by the state.  The “public” in this context was the state.  Now, no business is a private business because it sells or trades with others not itself.  Secularism has re-defined private to be limited to what goes on within one’s head.  As soon as another person is involved, it is a public act and the public authorities–known as the state–can rule and regulate it to its heart’s content. 

Judge Migdalia Pares ruled that Liberty Ridge Farm is a public accommodation because it rents its space and regularly collects fees from the public. The judge said the fact that the owners live on the premises does not mean that their business is private in nature. [The Blaze]

Luther used to joke that the only part of the human anatomy not controlled by the Pope was the rear end.  The growing Borg-like secularist tyranny, however, is no joke and its vaunted ambitions to possess and control all things are without bound.  But its overreach, its rebellion against King Jesus, is doomed to failure. 

The lesson for Christians and the Church?  Keep faithful.  Keep on one’s knees.  Refining through suffering first begins with the household of God.  Our sins and unfaithfulness are great.  How appropriate that our willingness to cede false honour to the secularist state has resulted in the Borg attempting to colonise us.  Resist we must and shall.  Here we stand.  We can do no other.  The victory and the honour belong to Christ.  He is a jealous God, and will brook no rivals.  The secularist state and its mind-eating Borg will eventually be broken asunder. 

Luther, at this point, is the wisest of counsellors:

A mighty fortress is our God, a bulwark never failing;
Our helper He, amid the flood of mortal ills prevailing:
For still our ancient foe doth seek to work us woe;
His craft and power are great, and, armed with cruel hate,
On earth is not his equal.

Did we in our own strength confide, our striving would be losing;
Were not the right Man on our side, the Man of God’s own choosing:
Dost ask who that may be? Christ Jesus, it is He;
Lord Sabaoth, His Name, from age to age the same,
And He must win the battle.

And though this world, with devils filled, should threaten to undo us,
We will not fear, for God hath willed His truth to triumph through us:
The Prince of Darkness grim, we tremble not for him;
His rage we can endure, for lo, his doom is sure,
One little word shall fell him.

That word above all earthly powers, no thanks to them, abideth;
The Spirit and the gifts are ours through Him Who with us sideth:
Let goods and kindred go, this mortal life also;
The body they may kill: God’s truth abideth still,
His kingdom is forever.

A Latter Day Julius Caesar

Christians: The world’s most persecuted people

The former Chief Rabbi is appalled at the lack of protest about the treatment of Christians round the globe, and so should we be 

One woman, at least, is safe. Throughout much of her pregnancy, she had been in prison in Khartoum, capital of the Republic Sudan, living with the dread expectation that she would be hanged once her baby was born. Her crime was that she had married a Christian and been accused by the authorities of apostasy, renouncing her faith, even though she maintained she had never been a Muslim in the first place. On Thursday, Meriam Ibrahim’s eight-month ordeal finally ended when she was flown out of the country to Rome where she, and her new baby daughter, met the Pope in the Vatican.

But it has been a different story for the 3,000 Christians of Mosul who were driven from their homes in northern Iraq  by Islamist fanatics who broadcast a fatwa from the loudspeakers of the city’s mosques ordering them to convert to Islam, submit to its rule and pay a religious levy, or be put to death if they stayed. The last to leave was a disabled woman who could not travel. The fanatics arrived at her home and told her they would cut off her head with a sword.

. . . 80 per cent of all acts of religious discrimination in the world today are directed at Christians.

Most people in the West would be surprised by the answer to the question: who are the most persecuted people in the world? According to the International Society for Human Rights, a secular group with members in 38 states worldwide, 80 per cent of all acts of religious discrimination in the world today are directed at Christians.

The Centre for the Study of Global Christianity in the United States estimates that 100,000 Christians now die every year, targeted because of their faith – that is 11 every hour. The Pew Research Center says that hostility to religion reached a new high in 2012, when Christians faced some form of discrimination in 139 countries, almost three-quarters of the world’s nations.

All this seems counter-intuitive here in the West where the history of Christianity has been one of cultural dominance and control ever since the Emperor Constantine converted and made the Roman Empire Christian in the 4th century AD.  Yet the plain fact is that Christians are languishing in jail for blasphemy in Pakistan, and churches are burned and worshippers regularly slaughtered in Nigeria and Egypt, which has recently seen its worst anti-Christian violence in seven centuries.

A few voices have been raised in the West about all this. The religious historian Rupert Shortt has written a book called Christianophobia. America’s most prominent religious journalist, John L Allen Jnr, has just published The Global War on Christians. The former chief rabbi Jonathan Sacks told the House of Lords recently that the suffering of Middle East Christians is “one of the crimes against humanity of our time”. He compared it with Jewish pogroms in Europe and said he was “appalled at the lack of protest it has evoked”.

. . . the world’s Christians fall through the cracks of the left-right divide – they are too religious for liberals and too foreign for conservatives.

Why is this in a culture that is happy to make public protest against the ferocity of the Israeli bombardment of Gaza or the behaviour of Russia in Ukraine?  In part, it is because our intelligentsia are locked into old ways of thinking about Christianity as the dominant force in Western historic hegemony. The church has not helped in this, with its fixation on pious religiosity and on cultural issues that it falsely regards as totemic – issues such as gay marriage and women bishops.

A bogus dichotomy between religion and equality has been set up, resulting in a succession of comparatively trivial new (sic) stories about receptionists being banned from wearing religious jewellery or nurses being suspended for offering to pray for patients’ recovery. Adopting the rhetoric of persecution on such matters obscures the very real persecution of Christians being killed or driven from their homes elsewhere in the globe.

Most of the world’s Christians are not engaged in stand-offs with intolerant secularists over such small matters. In the West, Christianity may have increasingly become embraced by the middle class and abandoned by the working class. But elsewhere the vast majority of Christians are poor, many of them struggling against antagonistic majority cultures, and have different priorities in life.

The paradox this produces is that, as Allen points out, the world’s Christians fall through the cracks of the left-right divide – they are too religious for liberals and too foreign for conservatives.

In the UK, it is socially respectable among the secular elite to regard Christianity as weird and permissible to bully its followers a little. This produces the surreal political reality in which President Obama visits Saudi Arabia and “does not get the time” to raise the suppression of Christianity in the oil-rich nation; and in which Prime Minister Cameron gets a broadside from illiberal secularists for the historically unquestionable assertion that Britain’s culture is formed by Christian values.

The reality of being a Christian in most of the world today is very different. It only adds to their tragedy that the West fails to understand that – or to heed the plea of men such as the Catholic Patriarch of Jerusalem Fouad Twal when he asks: “Does anybody hear our cry? How many atrocities must we endure before somebody, somewhere, comes to our aid?”

Paul Vallely is visiting professor of public ethics at Chester Univeristy

Vallely’s article is right on the money when he calls attention to the general pogrom that is being unleashed upon Christians around the world today.   He is also right when he highlights the silence of the West on the matter and the double standards at work.  But, in our view, he completely misses the mark when trying to explain this lapse of moral judgment.

Firstly, he trivialises the oppression of Christians in the West, writing, that Christians have made far too much fuss “on cultural issues that it falsely regards as totemic – issues such as gay marriage and women bishops.”  In so opining, he betrays the root of this problem in the West, on the one hand, and that he himself becomes an implicit advocate or apologist for the West’s loathing of Christianity, on the other. 

For the secular West in general, religious faith, including Christianity, is a curious relic of the pre-secular primitive past.  The fact that Christians still remain in the secular West is testimony to their particular ignorance, superstition, and primitive thought patterns.  Christians resist homosexual “marriage” because they have made totems–like all primitive religions–clinging to these archaisms because they are unable to move with the tide of secular enlightenment.  A similar condescending paternalism applies to Vallely’s criticism about Christians resisting the ordination of women.  He fails to grasp that Christians resist these defalcations because of their fidelity to the Lord of the heavens and the earth.  They believe and understand that His law binds–way beyond the pretensions of secularist ethics and fads.

Of course, Vallely would protest that such totems are minor matters in the global scheme of things, but in doing so fails to realise that it is secularism which is informing his judgment about what he judges is really important and what he considers unimportant.  

The fact that secularists abuse Christians for such faith and fidelity to the Christ is in principle no different from the abuse of Christians by Hindu extremists in India or Islamists in Iraq.  In both cases fidelity to Christ is being excoriated and punished.  The only difference is that in the West there is enough of a Christian legal tradition still remaining that the law restrains the hatred and anger towards Christians that is expressed whenever it has opportunity–on websites, twitter, and other media not subject to anti-defamation laws. 

Christians are thankful that such mercies still apply in the West and that the pogrom here is restrained.  But we are in no doubt that secular humanism is an aggressive, minatory religion that will oppress and punish all who stand in its way–given half a chance.  Vallely lacks epistemological self-consciousness about his own position (he is not a neutral observer, after all), and he also lacks awareness of the epistemology of secularism.

Finally, Vallely implies that Christians are significantly to blame for the silence of the West over the global persecution of Christians.  Christians have distracted the West by majoring on minors, and adopting “the rhetoric of persecution” on such matters.  Christians have lost perspective, he implies, failing to understand that that the secularist ethic of equality enforced upon Christians is not persecution, whereas real persecution exists when you lose your home or your life.

His article cites John L. Allen, referring to his recent book, The Global War on Christians, who claims  “. . . the world’s Christians fall through the cracks of the left-right divide – they are too religious for liberals and too foreign for conservatives”.  That about gets it right, for Western liberals and conservatives are both alike secularist,–although arguably secular conservatives, because of the desire to preserve what they deem acceptable from their heritage, are generally more tolerant of Christians than secular liberals.

We Christians do not despise the help and assistance of Unbelievers and secularists.  We are thankful for it.  It was Julius Caesar, for all his monstrous ambitions and lawlessness, who respected and protected the Jewish enclaves in Rome.  Such things are not uncommon in the history of the Kingdom.  Whilst we pray for the “king” and seek the good of all men, we have low expectations of a mutual response, albeit very thankful to God when it happens as in ancient Rome.  For our hope is not in fallen man, but in God, our Lord and Saviour.  For we know that the heart of the king (and authorities of every kind) is in the hand of the Lord.  He turns it wherever He will.  (Proverbs 21:1)

We are thus thankful to Vallely for calling attention to the global pogrom against Christians and being a latter day type of Julius Caesar for the Lord’s people.

Letter From the UK (About Double Standards)

The West must face the evil that has revealed itself in the Iraq genocide 

By
The Telegraph
August 10, 2014

A beautiful mosaic of ancient religions, cultures and languages in the Middle East is being systematically destroyed. Until now, the world has watched mutely. When Muslims were threatened with genocide in Bosnia, the international community acted in concert to prevent the campaign against them developing into a full-scale pogrom. I went there myself, as part of an effort to bring relief supplies to all those who were affected. I was also present when millions of Afghan refugees poured into Pakistan after the Soviet invasion of that country. Once again, Western countries, Christian, Islamic and secular organisations were at the forefront of bringing relief to these people.

For years now the Christian, Mandaean, Yazidi and other ancient communities of Iraq, have been harried, bombed, exiled and massacred without anyone batting so much as an eyelid. Churches have been bombed, clergy kidnapped and murdered, shops and homes attacked and destroyed. This persecution has now been elevated to genocide by the advent of Isis. People are being beheaded, crucified, shot in cold blood and exiled to a waterless desert simply because of their religious beliefs.

What began in Iraq, continued in Syria. Here the West’s ill-advised backing of an Islamist uprising (largely funded by Saudi Arabia and Qatar) against the Assad regime has turned into a nightmare which has given birth to ultra-extremist organisations like Isis. Once again, religious and ethnic minorities, whether Christian, Alawite or Druze, have been the victims, alongside ordinary people of all kinds. Isis, now armed to the teeth with weaponry originally intended by the suppliers for “moderate” Islamist groups, has arrived in Iraq with a vengeance beyond anything that unfortunate country has so far experienced.

Next door in Iran, the Baha’i have been reduced to being a non-people: their marriages are not recognised, their children cannot be educated, their leaders have been executed or are in prison and even their graveyards have been desecrated. Christians, similarly, are not allowed to worship in Farsi, or to hold meetings in their homes. Churches have either been closed or can open only under tightly-controlled conditions. Any violation of these orders brings arrest, interrogation and imprisonment. Zoroastrians, belonging to the indigenous religion of Iran, are now so reduced in numbers that there are more of them outside Iran than remain in the country.

Jews, likewise, are in daily danger of being associated with Zionism and having their property confiscated as “enemy property”, even if they have never set foot in Israel.  In Pakistan, Christians are being cowed by the draconian blasphemy laws, systematic discrimination and terrorist attacks on churches, schools and social organisations. The Ahmadiyya (a heterodox group), also, suffer legal discrimination, restrictions on the practice of their religion and recurrent mob violence. Only in Egypt can we say that the large Coptic minority has a breathing space as they await the emergence, perhaps, of a new order.

So will the world just stand by and watch this unprecedented onslaught on freedom or will we do something beyond airdropping food and medicines and protecting our own personnel who may be caught up in the conflict?

Along with many others, I have been saying for sometime now that Iraqi minorities need internationally protected “safe havens”. Until recently, the obvious place for Christian safe havens were the plains of Nineveh. For years, the West operated no-fly zones over Saddam’s Iraq to protect Kurds in the North and the Marsh Arabs in the South. What can be done to protect those under threat now?

I recognise that American or British “boots on the ground” is asking for the moon, but a UN-authorised international force, drawn from a variety of countries, is desperately needed to prevent multiple genocide. This can go hand in hand with whatever air action is deemed practical in consultation with the Kurds and with Baghdad. If the UN cannot prevent this genocide, hard questions will have to be asked about its utility at all.
In Syria, the international community must encourage a negotiated end to the Civil War (without preconditions, such as the departure of Bashar Al-Assad). Everything must be done to prevent the acquisition of weaponry by extremists, whether directly or indirectly. As with Iraq, once relative security returns to the land, there will have to be a massive programme of rebuilding historic cities like Aleppo, returning refugees and internationally-displaced persons to their homes and the rehabilitation of the injured. It is clear that Syria will not be able to achieve this on its own. A very significant international effort will be needed. I am sure the large Syrian diaspora will assist in such an effort.

The paradox is, of course, that the West supported the uprising in Syria partly to check Iran’s influence over the Assad regime. Now that same Iran is needed to check the advance of Isis in Iraq. But can Iran be trusted in this matter or, indeed, on what is of much greater concern to the West, the nuclear issue? How can we trust a regime to keep its word internationally when it oppresses its own people, denying them basic freedoms of movement, belief and worship? Surely, any re-engagement with Iran must be will have to be all-round? It must take into account not only what is perceived as a threat to the West or Israel but also the future of Iran’s role in the region, as well as its treatment of women, religious and ethnic minorities.

On a wider front, bilateral relations, particularly aid, will have to be agreed with the human rights situation fully in view. Article 18 of the UN Declaration on Universal Human Rights can be a template for such discussions. Is educational aid, for instance, simply fuelling the teaching of hatred in school text books or is it being used to remove such teaching? Is aid reaching marginalised minorities, women and the very poor? There has been a welcome concern in the United Kingdom to help in the development of the rule of law and of legal systems. Such an approach can be used, on a case-by-case basis, to encourage ‘a Bill of Rights’ in Egypt, for example, or a review of the blasphemy laws in Pakistan. At another level, assistance with legal discourse on punishment which moves away from an Islamist insistence on deterrence to more consideration of reform and rehabilitation, will lead to the development of more humane legal systems and greater respect for fundamental freedoms.

We cannot go on as before. The evil, with which we have been living for so long, has once again revealed its full face in Iraq. It is not a pretty sight and the international community must ensure that it has no place in the coming world order.

Letter From the UK (About Western Blind Eyes)

Iraqi Christians are raped, murdered and driven from their homes – and the West is silent 

By
The Telegraph
July 21st, 2014 


For the first time in 1,600 years, Mass is not being said in Mosul: an ancient culture has been wiped out in a matter of weeks. It’s a war crime that, strangely, no one seems to want to talk about.

Mosul is the second-largest city in Iraq and the place where many Christians believe Jonah was buried. Since the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (Isis) rode into town, their faith has been forced underground. Bells have been silenced, the hijab enforced with bullets. Tens of thousands fled after being offered an unattractive choice: convert, pay a religious tax, or be put to the sword. The levy was unaffordable. According to one local news agency, Isis troops entered the house of a poor Christian and, when they didn’t get what they wanted, the soldiers raped the mother and daughter in front of their husband and father. He committed suicide out of grief.

Having driven away the worshippers, the Isis fanatics are now trying to extinguish the physical legacy they left behind. A centuries-old church has been burned to the ground; Jonah’s tomb has been desecrated. Isis wants to create the Islamic equivalent of Year Zero, a brave new world with no evidence of Christianity, women’s rights, democracy or even that most subversive of instincts, human pity.

It might seem like this revolution has nothing to do with us in the West, but that’s more than a little naive.
The genocide of local Christians did not begin with Isis but with the 2003 invasion of Iraq. Prior to the conflict, there were 1.5 million “Chaldeans, Syro-Catholics, Syro-Orthodox, Assyrians from the East, Catholic and Orthodox Armenians” in the country – living, of course, under the tyranny of Saddam Hussein, but living nonetheless. Today, their number has dropped to just 400,000. Religious violence peaked in the first four years of the invasion and then declined dramatically after the US-led surge. There was a hope that President Nouri al-Maliki would live up to his initial promise to protect religious minorities. But the rise of Sunni opposition to the Shiite regime in Baghdad sparked a second phase of persecution against Iraqi Christians.

Over the border came Isis, a particularly virulent strain of Islamism previously incubating in Syria’s civil war. Bashar al-Assad’s refusal to surrendered power in Damascus has destabilised the region yet further (the use of gas weaponry has a tendency to court opposition) and his own Christians have found themselves trapped in the middle of an internecine Islamic bloodbath: it was one year ago in the northern Syrian city of Raqqa where Isis first experimented with its instruction to “convert, pay a tax or die”. The Syrian patriarch of the Melkite Greek Catholic Church has estimated that perhaps 25 per cent of his country’s 2 million refugees are Christian.

The West’s direct intervention in Iraq created Hell on Earth for its Christian citizens, while the West’s lack of action in Syria (out of deference to its failings in Iraq) has permitted a regrouping of Islamist forces and the opening of a second front against Christians. The lesson is: “either leave other countries alone or, if you must intervene, do so with consistency and resilience”. The consequences of going in, messing things up and then quitting with a weary shrug are terrible for those left behind.

Martin Luther King: “In the End, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends.”

Yet, having been so intimately involved in the collapse of Iraq, the West is now bizarrely silent about events in Mosul. The streets of London fill with thousands marching against Israel’s military operation in Gaza; the West rails mightily against the Russian separatists in Ukraine. But of Iraq there is nothing. Why?

It could be that no Westerner wants to return to Iraq, that politicians fear that even discussing the country will lead voters to fear yet another invasion and yet another bloody occupation. Or it could be that we feel embarrassed about the very idea of Christians as a persecuted minority. The reporter John Allen argues that Westerners have been trained to think of Christians as “an agent of aggression, not its victim” – so we’re deaf to pleas for help. That opinion is supported by Ed West in an excellent e-book, and its consequences have been condemned by religious leaders here in the UK. Rabbi Jonathan Sacks has compared the suffering of Middle East Christians with Jewish pogroms in Europe and reminded everyone of the words of Martin Luther King: “In the End, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends.” It would indeed be awful to think that the West might remain silent as violence rages purely out of a failure to recognise that Christians can be victimised, or out of a reluctance to cast aspersions on certain brands of Islam. It would make this the first genocide in history to be tolerated out of social awkwardness.

The West’s response to Mosul is worthy of contempt: if we won’t speak out for Christians, who will? But any disgust at our own moral cowardice should be balanced by admiration for the Iraqis who continue to bear witness to their faith in a land that moves closer and closer to outlawing it. Their resilience illustrates the difference between fundamentalist Islam and Christianity: the former is a religion of killers, the latter is a religion of martyrs. And for those of us who share the faith of the thousands fleeing Mosul, Jesus’s own sacrifice offers hope – a reminder that victory is guaranteed for those who endure: “Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil: for thou art with me; thy rod and thy staff they comfort me.”

Whatever your faith, please pray for the Christians of Mosul.

A New Diaspora

Jihadist-held Mosul free of Christians

July 21, 2014
The Daily Telegraph

IRAQ’S second-biggest city has been cleared of Christians, an Iraqi official says, as Mosul’s final Christian families, facing an ultimatum from Islamist militants at home, fled to the autonomous region of Kurdistan.

“THE numbers of Christians in Mosul were around 50,000 people,” said Bashar Kiki, a local council chief in the northern province of Nineveh, where Mosul is the key city.

“Since (the US-led invasion of) 2003, around 30,000 Christians have left the city. The rest have left the city after recent threats made by terrorist groups,” he added. Kiki relocated the council to the town of Qushahwali, some 45km north of Mosul, after it fell to militants from the Islamic State terrorist organisation in June. “Now Mosul is free of Christians for the first time in its history.”

Earlier this week, members of the Islamic State ordered Mosul’s Christians to either convert to Islam or pay a protection tax or face death. The al-Qaeda splinter group gave Christians until mid-Saturday to make a choice.

A presidential spokesman in Kurdistan on Saturday called on the world to swiftly assist the Kurdistan government in sheltering and protecting the Christians they have taken in. According to Iraq’s most senior Christian cleric, Chaldean Catholic Patriarch Louis Raphael Sako, there were about 1.2 million Christians living in Iraq before the US-led invasion of the country. The figure has dwindled to around 500,000 at present.

The Islamic State has seized large chunks of territory in Iraq’s Sunni heartland in the north and west in recent weeks. The chief of the radical Sunni group, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, last month declared the establishment of an Islamist caliphate in the territory under its control, which includes parts of Iraq and neighbouring Syria, raising fears for the emergence of a regional militant enclave.

[We are thankful that the Christians have escaped and found refuge in Kurdistan.  May God bless those who have shown them refuge.  Ed.]

Letter From America (About China)

China Persecuting Christians, But . . .

Christian Persecution Update 2014

The 10 Absolute Worst Places in the World to Be a Christian



Open Doors USA, an organization that monitors and exposes Christian persecution around the globe, has released its “2014 World Watch List” — a report that highlights and ranks the worst nations in the world to be a Christian.
Topping the list this year are countries known for brutal government crackdowns or for the uncontrolled and murderous tactics of extremist groups within their borders.  The absolute worst places to be a Christian this year are: North Korea, Somalia, Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan.
The below graphic shows the top 10 most brutal countries for believers; the 2013 results are also present to the right, so you can see where these nations placed last year (for a full explanation on the 2013 results, read our previous coverage):

Open Doors USA Ranks The 10 Absolute Worst Places in the World to Be a Christian

Credit: Open Doors USA
Note the nine of the top ten countries for persecution of Christians are Islamic.  Korea is the exception–a Stalinist dictatorship married to an absolutist cult of  a divinised personality.  [Ed.]
Dr. David Curry, CEO and president of Open Doors USA, told TheBlaze Tuesday that his organization is hoping the report will help draw attention to the fact that Christians, despite being in the majority in the U.S., are actually the largest persecuted religious minority in the world.  “We’re going to motivate the U.S. to pay attention to this issue as a critical component of creating free societies and to support Christians wherever they may be in the world,” he said.
In ranking each country on the list, Curry said his team looked at violence, government pressures and other related indicators. These issues are collectively assessed and countries are rated on a point system, which subsequently led to the current rankings.  “Not every circumstance is the same. For example, in North Korea, you have a quasi-Stalinist government that is the most difficult place to call yourself a Christian on the planet — and has been for the last 12 years,” he noted.  But while North Korea’s government is the real culprit, in places like Iraq, “roving extremist groups” are waging attacks against Christians, while government officials are seemingly powerless to stop the carnage, he explained.
Curry also charged that the Obama administration has essentially declined to make the protection of religious minorities a priority, linking a failure to uphold religious freedom in foreign nations with the destabilization of some governments.  “There are many instances where the vacuum of leadership and spokesman-ship has created a real problem,” said the human rights leader. “I would say that every significant data point on this year’s ’2014 Watch List’ is worse — and I think a factor in it is a lack of leadership from Western governments including … the U.S. in terms of religious freedom.”
Open Doors USA Ranks The 10 Absolute Worst Places in the World to Be a Christian

An interactive map showing the concentration of Christian persecution (Credit: Open Doors USA)
Curry is hopeful that the report will show the U.S. government the importance that freedom of religion has to any free and civilized society.  Citing some of the surprises in this year’s report, he noted that Columbia — a nation that is generally considered overtly Christian — actually ticked up on the list from the 46th spot in 2013 to the 25th in 2014. This is due to violence against pastors and churches speaking out against the drug cartels.
Another surprise on the list was the Central African Republic, which wasn’t in the top 50 last year, but is ranked 16th this year. TheBlaze reported last month about a Bible translator who was shot and killed there, as Christians are being routinely targeted by mainly Islamic extremists.
See an interactive map and view the top 50 countries where Christians are the most persecuted in the world here.

Too Polite to Mention

 Persecution of Islam On the Rise 

We often forget that Muslims are dying violent deaths every day.  Arguably, Islam is the most persecuted religion in the world.  But what is also forgotten is that Islam is also the most persecuting religion on the globe–and that its persecution is most often directed at fellow Muslims.  The world is exploding with Muslim upon Muslim violence: moreover, it is not just a recent phenomenon.  It is, however, a growing problem.  Iraq, Syria, Egypt, Libya, Afghanistan, and Pakistan have all experienced increasing Islamic persecution of Muslims this past year. 

Some have argued that this is due to a lack of unifying structures and authorities.
  Islam has suffered, it is suggested, from toxic decentralisation which has allowed the various sects to war amongst themselves.  Islam has never recovered from the dissolution of the Caliphate in 1924.  Islam is a religion which preaches and demands submission–submission to Allah, through his rulers upon earth.  But there are far too many rulers, each demanding submission from everyone else.  Islam craves a world-wide ruler–the Caliph, as long as the Caliph is of us, not the cursed Shi’ites, or Sunnis, or Wahhabists, or whatever. 

Regardless, Islam right now has no large, authoritative institution with a “tradition of existence” that can temper the forces of zealotry and puritanism sweeping through the Muslim world.  Instead, would-be Muslim Martin Luthers and mini Mahdis issue more fatwahs than Luther had theses, telling why vast numbers of non-believers must be slaughtered or converted, why Islam will conquer the world, and how theological backsliding [that is, other Islamic sects] or compromise is a crime punishable by death.  [Jonah Goldberg, The Tyranny of Cliches: How Liberals Cheat in the War of Ideas (New York: Sentinel/Penguin, 2012), p. 239.]

This internecine Islamic hatred is reportedly provoking many Islamic people to leave their religion behind.   To secular Western folk, however, the violence is not intrinsic to Islam itself.  Rather, it is a product of primitiveness, of being captured in a time-warp of poverty, ignorance, and pre-Western economic development.  Once Islamic people get a decent Western education and adopt Western political ideologies based upon human rights and freedoms, the violence will fade away.  This arrogant and naive view is an extension of the West’s secularism–that is, all religions are not to be taken seriously; at best they are private belief systems not to be allowed to intrude in any public squares or places. 

The West thus refuses to take Muslim upon Muslim violence seriously.  At best it is not a problem we need to be concerned with at all.  At worst it is something which Islamic nations will “grow out of” along the road to modernity.  Two years ago, Western leaders were prattling on endlessly and gushing profusely about the Arab Spring, believing that huge progress was about to be made.  They forgot that “Islam” means submission–if not voluntarily and willingly, then forced.

There are some things that ought not to be mentioned in polite conversation. 

Choose You This Day . . .

Becoming a Shechemite Christian

Astute Christians have known for some time that persecution against God’s people is coming again–in the West.  The Church has never been entirely free of it, of course.  Constantine abolished state persecution of the Church.  Since that time, it has sprung forth again occasionally.

In recent history, regimes that have locked Christians up and killed them off for the crime of being Christians have been cast as evil or wicked, such as the Nazi’s or the Stalinists.  The point is that Nazi and Stalinist repression was not focused upon Christians, but upon lots of ne’er-do-wells.  State repression hit gypsies, Jews, kulaks, Poles, and Christians.  Anyone and anything which seemed to challenge the totalitarian iron fist was fair game.  Satan does not mind.  Evil and rebellion against God is his game.  Hatred of all men is his modus operandi. 

But what is coming down the pike now is a bit different–more like a throwback to pre-Constantinian Roman times.
  Society is singling out Christians for opprobrium and hatred.  It is following up its hatred with legal repression.  The current battleground is homosexual “marriage”.  Next decade it will likely move on to more pretexts. 

Homosexual “marriage” is not “legal” in the United States, except in those states which have deemed it so.  New Mexico is one state where homosexual “marriage” is not legal.  Nevertheless the state supreme court has declared it illegal for any provider of marriage services to refuse service to a homosexual “marriage”, regardless of the faith or convictions of the service provider.  This from TheBlaze:

Today the New Mexico Supreme Court ruled that Christian photographers cannot decline to participate in gay-marriage commitment ceremonies, even though that state does not have gay marriage and the court acknowledged that providing services for the ceremony violated the Christian’s sincerely-held, traditional religious beliefs.

This becomes one of the first major cases where religious liberty collides with gay rights, and could now go to the Supreme Court of the United States. Elane Huguenin is a photographer in New Mexico. She and her husband Jonathan jointly own their family business, Elane Photography. Specifically, Elane is a photojournalist—using a carefully-planned series of photographs to tell a story and convey a message. She is also a devout Christian, who believes that marriage is the union of one man and one woman.

In 2006, Vanessa Willock contacted Elane Photography, asking Elane to photograph her lesbian commitment ceremony. It was a private commitment ceremony because New Mexico recognizes neither gay marriage nor gay civil unions. Elane thanked Willock for her interest, but explained that due to her religious beliefs she only does traditional weddings.

Willock filed a complaint against Elane with the New Mexico Human Rights Commission, citing a state law that does not allow discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation. The commission ruled Elane’s decision illegal, and imposed a fine of $7,000 to cover legal fees.  Elane took this matter to court, represented by Jordan Lorence of the Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF). The trial court upheld the fine, as did the court of appeals.

The New Mexico Supreme Court has now affirmed the lower courts, holdingthat Elane Photography is a “public accommodation,” and because they photograph wedding ceremonies they cannot refuse a gay-commitment ceremony (even if it is not a legal wedding).

In a concurring opinion, Justice Richard Bosson wrote Elane and Jonathan:

… now are compelled by law to compromise the very religious beliefs that inspire their lives… the result is sobering. It will no doubt leave a tangible mark on the Huguenins and others of similar views.

… At its heart, this case teaches that at some point in our lives all of us must compromise, if only a little, to accommodate the contrasting values of others. A multicultural, pluralistic society, one of our nation’s strengths, demands no less. The Huguenins are free to … pray to the God of their choice … But there is a price, one that we all have to pay somewhere in our civic life.

Bosson goes on to say having to violate your religious beliefs when they conflict with social issues like gay marriage “is the price of citizenship.”

In response to today’s decision, Lorence said in an ADF statement:

Government-coerced expression is a feature of dictatorships that has no place in a free country. This decision is a blow to our client and to every American’s right to live free. Decisions like this undermine the constitutionally protected freedoms of expression and conscience that we have all taken for granted. America was founded on the fundamental freedom of every citizen to live and work according to their beliefs and not to be compelled by the government to express ideas and messages they decline to support. We are considering our next steps, including asking the U.S. Supreme Court to right this wrong.

A recent Rasmussen poll showedthat 85% of Americans support the right of a religious photographer not to participate in a gay-marriage ceremony.  A petition to the U.S. Supreme Court asking for review is due by mid-November.

Breitbart News legal columnist Ken Klukowski is senior fellow for religious liberty at the Family Research Council and on faculty at Liberty University School of Law. Follow him on Twitter @kenklukowski.

It is likely that this ruling will be challenged in higher courts.  What the outcome will be is unknown.  But some initial observations are in order.

Firstly, notice that homosexual “marriage” is legal non-existent nullity in New Mexico.  Nevertheless, the state supreme court decided that human rights legislation forbad any refusal of service, regardless of the conscience of those involved.  Human rights–or, more accurately, spurious human rights dogma–trumps religious convictions.  Imagine how the courts will decide in those state where homosexual “marriage” is legalised. 

Secondly, note the reasoning of one of the justices.  The law now requires Christians to compromise their faith.  In the conflict between society’s demands and the demands of God, society must win.  It is what a multi-cultural society demands.  No less is expected.  People are free to do what they like in the privacy of their own heads.  But when it comes to civic and civil matters, the state and secular humanism and multi-culturalism trumps every time.  It is one of the strengths of the republic, we are told.  And if any disagree or demur or do otherwise, they will be punished by the state, lest the republic be undermined.

The battle-lines are becoming clearer: secular humanism versus the Lord Jesus Christ.  All Christians in the West are going to have to face this.  It is best now that we prepare ourselves, our children, and grand-children for it.  But how to prepare?  The best preparation is one of faith.  It is to re-commit, to resolve again to be the Lord’s servants.  The challenge of Joshua to our fathers at the great covenant renewal of Shechem is as relevant today as it was then: choose you this day whom you will serve.  Will you serve the gods your fathers used to serve in Egypt or those of  the Amorites around you? But as for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.  (Joshua 24: 15)

Facing Joshua’s challenge, and answering it as he did, both for himself and his household, in heart, in truth, and in integrity, is the essential preparation for the tests that lie ahead. 

Haters of Humanity

Baalism or the Christ

Neutrality is not an option.  It is a chimera.  The Scriptures declare that one is either for the Lord Jesus Christ, or against Him.  No middle ground.  And our Lord added, he who does not gather with Me, scatters.  These statements are not startling; they are entirely predictable and expected.  After all, our Lord is the light of the world.  Darkness cannot continue or abide in the light.  They are opposites.  When men are confronted with the light, they will either come to Christ, into His light, or they will flee Him.  No neutrality.

The secular humanist state, now regnant throughout the West, professes neutrality towards the Christ.  It is officially neither for Him, nor against Him.  The secular humanist state considers Him irrelevant.  If He exists at all, He belongs to a realm that has no bearing upon earthly reality.

But what of His followers?
  How does the modern secular state regard them?  With like neutrality.  The state and its engines are neither for Christians nor against them–so long as their faith and loyalty to Christ stays in the closet.  But as soon as Christians seek to live out their faith in public, look out.  The vaunted neutrality of the secular humanist state disappears in a puff of smoke.  Suddenly, the state is not neutral at all. 

The professed neutrality of the secular humanist state towards Christ and His disciples is a charade.  The words of Christ are true–one cannot be neutral toward Him; the words of the secular state are misleading and deceptive; they are lies.

Unbelief is never static.  It is always moving.  It is either moving towards the Light, or away from it.  So with the secular humanist state.  And consistently governments in the West have moved away from Christ for the last fifty years.  One of the consequences is that the canard of state neutrality towards the King of all governments is wearing more and more thin.  Christians, therefore, need expect that public opposition will grow and eventually persecution will break out once more against the Church in the West.

Western governments are moving now to enforce secular beliefs.  Some utterances are now beyond the pale.  The concept of “hate speech” has entered the political and legal lexicon.  To declare forthrightly or clearly the Christian ethical maxim that homosexuality is sinful and that homosexuals have been captured by evil and enslaved to it is to guilty of hate speech in many Western quarters.

Those not ignorant of our history know that this has been heard before.  It was alleged by the Roman imperium that Christians were “haters of the human race”.  They would not worship the gods–which needed to be placated to keep them onside, thus preventing natural disasters, war, famines and the like.  Failure to placate the idols meant that Christians must hate other people.  That allegation of hatred of mankind provided convenient justification for state persecution.

It is a very short bow to move from that ancient pagan construction to the secular West which increasingly characterises Christians as “haters”.  And so the maxim of our Lord proves true.  There is no middle ground.  One either gathers with the Lord of glory, or one opposes Him.  The neutrality of the secular Western state is a chimera.  Its militant secularism means that the state will increasingly bear down upon Christians and churches.

Let’s be prepared, not surprised.  Once again we will hear the challenge of the Lord’s prophet: if Yahweh is God, serve Him; but if Baal is god, serve him.  Why go limping between two opinions?  Christians are those people absolutely convinced of two things: the first is that Baal is not God; the second is that Yahweh is most certainly God.  We will not limp between the two.

It is a foolish and damned state which would move to require that Christians choose between loyalty to Christ and loyalty to itself.  We will not bless Caesar and  curse God.  Were to do so, we truly would be haters of the human race. 

Douglas Wilson’s Letter From Moscow

The Great Cat Poo Medallion

Rod Dreher has a good piece here on the great looming alternative that now confronts us.

Within the biblical framework of a rightly-ordered patriotism, it is easy for Christians to take our native loyalties to our native land as a simple given, while reserving to ourselves the right to disagree with or oppose the decisions and mandates of the current administration. Jeremiah was no less a patriot for challenging King Zedekiah. Seems simple.

But when the canker of rebellious idolatry is well-advanced in any nation, the possibility of the regnant idolaters seeing believers as part of a loyal opposition begins to steadily erode. A totalitarian miasma sets in, and any disagreement with the current forms of legislated disobedience is taken either as mental illness or treason. When Stalin wanted to deal with his political enemies, he used psychiatry to define them into his version of the outer darkness. When the ancient Romans persecuted the Christians, they did so because the Christians were enemies of mankind. And in our day, simple disagreement with the proposals surrounding same sex mirage is categorized simply, routinely, and quite handily, as “hate.” That was an extraordinary move, and entirely predictable.

And someone who is mentally ill, or treasonous, is not someone who can be a loyal son of his nation. He cannot be one who simply disagrees with the current push for same sex mirages. He is outside the pale, and he is out there by definition.

So Christians need to start making some emotional adjustments, by way of preparation. “I love my country, I fear my government” is a common sentiment among us, reflecting the common distinction I mentioned above. And our position is that our fear of God necessitates that we oppose certain actions of our government, but we need not say that it necessitates a contempt for our people, customs, language, culture, etc. That is, it does not necessitate it on our end. It very well may become a requirement coming at us from the other direction. In fact, that is what is happening, and it has been the strategic play since the appearance of the very first “Hate is Not a Family Value” bumper sticker.

I do love my country, and detest the current regime (and by “regime” I am referring to more than the current administration). Well, of course the current regime has the ability to make us choose between their policies and Jesus — that’s the easy part — but they can also frame the debate in such a way that it appears we have to reject our people and nation for the sake of Christ. It does no good to complain about them taking hostages like this — one of the results of them being in power is they can manipulate things in this way. We are not all the way there yet, but we are most of the way there.

In other words, what happens when the definition of fundamental allegiance is formally and officially altered (actually, or in effect), such that any true believer in Christ would be prohibited from professing it? The early Christians were not persecuted because of their loyalty to Jesus. That was fine with the Romans. Whatever you wanted to worship in your spare time was fine with them. The problem was caused by the Christian loyalty to Jesus precluding a certain kind of loyalty to the state. The Christians were not persecuted because of their prayers to Jesus. They were persecuted because of their refusal to say a dinky little ceremonial prayer to Caesar.

As Chesterton puts it in The Everlasting Man . . .

“A convenient compromise had been made between all the multitudinous myths and religions of the Empire; that each group should worship freely and merely give a sort of official flourish of thanks to the tolerant Emperor, by tossing a little incense to him under his official title of Divus” (p. 163).

The only problem was that faithful Christians, a lot of them, wouldn’t do it. From a secular vantage point, the Romans really were being extremely tolerant, and were fully prepared to continue being that tolerant — as long as they were recognized as the final authority. And the Christians, refusing to make that concession, seemed to the authorities to be driven by sheer cussedness. But given God’s Word to us, Christians simply cannot do this kind of thing. Not to overstate the case, it is the “Supreme Court,” not the “Supreme Being.”

Because of this, again in Chesterton’s words, the enemies of Christ responded the way they always do, by surrounding us with their own peculiar forms of organized malice — “the halo of hatred around the Church of God.” And as American Christians, once free and happy, prepare themselves to start wearing that peculiar halo again, a recent move is to accuse them of being whiners about a bunch of nothing, a charge that appears to be right on schedule. You poor, delusional thing, you. “The people answered and said, Thou hast a devil: who goeth about to kill thee?” (John 7:20).

It is most clear that we are on the verge of that stage of the proceedings now. So when the decree comes down and we are told — as we are now being prepared to be told — that we cannot oppose same sex mirage and be good Americans, our first reply ought to be “very well then, have it your way. We shall be bad Americans.”

My citizenship, my affections, my loyalties whether national or regional, my manner of expression, my lever-action Winchester, my language, my love of pie, my Americanism . . . these are all contingent things. They are all creatures, because they are attributes of my life and existence, and I am a creature. Our nation, and all its pleasant things, is a creature. The grass withers, and the flower fades.

The purveyors of soft despotism want to arrange things so  that we conform fully to their agenda, or consign ourselves to their idea of the outer darkness, which turns out to be the same kind of place as Stalin’s.

Because I think like a Christian, I don’t necessarily think it is a necessary choice at all. But it is only not necessary in a nation that is not despotic — and ours is metastasizing into despotism. So under their terms, under their rule, such a choice is mandatory — because in times of persecution, they will make it necessary — which means that I will swallow the reductio. Force me to choose between Jesus and America, and then watch me choose Jesus.

The apostle Paul knew what it was to be a true Jew (Rom. 2:29). He loved his native people intensely (Rom. 9:3-5). But he also knew that it was possible for the earthly chess pieces to be maneuvered in such a way that we might have to sacrifice our queen, and real Christians are always prepared to do this gladly. This was something Paul was willing to do, and so if you successfully got him into the position where he had to decide between being a Hebrew of Hebrews, of the tribe of Benjamin (Phil. 3:5) and the excellency of the knowledge of Jesus Christ (Phil. 3:8), he didn’t even have to think about it. The prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus (Phil. 3:14) or the Medal of Freedom? Well, if you make me choose, friend, the Medal of Freedom strikes me as a haphazard affair, as a Pringles lid hung around some compromised neck with frayed shoe laces, and said lid heavily caked with cat poo.

Is it really the settled public policy of the American nation that we must choose between our love for Jesus Christ and His heavenly kingdom, on the one hand, and on the other, parades in all our major cities celebrating anal intercourse? Well, let me think about it. Can you give me some more time?

Those believers who have had an ordinary love of country, coupled with a naive (and very unbiblical) belief that America could never become an idolatrous adversary to the kingdom of God, are the kind of people who would be quick to acknowledge on paper that if we had to choose between God and country, we should always and everywhere choose God. But having ticked that box, they murmur to themselves that they are very glad that they could never be called upon to make that choice. Sorry, but here it is. Right on top of us.

Our nation is a nation just like all the others, and we can spiral into spiritual apostasy just like all the others. We are now more than halfway down the line of statues in the royal hall of Charn, where the look of our earlier nobility has vanished and we are just three elections away from the coldest forms of despair. Just think — all over the world, drone strikes making the world safe for sodomy.

As a nation like all others, we do have the option of repentance as well. But the first sin requiring the deepest repentance will have to be that damn-fool notion of American exceptionalism.

This is why pastors have a particular and pressing duty here. If this despotic modern state is the idol of our age — and it is — then pastors have a pressing duty to prepare their parishioners to resist it. We have a duty to prepare our people to refuse to bow down when they hear the sound of the cornet, flute, harp, sackbut, psaltery, and dulcimer (Dan. 3:5). Those instruments seem odd to us today, and so does Nebuchadnezzar’s statue, but you may depend upon it — at the time, bowing down to that statue to that music at that time was about as mainstream as you could possibly get, and the only people left standing were the extremists and weirdos.

John warns Christians as little children, telling them to keep themselves from idols (1 John 5:21). This will be a pressing danger when the idolatry is mainstream, when paying your mortgage depends on conforming, when all the networks are asking what the big deal is, when we can’t buy or sell without offering that pinch of incense to the emperor, and the music has been playing for a good minute and a half now. People are starting to look. You see an official in the back writing down your name.

It is quite true that idolatry can exist as a matter of heart motive. Paul does says that greed is idolatry, for example (Eph. 5:5; Col. 3:5). But the idolatrous state doesn’t care if you are an idolater in your heart only — they will at some point insist that you register. We sometimes have a rarefied view of idolatry, thinking that such a sin could only be determined when we appear before God at the great judgment seat. We will appear there in order to answer His series of trick questions, and when He asks us which is more important, being American or Christian, we need to say, “Christian! Of course!”

But the trick questions aren’t there — they are all here.  Pastors don’t need to be preparing men to not deny Christ before the Father. They need to teach them how to not deny Him before men (Matt. 10:33).