Good News: Pakistan

Passage of Bill on “Apostates” Called Unlikely:

Christian and government leaders yesterday said they are hopeful that Pakistan’s parliament is unlikely to support the death penalty for Muslims who abandon their faith.

Critics have worried that the Apostasy Act 2006, proposed in May, signaled further reduction of religious freedom in Pakistan, where vigilante enforcement of strict sharia law has been on the rise.

In the most high-profile example of such vigilante activity, burqa-clad members of Islamabad’s Lal Masjid or Red Mosque and religious schools had kidnapped people they accused of being prostitutes and harassed police and music/video-shop owners in recent months. The activities prompted a government siege and raid of the heavily-armed mosque members this week in which at least 102 people died.

The bill likely will not be approved in its original form by the National Assembly’s Standing Committee on Law and Justice, where it is being revised, a member of the committee said.

[…]

Proposed by the Mutahida Majlis-i-Amal (MMA), an alliance of six Islamic parties, the bill states that the testimony of two Muslim male witnesses would be sufficient to sentence to death a male “apostate” or man who changes his religion from Islam. A female “apostate” would receive life imprisonment.

According to article 5 of the draft, a convicted “apostate” would have up to 30 days to revert to Islam and avoid punishment. But repeat male offenders who committed “apostasy” a fourth time would not be given a chance to repent.

[…]

Besides the storming of the Lal Masjid mosque this week, the government is countering extremism in madrassas (Islamic schools) and brooking protests from lawyers across Pakistan over President Pervez Musharraf’s dismissal of the Supreme Court Chief Justice in March.

[…]

At the same time, calm returned to two Pakistani villages where death threats against Christians who refused to convert to Islam have not been carried out.

Christians in the villages of Shanti Nagar and Charsadda had feared for their lives after receiving letters threatening death if they refused to become Muslim in June and May.

Despite rising popular enforcement of strict sharia, the Christians in the two towns have concluded that the unfulfilled ultimatums to convert to Islam in recent months were isolated incidents and not cause for concern over a systematic campaign of violence.

Hopefully this hopeful optimism becomes some sort of good reality.

NK-PRP Underground Railroad

The Underground railroad lives

The story of Pastor Son, who became a Christian while working in China and returned to North Korea to spread his faith, gives us a glimpse into a rarely reported story: the large number of North Koreans who live and work in China, the porous border that allows the smuggling of Kareoke machines and South Korean DVD’s into North Korea, and the smuggling of the thousands of North Korean refugees into China, and the presence of an “underground railroad” composed of Christian believers that is helping to smuggle out some of these refugees.

Many, some estimate 200 to 300 thousand, North Koreans are living in China illegally, knowing that if they are caught they will be deported back to North Korea and placed into prisons where conditions are terrible.

HT: persecution.org

Use Caution…

…with digital communication.

Never consider email or text messages as private.

Also beware of personal photos and information you post online, especially if you’re a blogger.

I thought of that (again) when I read this:

Pew Internet: Cyberbullying and Teens

About one third (32%) of all teenagers who use the internet say they have been targets of a range of annoying and potentially menacing online activities – such as receiving threatening messages; having their private emails or text messages forwarded without consent; having an embarrassing picture posted without permission; or having rumors about them spread online.

Here are some books whose titles look interesting. I have read none of them, so this does not constitute a recommendation.

To Catch a Predator: Protecting Your Kids from Online Enemies Already in Your Home     The Dark Side of the Internet: Protecting Yourself and Your Family from Online Criminals     Cyber-Safe Kids, Cyber-Savvy Teens: Helping Young People Learn To Use the Internet Safely and Responsibly

Look Both Ways: Help Protect Your Family on the Internet     How to Protect Your Children on the Internet: A Road Map for Parents and Teachers     Cybersafety: Surfing Safely Online (Teen Issues)

Christianity 103

Church of England says calling God ‘He’ or ‘Lord’ encourages wife-beating

Church of England leaders warned yesterday that calling God ‘He’ encourages men to beat their wives.

They told churchgoers they must think twice before they refer to God as ‘He’ or ‘Lord’ because of the dangers that it will lead to domestic abuse.

In new guidelines for bishops and priests on such abuse, they blamed “uncritical use of masculine imagery” for encouraging men to behave violently towards women.

They also warned that clergy must reconsider the language they use in sermons and check the hymns they sing to remove signs of male oppression.

The recommendation – fully endorsed by Archbishop of Canterbury Dr Rowan Williams – puts a question mark over huge swathes of Christian teaching and practice.

[…]

The guidelines also claim that abuse is common within marriage and says this is because marriage heightens a sense among husbands that they own their wives.

Attention, Mr. Williams & Company:

Husbands, love your wives, even as Christ also loved the church, and gave himself for it;

That he might sanctify and cleanse it with the washing of water by the word,

That he might present it to himself a glorious church, not having spot, or wrinkle, or any such thing; but that it should be holy and without blemish.

So ought men to love their wives as their own bodies. He that loveth his wife loveth himself.

For no man ever yet hated his own flesh; but nourisheth and cherisheth it, even as the Lord the church.

(Ephesians 5:25-29)

Now, please, make your case from the Scriptures, Mr. Williams and Co.

Bomb? Inside or Out?

I took this picture in Woodburn (Oregon) yesterday morning. I have not photoshopped it.

Woodburn Terror Strike (?)

OK, you explosives experts (and wannabes, too) — was the bomb in the building or outside?

Click the image for an 800×400 version for better study of important details and potential clues.

And you photoshop experts, how would you fix this photo to look more like Woodburn was struck by terrorists?

Sadness in India

Nithin

The dead body of a 14 year old Christian boy was found on the railway track today near All Saints College, Thiruvanandapuram, the capital city of Kerala. He was a tenth standard student of St Josephs Higher Secondary School.

The boy identified as Nithin, was the only son of Napolean and Nirmala, residing behind G V Raja School. It was the local people who found the body today morning.

Sarita

A fisherman has saved a seven-year-old girl whose father threw her in the river because he could not pay the steep expenses necessary to treat her. Sarita has suffered from renal failure for three years and in recent weeks, she had been receiving treatment in a hospital in Mumbai. Her father, Bakheru Sonkar, a resident of the village of Devkali, district of Jaunpur (Uttar Pradesh), is a vegetable seller and he cannot afford to pay for the long treatment, which according to police would cost at least 300,000 rupees. On 9 July, he accompanied his daughter to Mumbai, but he has been accused to pushing her into the river when they returned.

Fishermen rescued Sarita after they heard cries of “Papa, papa…help me.” The child was admitted to a local hospital after being rescued. The father disappeared and police are searching for him.

Sarita has returned home. Her mother is at a loss to explain what her husband has done, especially after he had been taking his daughter for treatment for five months.

Secret Believers

Here’s a bit of an interesting report from Mission Network News:

Open Doors’ Brother Andrew says now, more than ever, the belief systems of Islam and Christianity are clashing head-on. “The conflict that we face today is a new one. We’ve never, in the history of the world, faced a situation like this where they (Muslims) have unlimited resources, strong belief and eschatology, their right to be heard, not only by the power of persuasion, but by the power of the sword.”

Secret Believers: What Happens When Muslims Believe in Christ

The resulting tensions have fueled a great deal of persecution against the indigenous church, especially those who’ve converted from Islam. Their plight is behind Brother Andrew’s most recent book Secret Believers: What Happens When Muslims Believe in Christ.

In it, he and coauthor Al Janssen tell the stories of Muslims who encounter Christ and determine to become Christians, despite ostracism and death threats. It also shares the reality faced by Christians struggling to become mature in their faith in the midst of a hostile and increasingly violent Muslim society.

That is born out in the mass exodus of Christians out of the war-torn Middle East. In many of these areas, the conflict has forged a stronger, more determined remnant church, while in others, the fighting has created a “diaspora” effect, resulting in great change.

Take this as a call to prayer for these secret believers.

Above all, love God!

since November 9, 2005