Persecution
is nothing new. Paul was on the road to Damascus and had a life changing
encounter with the risen Lord. Many of us have had those encounters, but Paul got
an extra word of encouragement: Acts 9:15-16: "But the Lord said to
Ananias, "Go! This man is my chosen instrument to carry my name before the
Gentiles and their kings and before the people of Israel. 16 I will show him
how much he must suffer for my name." And when John has his vision, what today we
call the revelation, one of the things that Jesus notes about the church at Ephesus
is that they have endured hardship for His sake (Rev 2:3).
Even
before that Jesus had been telling the disciples that life with Him wasn't
going to be all things wonderful. We look at some of the places that Jesus took
the disciples, and those places weren't always all that safe, but besides that
there were the comments about persecution: 'Blessed are those who are
persecuted for the sake of righteousness" (Righteousness= right
relationship with God -Matt 5: 10);Then you will be handed over to be
persecuted and put to death, and you will be hated by all nations because of
me" (Jesus speaking- Matt 24:9). Or how about John 15:18-21 where Jesus tells the disciples
that they will be hated, but they hated Jesus first. So persecution is nothing new.
And now
a moment on my soapbox. Persecution means different things in different
contexts and cultures. In middle class America,
we hear that you can't say "Merry Christmas" in big box stores, but
have to say "Happy Holidays" so as not to offend anyone (NOT true by
the way) and we start screaming that Christians are being persecuted. We make
bad choices and say about the consequences "We all have a cross to
bear." Nowhere in either of those
examples is the part about suffering for Jesus' sake, because of Jesus, or because
of Jesus' Name. We just get it wrong.
Fast
forward across an Ocean and you might feel you've been in a time machine and
backed up several centuries, and in many places religious persecution is real.
North Korea, Saudi Arabia, and Afghanistan are at the top of the list of
countries where people are persecuted for Jesus' name but it happens in many other places. Despite the
persecution, the threat of pain, torture, being exiled from the family and the
community, or even death, the church is growing in some countries where
persecution is real. In parts of Asia missionaries and GFA workers continue to
press on as they proclaim the gospel to those who are lost in the
darkness. They want every person within their
extended areas of influence to hear the name of Jesus, and if they should physically
perish in the process, so be it. The top ten countries are:
In a
sense we are all linked to these brave souls, soldiers for Christ, so we should
be praying for them as if our lives depended on those prayers. And perhaps they
do. For more ways to pray for the persecuted church visit here
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