Thursday, 12 March 2009

MISSIONARIES CELEBRATE NEW OPENINGS IN MACAU


Macau ― ReachGlobal staff recently joined a group of pastors from a local church (the Gospel Center) in Macau for an idol-removal ceremony.
An elderly couple formerly owned a shop that sold paraphernalia for idol worship. Their daughter, a Christian, had witnessed to her parents for years and finally saw them come to Christ a year ago.
As her parents' health deteriorated and they were unable to participate in the church services, their daughter asked the local pastors from the Gospel Center to keep discipling them in their new faith.
Roger, one of the pastors, visited them weekly for several months, and the results were evident as they declared their faith in Christ and rejected their former idols.
The Reach Global missionary team is encouraged by how Pastor Roger and his wife, Sarah, interacted with this couple and believe they will have an effective and caring ministry among the elderly as they reach out to them and include them at the Gospel Center.
Staff are in Macau helping to develop more ministries. One project that's continuing to grow is the Evangel Adult Education Centre.
The Evangel Adult Education Centre was opened in 1998 as a way of reaching out into the community with the Gospel. Its two main goals are to provide high-quality adult education for the people of Macau (social service), and to share the love of Christ with every student (evangelism). The hope is that new converts would be incorporated into EFC church plants.
Because the center has outgrown its present facility and needs additional classroom and office space for growth and development, EAEC rented a new facility and relocated to its new location in January 2004.
Before they could begin using this new facility, however, renovation work was needed, which included dividing walls, floor tiling, electrical wiring, painting, A/C, signage, furniture and equipment, such as computers, telephones, whiteboards, etc.
Keep praying for continued effective ministry efforts in Macau.

MUSLIM BACKGROUND CHRISTIANS TORTURED IN LIBYA; PRAY AND MAKE A DIFFERENCE IN LIBYA.....


Libya ― International Christian Concern (ICC), a Christian human rights group, says it has learned that Libyan intelligence officials have detained and tortured four Christians for converting from Islam, adding that the Christians have been imprisoned for the past seven weeks in Tripoli, Libya's capital.
A spokesperson for ICC told ANS, "Libya's External Security Organization is believed to be behind the detention and torture of the Christians, according to our sources. The security agents have barred the families from visiting the detained converts and are putting severe physical and psychological pressure on the Christians in order to force them to reveal the names of other converts. Fearing for their lives, other converts from Islam are on the run.
"The detention and the torture of the Christian converts come at a critical time in Libya's relations with the international community. The country has been improving its relations with the international community following the lifting of sanctions imposed on it due to its involvement in the bombing of an American airliner in which 270 people were killed.
"By torturing the four Christian converts and stifling religious freedom, Libya is once again violating basic principles of the international human rights law."
ICC's Regional Manager for Africa, Jonathan Racho, said, "We call upon Libyan officials to stop torturing the four Christians and release them from detention. Libya must respect the rights of its citizens to worship freely and not to be tortured. We particularly ask the Libyan leader and the current head of the African Union, Mr. Muammar Gaddafi, to set the prisoners free and demonstrate his country's commitment to respect human rights."
The ICC spokesperson added, "Please pray for the safe release of the detained believers. Also pray for comfort and strength for their families."
You can help secure their release by contacting the Libyan embassy.

PASTOR SHOT AND THE CHURCH EXPLODED BY CRUDE BOMB IN BIHAR ( INDIA )


In an effort to stop conversions to Christianity in the eastern state of Bihar, a 25-year-old ailing man on Sunday (March 8) exploded a crude bomb in a church and shot the pastor.
Police Inspector Hari Krishna Mandal told that the attacker, Rajesh Singh, had come fully prepared to kill the pastor, Vinod Kumar, in Baraw village in the Nasriganj area of Rohtas district, and then take his own life.
“However,” Mandal said, “believers caught him before he could do more damage or kill himself.”
The 35-year-old pastor was taken to a hospital in nearby Varanasi, in the neighboring state of Uttar Pradesh and at press time was out of danger of losing his life, according to a leader of Gospel Echoing Missionary Society (GEMS) who requested anonymity.
The church, Prarthana Bhawan (House of Prayer), belongs to GEMS. Around 30 people were in the church when the attack took place. Some women in the church sustained burns in the blast.
“Rajesh Singh threw a crude bomb from the window of the church, and the sound of the explosion created a chaos in the congregation,” said Inspector Mandal. As members of the church began to run out, he added, Singh came into the building and shot the pastor with a handmade pistol from point-blank range.
Singh had more bombs to explode and three more bullets in his pistol, but church members caught hold of him and handed him over to police, the inspector said.
“In his statement, Singh said he was personally against Christian conversions and wanted to kill the pastor to stop conversions,” Mandal said. “He wanted to take his own life after killing the pastor, and this is why he had more bullets in his pistol and an overdose of anesthesia in a syringe.”
Asked if Singh had any links with extremist Hindu nationalist groups, the inspector said no such organization was active in the area, though local Christians say Hindu extremist presence has increased recently. The GEMS source said people allegedly linked with a Hindu nationalist group had sent a threatening letter to the pastor, asking him to stop preaching in the area.
The source said the incident could have been fallout from conversions in nearby Mithnipur village, where a Hindu family had received Christ after being healed from a mental illness around six months ago. Singh also lives in Mithnipur.
“Pastor Kumar had not been visiting the village, fearing opposition from the villagers who were not happy with the conversion of this family,” the GEMS source said. “The same church’s cross had also been damaged about a year ago by unidentified people.”
The source said he believes that although Singh’s affiliation or linkage with a Hindu nationalist group has not been established, it is likely that he was instigated to kill the pastor by an extremist group. Pastor Kumar, married with three children, has been working in Rohtas district for the last 12 years.
Local Christians complain that the presence of the Hindu extremist Sangh Parivar (a family of organizations linked with the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh or RSS, India’s chief Hindu nationalist group) has recently increased in the area. They say the Hindu nationalist conglomerate has been spewing hate against Christians for more than 10 years, accusing them of using monetary incentives and fraudulent means and foreign money to convert Hindus.
The attacker has an amputated hand and was said to be mentally disturbed since 1996, when he was diagnosed with cancer, Inspector Mandal said.
“According to the villagers,” he said, “Singh had been mentally disturbed ever since he was diagnosed with cancer, and later tuberculosis, although there is no medical report to substantiate this.”
The government of Bihar is ruled by a coalition of a regional party, the Janata Dal-United (JD-U) party, and the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). The JD-U is also part of the National Democratic Alliance, the main opposition coalition at the federal level led by the BJP. The JD-U, however, is not perceived as a supporter of Hindu nationalism.
Of the 82 million people, mostly Hindu, in Bihar, only 53,137 are Christian, according to the 2001 census.