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Not a Single Christian Church Left in Afghanistan, Says State Department

Can you believe that there is a country in the world that has not one small, struggling church the worships the Lord Jesus Christ. That is what this article reports based on US State department findings.

I am alarmed. I am asking God to raise up men and women and send them to Afghanistan. Will you pray with me? Will you read portions of this article and then pray? Will you do what you can do to get missionaries to this needy part of the world?

The source article can be found by clicking here.

(CNSNews.com) — There is not a single, public Christian church left in Afghanistan, according to the U.S. State Department.

This reflects the state of religious freedom in that country ten years after the United States first invaded it and overthrew its Islamist Taliban regime.

In the intervening decade, U.S. taxpayers have spent $440 billion to support Afghanistan’s new government and more than 1,700 U.S. military personnel have died serving in that country.

The last public Christian church in Afghanistan was razed in March 2010, according to the State Department’s latest International Religious Freedom Report. The report, which was released last month and covers the period of July 1, 2010 through December 31, 2010, also states that “there were no Christian schools in the country.”

“There is no longer a public Christian church; the courts have not upheld the church’s claim to its 99-year lease, and the landowner destroyed the building in March [2010],” reads the State Department report on religious freedom. “[Private] chapels and churches for the international community of various faiths are located on several military bases, PRTs [Provincial Reconstruction Teams], and at the Italian embassy. Some citizens who converted to Christianity as refugees have returned.”

Most Christians in the country refuse to “state their beliefs or gather openly to worship,” said the State Department.

“There were no explicit restrictions for religious minority groups to establish places of worship and training of clergy to serve their communities,” says the report, “however, very few public places of worship exist for minorities due to a strapped government budget.”

While the new constitution states that Islam is the “religion of the state” and that “no law can be contrary to the beliefs and provisions of the sacred religion of Islam,” it also proclaims that “followers of other religions are free to exercise their faith and perform their religious rites within the limits of the provisions of the law.”

However, “the right to change one’s religion was not respected either in law or in practice,” according to the State Department.

“Muslims who converted away from Islam risked losing their marriages, rejection from their families and villages, and loss of jobs,” according to the report. “Legal aid for imprisoned converts away from Islam remains difficult due to the personal objection of Afghan lawyers to defend apostates.”

The report does note that “in recent years neither the national nor local authorities have imposed criminal penalties on coverts from Islam.” The report says that “conversion from Islam is considered apostasy and is punishable by death under some interpretations of Islamic rule in the country.”

Also, in recent years, the death punishment for blasphemy “has not been carried out,” according to the State Department.

According to the State Department report, the United States continues to promote religious freedom in Afghanistan–even though the country no longer has even one Christian church.

“The U.S. government regularly discusses religious freedom with government officials as part of its overall policy to promote human rights,” according to the report.

According to the State Department report, more than 99 percent of the population, estimated between 24 and 33 million people, is either Sunni (80 percent) or Shia (19 percent) Muslim. Non-Muslim religious groups, including the estimated 500 to 8,000 strong Christian community in the country, make up less than 1 percent of the population. Other non-Muslim groups in the country are Sikhs, Bahais, and Hindus.

This country is in great need of the gospel. It will mean someone risking everything to start underground churches in the country. What are you willing to do to help reach this area with the gospel?

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RZ

It was while he was a student at the Peru Baptist College in 2005 that R Z attended a class on Muslim Evangelism taught by a missionary to North Africa. God used that class to give him a burden for the Muslim people.  Since then, R has been faithful in the work of the ministry. He has planted and pastored a church and trained young men for the ministry, one of whom is now pastoring the church he started in Arequipa, Peru.

R and his wife, A, and their baby girl arrived on the field of North Africa in April 2011 and are currently in language school to learn Arabic. They are sent out of Vision Baptist Missions International. R is praying about starting a business and house church in the southern Moroccan city of Marrakesh.

CC

C C pastored in Peru for eight years before heading to North Africa as a church-planting missionary in 2006. He and his wife, Maryeth, work with several missionary families in Morocco. The C’s played an integral part to the founding of two house churches in Morocco, and they continue to minister daily and share the Gospel in Arabic. They have a little boy named Cesar David.

Tyler and Gretchen Master

Tyler was raised in a Christian home and got saved at the age of fifteen. He surrendered to preach at the age of eighteen. He started studying at Grace Baptist Bible Institute to prepare for his call into ministry. He then made his way down to Peru for an internship that was required by his school. While he was there, he met his wife Gretchen, and they were married in December of 2004.

 

After marrying, Tyler and Gretchen went back to Peru so Tyler could finish his studies under Chris Gardner. While there, they had their first child Nora in 2007. Tyler finished up his studies and preparation after two years of being there, and they made their way back to the states for deputation. In 2009, they had their second child Judson who was born in Georgia.

 

Tyler and his family left for the field of North Africa in July 2010. He has been learning Arabic and been using the Spanish he learned while in Peru to work in both countries of Spain and Morocco. He has been travelling back and forth between the two countries every week. Tyler has seen God do great things in the past year with the Arabic people, and he continues to work hard so they all can hear about the one true God.

Voice for the Villages

Voice for the Villages is a current project that we are working together with our strategic partners, “partnering missionaries”, around the World providing material and training for pastors in villages and the least desirable areas.

Voice for the Villages is a ministry of Vision Baptist Church. Our goal is to reach into the villages of several different countries. We, with the help several strategic partners, are helping lead up the outreach in rural locations throughout the world. Places like the villages in communist China, the Mossi people of Burkina Faso, the Xhosa people in South Africa and small villages in Northern Africa where Islam has a strong hold.

What does this include?
Translation – Every month there is a PDF prepared with essential material to help these rural pastors. Currently there has been three full-time translators hired to translate these PDF’s into Chinese, Moore, Xhosa and Arabic.

Printing – Every month after these PDF’s are translated, they will be printed and put into a notebook.

Recording – If the need arises, that some of the rural pastors are illiterate, then the material will be read, recorded, and placed onto a MP3 player.

Training – After everything is prepared, the translated material will be delivered to the rural pastors and there will be a short training session with him.

What are the cost?
The preparation and reception of the PDFs are free of charge. But we have the cost of labour for our full-time translator, printing/notebook cost, and transportation cost driving out to the villages. Also, if we need to, we will hire someone to record the material in the native language, plus the cost to purchase the MP3 players.

Startup Cost: We have minimal startup cost, mainly consisting of a computer, quality printer and material to create the notebooks.

Interested in Helping?
If you are interested in financially helping us in this ministry, you can send all monthly or one-time donations to:

Voice for the Villages
P.O. Box 442
Alpharetta, GA 30009

Please make checks out to “Vision Baptist Missions” with “Voice for the Villages” in the memo.

check out bcwe.org

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