Islamic
Persecution Throughout Africa
The
greatest threat to the Church today is presented by Islam.
The largest block of unreached people (over 1 billion)
are Muslims.
In Africa, over 40% of the population (260 million people)
are Muslims.
Through
the ages Islam has been the largest and most vicious opponent
and persecutor of Christians. By the tenth century the
Muslim armies had annihilated half of all the Christians
in the world of that time. Today the Islamic Jihad against
Christians continues and the sharpest confrontations between
Christianity and Islam in the world are in Africa.
Islam
claims the whole of North Africa (what were once the lands
of great Christian leaders and famous writers such as
Tertullian, Origin, Ignatius and Augustine). In 17 countries
in Africa Muslims are the majority. In every one of those
Islamic states Christians are restricted and persecuted
to differing degrees.
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In
Sudan, the largest country in Africa, the
longest war of this century is still in progress.
The Muslim Arab North is waging a relentless war
against the mainly Christian Black South and against
the Nuba in Central Sudan.
In
Morocco, it is against the law to proselytize
(evangelise) or to shake the faith of
a Muslim. The Islamic government refuses to recognise
any church that has Moroccan nationals as members.
Christians have even been imprisoned for years merely
for handing out Gospel literature.
In
Algeria, Islamicist groups such as the National
Salvation Front and the Armed Islamic Group have
been waging a brutal war of terror to enforce an
Islamic state upon the nominally secular (formerly
Marxist) National Liberation Front dictatorship.
The NLF government's move to declare Algeria an
Islamic state is unlikely to satisfy the aspirations
of the Islamic extremists.
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Most
of the tens of thousands of victims of this Islamic campaign
of terror have been Muslims. But many of the victims are
Christians who have been bombed, shot or hacked to death.
Many Algerian women have had acid thrown in their faces
by Islamicists determined to force all women to wear a
veil!
Christians
accused of apostasy or proselytizing
in Egypt face imprisonment and torture from the authorities,
as well as kidnapping, forced conversions to Islam, rape
and murder from Islamic militants.
In
Nigeria, where Muslims are a large minority, Muslims
have burned down hundreds of churches and killed thousands
of Christians in recent years. Christians in the area
claim that they are facing a systematic campaign to wipe
out any traces of Christianity in the northern states
of Nigeria.
In
Mauritania, not only is slavery practised but the
death penalty for apostasy (converting from Islam) is
part of the penal code and is enforced by the state.
In
Somalia, (just before the US military went in under
the UN) the last remaining church in the country was destroyed.
And the last surviving minister was murdered by Muslim
mobs.
The
most relentlessly violent persecution of the church today
is in Sudan. The largest country in Africa is still
in the grip of the longest war of this century. Since
1955 the Muslim Arab North has been attacking the Black
South.
Rolling
Back the Islamic Offensive
The Islamic offensive against Christianity in Sudan cannot
succeed. The number of Christians in Sudan has increased
from 2% in 1955 to 20% today. And in the South, Christians
now form a majority.
Muslims are coming to Christ in Sudan in unprecedented
numbers. One commander defected with his whole battalion
of government troops to the SPLA. I have heard defectors
tell me personally: We want to become Christians.
We want to fight for the South!
The
reasons for this massive turning to Christ in Sudan are
threefold: Firstly, the extreme harshness and cruelty
of the National Islamic Front (NIF) regime is repelling
Muslims. Secondly, the resilience and courage of the Christians
is attracting Muslims. Thirdly, in Sudan converts from
Islam have a place where they can flee to where
they can enjoy religious freedom. As the SPLA resistance
movement wins more territory, we can expect even more
Muslims to take advantage of the protection this can offer
them to come to Christ without the fear of being executed
by the Muslim government of Sudan.
The
desperate needs and challenging opportunities for ministry
in Sudan are overwhelming. God is clearly doing an incredible
work of grace in Sudan and it is our privilege to serve
His suffering Church.
You
may ask: What can I do?
| 1. |
Be
informed. My people are destroyed from
lack of knowledge Hosea 4:6. Obtain the
new edition of our book. Faith Under Fire in
Sudan, and other reports in Frontline Fellowship
News on Sudan. Pass on copies of this information
to editors, pastors and congressmen. |
| 2. |
Be
interceding. Remember the prisoners
as if chained with them . . . Hebrews
13:3. Pray for the persecuted. Encourage your pastor
to pray for the persecuted from the pulpit. |
| 3. |
Be
involved. In as much as you did it
to one of the least of these My brethren, you did
it to Me Matthew 25:40.
Speak up for the persecuted. Write letters to the
editor of your local magazine or newspaper. Write
to your elected representative urging pressure on
the persecutors and assistance to the persecuted.
Organise donations of Bibles, medicines or other
essentials. |
The
Christian Church in Southern Sudan is on the very frontline
of the fight for faith and freedom. We can strengthen
the Christians in Sudan to not only survive the severe
persecution, but to win their persecutors to Christ. We
are making disciples of the emerging New Sudan.
Just
in the last 3 years, in Sudan alone, Frontline Fellowship
has delivered over 90 000 Bibles and Christian books in
21 languages. We have also conducted over 1 000 services
and meetings inside Sudan including Pastors Training Courses,
Medical Workshops, Biblical Worldview Seminars, God and
Government Seminars, Reformation and Revival Seminars
and Muslim Evangelism Workshops.
We
can have a part in helping to make history in the Middle
East. We can roll back the southward expansion of Islam
and reclaim Sudan for Christ.
Dr.
Peter Hammond
Related Resources:-
Terrorism
and Persecution (video)
Sudan,
the Hidden Holocaust (video)
Faith under
Fire in Sudan (book)
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