Saturday, November 5, 2022

After Five Attacks: She Still Clings To Jesus...BY OPEN DOORS MINISTRIES NOVEMBER 01, 2022 Share this article:

 

After Five Attacks: She Still Clings To Jesus

News Image BY OPEN DOORS MINISTRIES NOVEMBER 01, 2022
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You can't grow up in the Far North Region of Cameroon between Nigeria and Chad without hearing about Boko Haram. The extremist group is known for its extortion of local farmers, fishermen, and traders, and for its main source of revenue: ransoms for victims kidnapped in attacks on vulnerable towns and remote villages.

Conflict and the potential for attack are constant and add to the difficulty of living in the country's poorest region. If you're a Christian in Cameroon's Far North, you grow up knowing you are a target of Boko Haram because you follow Jesus.

And it's only getting worse.

Fadi Zara knows this firsthand. As a young Christian woman, she has now fled five times, from one village to another, each time running for her life from Boko Haram. When we met Fadi, she was living in a camp where thousands of people, who have also fled, were trying to survive. 

"Living in the village of other people is very difficult," Fadi tells us. "We don't have farming to do there, to get something to eat."

The region's open and remote deserts make it especially vulnerable to extremist groups bent on crippling the church. Open Doors has registered more than 41 attacks against villages located in this area that has now been designated as a "red zone." As Boko Haram deepens their foothold, Christians, who rely on their crops to survive, face the increasing danger of individual assault or kidnapping while they work their farms.

There are also severe food shortages. Experts estimate that 900,000 people in Cameroon's Far North face food insecurity--an increase of almost 100,000 people since 2021.

Fadi has lived in the Far North for her entire life. She grew up in the farming village of Barawa with her father, mother, and sister near the Nigerian border. In 2013, Boko Haram attacked her village.

"They came in the night," Fadi recalls. "They killed many people and burned our churches. So, we fled over the border to the village of Vreket."

But Fadi's family wasn't safe there either. Once again, Boko Haram attacked in the night, burning houses and looting the village. From there, the family ran to nearby Laoudzaf only to be attacked a third time. This time, Fadi remembers seeing people she knew being carried off alive.

"They kidnapped many people, like women," she says. "After being attacked three times, we fled to Zeleved.

She and her family lived in Zeleved for a few years. During the day, they worked in and around the houses and farms, trying to grow enough food to eat each day and somehow survive. But every day before sunset, they climbed the surrounding mountains to spend the night in the forest, for fear of yet another Boko Haram attack. This survival strategy has become a way of life for these "red zone" Christians.

"We had to pass the night in the mountains," Fadi remembers. "In the morning, we would come back to our houses and work on our farms. But at nightfall, we go to the forest to sleep there."

Yet what everyone in Zeleved feared eventually happened.

"One day, we heard gunshots. Boko Haram was again in our village," Fadi says. "They attacked in the night again. I cannot count the number of people they killed."

As drought, famine and inflation take their toll, persecuted Christians around the globe are living in frantic circumstances. Your support can help persecuted Christians living in some of the hardest hit countries. You can provide lifesaving food and medical care.


Today, Fadi lives in a camp in Koza, a town of 80,000 people. She is alone now. Her younger sister was kidnapped in 2015. Two weeks later, her mother died, traumatized and weary from the loss of her daughter and the repeated deaths of her neighbors. Fadi shared her heartbreak:

"My sister's name was Vusa. She was 14 years old when they kidnapped her. She went to the farm with her friends but did not return back with them. Some people say they have killed her. Some say they can't kill a young lady like that. They will just marry her like their wife. We don't know what to say.

"My mother, she witnessed many of our neighbors--she saw them, their blood on the ground. And then they kidnapped her daughter. So, she got hypertension, and she died."

For Fadi, life has been full of repeated suffering--the loss of her family, each of her homes, her livelihood.

"Even when I want to sleep, I can't," she says. "Many things come like a vision or dreams. And every time I am crying because I am an orphan. I am the only one."

Her emotional trials are now exacerbated by the physical challenges of getting enough food to eat to survive--a reality of the global economic crisis that has millions of persecuted believers struggling to live right now.

But you can help provide the emergency aid persecuted believers desperately need. PLEASE GIVE NOW.

Perhaps miraculously, Fadi has not lost the faith she was raised in and her trust in God.

"I need that God stays with me in every situation, to do His wonderful power in my life," she tells us, smiling shyly. "For me to see His face at the end of the day."

Open Doors recently distributed emergency aid packages to more than 3,000 Christians in Cameroon in desperate need of food. It was a joyous moment for Fadi and all those in the many villages our partners reached.

"I got rice, fish and a bucket, and soap and corn, a mat and wrapper and vegetable oil. All these things, I am surprised for getting it in my life today. I am very, very happy. Especially this wrapper. It is two years today since I have not gotten a new wrapper like this. But you gave it to us today. I am very, very happy."

At the end of our visit with Fadi, she broke out in beautiful song:

"Holy Ghost, do it again, do it again in my life. Open my eyes to see Jesus, do it again in my life."

When you give today, you help provide lifesaving items like food kits with rice, lentils, and oil, along with medicine and safe shelter for persecuted Christians.

Please give right now to send food kits and emergency aid to persecuted Christians on the verge of starvation.

Why Attend A Church That Revises Its Teachings To Conform With The Culture?...BY ROB SCHWARZWALDER/THE WASHINGTON STAND NOVEMBER 01, 2022 Share this article:

 

Why Attend A Church That Revises Its Teachings To Conform With The Culture?

News Image BY ROB SCHWARZWALDER/THE WASHINGTON STAND NOVEMBER 01, 2022
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The Presbyterian Church in the USA has decided to add a "nonbinary/genderqueer category" to the form it uses to collect information about its membership.

"We've always asked how many female members there are in the church," says Kris Valerius, who manages denominational roles and statistics. We're now asking how many men, women, and nonbinary/genderqueer members there are. We've never asked that question so we don't know how many people will fill it out."

Well, that last point makes sense: Don't ask something and you likely won't know the answer. The larger issue, though, is why ask about something that should be irrelevant to the life of the body of Christ?


This is not to say people struggling with gender identity are unimportant and don't need pastoral care and the compassion of loving Christian friends. Rather, Valerius said, "If we want to be inclusive, then we have to start asking because you should be aware of who's a part of your church." There it is: "inclusion," one of religious liberalism's favorite terms of political art. It's also a misuse of the word.

If persons who have had transgender surgery come into a Christ-following church, they should be welcomed warmly and included in the life of the church -- up to a point. Like the rest of us sinners, they would need to repent of known violations of God's Word in their lives to become members and participate in the full fellowship and activities of their new church family.

This would be true for an unmarried couple who live together -- they would need to marry to join a faithful congregation. It would be true for someone who admitted to lifelong bitterness and needed to jettison it to join the church. It would be true for someone who came believing he could get to heaven on his own merit -- he would need to come to transforming faith in the Savior. And for the people who identify as transgender mentioned above, it would require their turning from a pattern of life the Bible says is wrong in our Creator's sight.

The matter at hand is not one of love, acceptance, or even inclusion. It's about agreeing with and endorsing something that does violence to the plain teaching of the Scripture that Christians believe was given to us without error in all it affirms.

Historically, Presbyterianism has one of the richest theological traditions in global Protestantism. As one example, the Westminster Shorter Catechism, for centuries a bedrock of Reformed orthodoxy, has been understood as one of the most profound statements of Christian teaching ever written. 

Now, though, the PCUSA has abandoned its orthodox heritage in a number of areas, ranging from its view of the inspiration of Scripture to, today, its claims about human sexuality.

Where has all of this gotten the Presbyterian Church-USA? In 1983, when the denomination was created by a merger of Presbyterian Church in the United States (PCUS) and the United Presbyterian Church in the United States of America (UPCUSA), it had 3.2 million members and 12,000 churches. 

Today, "total membership is just over 1.19 million members" in 2021 and about 8,800 churches. This is a membership decline of nearly 63%.

The PCUSA is typical of the six other "mainline" Protestant denominations. Mark Tooley, president of the Institute on Religion and Democracy, noted recently that in about 1960, "One of six Americans belonged to seven historically liberal mainline Protestant denominations. Today it's less than one of every 20 Americans."


This should not come as a shock. Why attend a church that revises its teachings to conform with the demands of the culture? If Christianity is merely about believing in a Christ Who comforts but never convicts, being nice to people, and listening to sermons that elevate emotion but starve the soul, why bother? 

If the gospel is hollowed-out and sin is no longer sin, go golfing, have a nice brunch, and watch a game. You'll feel about the same either way.

Faithful followers of Jesus know there is so much more to the new life He offers. This is why the Gospel is described by Paul as "the power of God to salvation to everyone who believes" (Romans 1:16). Power, salvation, trust in Christ: denominations may fail, but the Gospel never does.

Originally published at The Washington Stand - reposted with permission.


 



California Could Barr Christians Who Reject Trans Ideology From Police Force Christians who reject transgender ideology could virtually be barred from serving as police officers in the nation's largest state, thanks to a series of laws and guidelines rolled out under California Governor Gavin Newsom.

 


 

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Breaking News Updates - November 01, 2022
 
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CA

 
California Could Barr Christians Who Reject Trans Ideology From Police Force
 
Christians who reject transgender ideology could virtually be barred from serving as police officers in the nation's largest state, thanks to a series of laws and guidelines rolled out under California Governor Gavin Newsom.
 
read more
 
Church
 
Why Attend A Church That Revises Its Teachings To Conform With The Culture?
 
The Presbyterian church has abandoned its orthodox heritage in a number of areas, ranging from its view of the inspiration of Scripture to its claims about human sexuality, all in the name of inclusivity and acceptance.
 
read more
 
 
Learn more about RevenueStripe...
 
Christian
 
After Five Attacks: She Still Clings To Jesus
 
If you're a Christian in Cameroon's Far North, you grow up knowing you are a target of Boko Haram because you follow Jesus. And it's only getting worse.
 
read more
 
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