Archive - January 14, 2010

North Korea again listed as most repressive

WASHINGTON (BP)

–An organization that serves the persecuted church again has rated North Korea as the worst oppressor of Christians. It was the eighth consecutive year that Open Doors gave the Asian regime the top ranking, this time 25 points ahead of Iran, the No. 2-rated country.

Meanwhile, more than two-thirds of the world’s population live in countries with high restrictions on religion, according to a report by the Pew Research Center’s Forum on Religion and Public Life titled Global Restrictions on Religion.

Nearly 70 percent of the world’s 6.8 billion people reside in countries with high or very high restrictions on religion, the Pew Forum reported. Although only 64 of the 198 countries or territories studied have those levels of restrictions (32 percent), they contain the large majority of the world’s population.

In the government restrictions ratings, the countries that scored “very high,” or in the top 5 percent of the scores, were, in descending order, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Uzbekistan, China, Egypt, Burma, Maldives, Eritrea, Malaysia and Brunei.

The countries that ranked “very high” in social hostilities were, in descending order, Iraq, India, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Indonesia, Bangladesh, Somalia, Israel, Sri Lanka, Sudan and Saudi Arabia.

In rankings by region, the Middle East-North Africa had the highest scores in both government restrictions on and social hostilities toward religion, while the Americas were the least restrictive in both indexes.

Iran, Egypt, Indonesia, Pakistan and India were the most restrictive among the world’s 25 most populous countries when both categories are considered. Meanwhile, the least restrictive of the 25 most populous countries were Brazil, Japan, the United States, Italy, South Africa and the United Kingdom.

“There is no other country in the world where Christians are persecuted in such a horrible and systematic manner,” Carl Moeller said in a Jan. 6 news release from Open Doors. “Three generations of a family are often thrown into prison when one member is incarcerated.”

The regime of dictator Kim Jong-Il has an estimated 200,000 political prisoners, including 40,000 to 60,000 Christians, according to Open Doors.

Despite the repression, “the number of Christians in North Korea has grown in the last 10 years,” Moeller said.

According to Open Doors, the 10 countries where persecution of Christians is worst, with scores in parentheses, are North Korea (90.5), Iran (65.5), Saudi Arabia (63.5), Somalia (62.5), Maldives (62.0), Afghanistan (61.5), Yemen (60.5), Mauritania (59.5), Laos (56.0) and Uzbekistan (56.0).

Tom Strode is the Washington bureau chief for Baptist Press.

Update on surgeries

Ethan Howeth and Judson Masters were both in Children’s hospital of Atlanta. Ethan had surgery yesterday and Judson had surgery today. They are both doing well.

Judson will be coming home tomorrow morning, Lord willing. Ethan may come home on Saturday.

Ethan’s surgery went well. He is dealing with the pain and the after affects of the anesthesia. He still has a lot in front of him but it appears that God is really working it all out.

Thank you for praying for them. It was pretty neat seeing Judson on the first floor and Ethan on the second floor.

Read Haiti updates from Ron Maggard

Ron Maggard is a good missionary and doing a great work in many parts of the world. Read here to get more information about what they are doing and how they could help.

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Latest news from Connie Anderson

I received the following email from a Macedonia missionary about Mrs. Connie Anderson. The letter is from Dean Hamby, the Assistant Director of Macedonia. I am gathering all the news that I can about Mrs. Connie Anderson and also what God is doing in Haiti.

We just received a call from Connie Anderson. She is doing fine. She is able to stay at a CSI guest house in Port-au-Prince. She has some food and water. She cannot get back up the mountain to her home. The children and the Haitian lady that helps her are all ok and the house is ok. She doesn’t know when she can get back up the mountain. The town down below at the foot of the mountain was destroyed but as far as we know the pastors and families are all ok.

She will probably have to go by horse or mule when she does go. The mountain that connects to the mountain she lives on, is not passable.

She asked that everyone to please pray and had tears when she said it. It is a devastating situation.
We have a set up a fund to help once she is able to get it. It is:
“Haiti Disaster Relief Fund” through Macedonia.

Thanks for your prayers and concern.

Bro. Dean

Humility in the leader

A leader’s humility should grow with the passing of years, like other attitudes and qualities.

On one occasion when Samuel Brengle was introduced as “the great Doctor Brengle,” he noted in his diary: If I appear great in their eyes, the Lord is most graciously helping me to see how absolutely nothing I am without Him, and helping me to keep little in my own eyes. He does use me. But I am so concerned that He uses me and that it is not of me the work is done. The axe cannot boast of the trees it has cut down. It could do nothing but for the woodsman. He made it, he sharpened it, and he used it. The moment he throws it aside; it becomes only old iron. O that I may never lose sight of this.”

Robert Morrison of China wrote: “The great fault in our missions is that no one likes to be second.”

All the above quotes are taken from
Spiritual Leadership: Principles of Excellence for Every Believer (J.Oswald Sanders)