Sunday, June 14, 2009

 

 

Iranian Security Officers Arrest Five Christian Converts from Islam; Two Women Converts Still In Prison

By Michael Ireland
Chief Correspondent, ASSIST News Service

Iranian security forces on May 21 raided an underground house church and arrested five Christian converts from Islam in the city of Karaji, Iran.

According to International Christian Concern (ICC), citing the Farsi Christian News Network (FCNN), plainclothes security officers handcuffed and took the five Christians to an unknown location. The officers also confiscated several Bibles. Mr. Javad Abtahi, the leader of the church, is among the detained Christians.

ICC (www.persecution.org ) says this arrest comes soon after news that two Christian women were imprisoned in March.

Iranian officials imprisoned Marzieh and Maryam, who are also converts from Islam, sending them to the notorious Evin prison, where American-Iranian journalist Roxana Saberi, who returned home to Fargo, North Dakota on Saturday after an appeals court reduced her sentence and allowed her to leave the country, had been held for four months on spying charges.

To read the detailed report on Marzieh and Maryam, see:www.persecution.org/suffering/pressdetail.php?presscode=280.

In an e-mail news release, ICC said: "Our sources indicate that Marzieh and Maryam are still in prison and Iranian officials have not brought charges against them. Please help Marzieh and Maryam by signing our petition calling for their release: at www.persecution.org/suffering/petitions.php "

ICC's Regional Manager for Africa and the Middle East, Jonathan Racho, stated: "Iran should refrain from invading Christian houses, arresting converts and confiscating their properties. Iran must allow its citizens to choose what religion to follow. We call upon Iranian officials to release the five Christians arrested in Karaji as well as Marzieh and Maryam."

Please pray for the five detained Christians as well as for Marzieh and Maryam. Pray for their immediate release from prison. Also pray for God to give them perseverance and comfort.

ICC is a Washington-DC based human rights organization that exists to help persecuted Christians worldwide. ICC provides Awareness, Advocacy, and Assistance to the worldwide persecuted Church. For additional information or for an interview, contact ICC at 800-422-5441.

 

Sunday, June 14, 2009 7:06:01 PM UTC  #    Comments [0]  | 

 

 

Chinese Christian Sentenced to Three Years in Prison for Printing and Giving Away Free Bibles

By Michael Ireland
Chief Correspondent, ASSIST News Service

A Chinese Christian bookstore owner and house church leader has been found guilty by a Beijing Court of "illegal business operation" and sentenced to three years in prison and 150,000 Yuan fine (about $22,000 USD) for printing and distributing Bibles at no cost.

According to the law, jail time served by Shi Weihan prior to the trial counts as part of his three-year sentence time, says a media release from ChinaAid (www.ChinaAid.org ) .

The group says that six others stood trial together with Shi Weihan, and also received criminal sentences. It is believed that these individuals were shareholders and executives of the printing company which printed the Bibles.

ChinaAid says the appeals process could take up to a year, while Shi Weihan would remain in prison. It is still uncertain whether the family will file an appeal due to the enormous pressure from the Public Security Bureau (PSB).

According to the ChinaAid media release, despite his serious medical diabetic condition, the lawyers' prior applications for medical parole were never granted by the authorities.

Shi Weihan's wife, Zhang Jing, and their two daughters, Shi Jia (12) and Shi En Mei (8)
[ChinaAid photo]

ChinaAid says that according to friends, Shi Weihan's wife Zhang Jing is bearing much of the burden for the family. Her main concern is caring for their two daughters, 12-year-old Shi Jia and 8-year-old Shi En Mei, and continuing the House Church work. Authorities continue to pressure their family.

ChinaAid adds: "Friends of Shi Weihan and his family ask Christians around the world to pray for the following: that Shi Weihan's health would be protected, wisdom for the family regarding whether to appeal the conviction or not, favor for a possible medical parole and God's peace and favor in these difficult circumstances."

To request the immediate release of Shi Weihan, please contact the following government authorities:

Tang Long, City of Beijing Deputy Secretary General of the Municipal People's Government
Phone: +86-10-62362008

Liu Jianchao, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Director of
Information Department
Phone: +86-10-65963342

Write an encouraging note to Shi Weihan in prison:
Qinghe Detention Center of the Haidian Sub-Bureau 2585, Longgang Road, Qinghe Town, Haidian District, Beijing CHINA

Write an encouraging note to Shi Weihan's wife, Zhang Jing, and their two daughters, Shi Jia (12) and Shi En Mei (8). Their address is: 3207, Jisheng Villa, West Sanqi, Haidian district, Beijing municipality, CHINA

Please contact: Katherine@ChinaAid.org  with questions or requests for further information.

Sunday, June 14, 2009 6:28:52 PM UTC  #    Comments [0]  | 

 

Chinese Bookstore Owner Sentenced to Three Years in Prison
Also fined nearly $22,000; “illegal business” printed Bibles for free distribution

By Jeremy Reynalds
Correspondent for ASSIST News Service

A Beijing court recently found Christian bookstore owner Shi Weihan guilty of “illegal business operation” and sentenced him to three years in prison and a 150,000 yuan (US$21,975) fine.

According to a story by Compass Direct News, sources said Shi’s store operated legally and sold only books for which he had obtained government permission, and that his Holy Spirit Trading Co. printed Bibles and Christian literature without authorization but only for free distribution to local house churches.

Compass said Shi, 38, had been released on Jan. 4, 2008 due to insufficient evidence for the same vague charge of “illegal business operation,” but he was arrested again two month later, on March 19. Contrary to Chinese law, authorities have denied all but a few visits from his lawyer and family, held him without charges for most of his time in jail, and initially withheld medication for his diabetes.

Compass reported that the court ruling seems to have allowed time that Shi has spent in jail to count toward his sentence, a source said, as his prison term was described as running from Nov. 28, 2007, when he was initially arrested, to Nov. 27, 2010.

Others in a printing company who stood trial with Shi appeared to have received similar sentences. A written judgment is expected within 15 days to allow time for an appeal to be filed, said Ray Sharpe, a friend of Shi.

“Absent an appeal, it is also possible that Shi could be allowed a sort of medical parole, due to his diabetic condition,” Compass reported Sharpe said. “Hopefully, he could then be allowed to stay in a hospital under a sort of house arrest.”

He said that Shi did not yet know whether he would appeal, adding that the process could take up to a year.

Compass said friends and business acquaintances of Shi have described him as a model citizen of China, saying that he has inspired them to love China by his patriotism and love for his homeland. They said he is known for selfless sacrifice on behalf of poor and disenfranchised rural Christians and minority children.

For much of his incarceration, Compass said Shi’s wife Zhang Jing and their two daughters, 12-year-old Shi Jia and 8-year-old Shi En Mei, have not known where he was being held. The family has been under nearly continual surveillance, limiting their ability to make contact with people who could assist them.

Compass reported sources said Zhang has worried about her husband’s condition and that she has taken on leadership duties at their church, where Public Security Bureau officials have intimidated the congregation with regular visits. Some members have left the church because of the intimidation, sources said, and Zhang is said to have suffered anxiety and stress that have led to depression.

Their two daughters have been ostracized at school for being the children of a prisoner, sources said.

Sources told Compass that Shi has lost more than 44 pounds since his second incarceration, dropping to less than 130 pounds. They added that he has suffered from blisters because of unsanitary conditions in prison, as well as tinnitus that at times causes his ears to ring so loudly that he cannot sleep.

Compass reported Chinese officials claim that the Nanjing Amity Printing Co. (Amity Press), the only government-approved Bible publisher, produces enough Bibles to meet the needs of the Chinese church, which various religious freedom organizations dispute. The groups complain that Amity prints a large share of its Bibles for export, and those sold domestically are not available to many Christians.

Sunday, June 14, 2009 6:22:23 PM UTC  #    Comments [0]  | 

 

 

Policemen in Egypt Sentenced to Only Five Years for Killing

June 10, 2009

ISTANBUL (Compass Direct News) – Two policemen convicted of killing a Christian in Giza, Egypt have received only a five-year prison sentence for what lawyers are calling the cold-blooded murder of a Copt who stood up for his rights.

The Giza Criminal Court sentenced the two policemen for manslaughter on May 25 for the 2007 death of Nasser Gadallah, 39. Police say he jumped out of a window in an effort to escape, but family members who were eyewitnesses said the officers beat Gadallah and pushed him out the window in intentional murder because he was a Christian who had filed a complaint against police.

The court, however, determined Gadallah died from the officers beating him, and that they did not intend to kill him.

 

Read the rest of the story here:

Policemen in Egypt Sentenced to Only Five Years for Killing-

Sunday, June 14, 2009 6:14:52 PM UTC  #    Comments [0]  | 

 

 

Study: Megachurch attenders tend to be younger

 

Despite their reputation as symbols of baby-boomer America, Protestant megachurches attract a younger crowd and more singles than the average Protestant church, according to large-scale study released Tuesday.

The survey also found distressing news for a movement that took off in the 1980s and remains influential in evangelical Christianity: megachurch-goers volunteer less and give less money than other churchgoers.

Conducted by the Hartford Institute for Religion Research at Hartford Seminary and Leadership Network, the survey of nearly 25,000 people who attend 12 U.S. megachurches was conducted from January through August 2008. It is billed as the largest representative national study of that religious demographic to date.

An estimated 5 million Americans a week attend roughly 1,300 U.S. megachurches, defined in the study as Protestant churches with attendance of 2,000 or more.

 

Read the rest of the story here:

 

Study: Megachurch attenders tend to be younger

Sunday, June 14, 2009 6:10:56 PM UTC  #    Comments [0]  | 

 

 

Evangelical Group Banned From Tulsa Housing Projects, Chapter Leader Says

 

A Christian evangelical group that works to improve the lives of underprivileged children says it has been prohibited from conducting Bible study classes in public housing projects in Tulsa, Okla., potentially violating a Supreme Court ruling that upheld religious groups' right to the use of public institutions.

For more than 70 years, the Missouri-based Child Evangelism Fellowship has worked with underprivileged kids, not only to convert them to Christianity, but to improve their lives through education and after-school activities. In one program, fellowship missionaries visit prisons and sign up inmates' children for Bible study programs in an effort to keep them from winding up in jail themselves.

And for more than two decades, the fellowship has hosted a religious-themed summer program in Tulsa's tough housing projects, designed to keep children from falling victim to the temptations of drugs and crime.

 

Read the rest of the story here:

Evangelical Group Banned From Tulsa Housing Projects, Chapter Leader Says

Sunday, June 14, 2009 5:01:49 PM UTC  #    Comments [0]  | 

 

 

— Some see the Bible as a book of mythical stories, others a book of inspiration to live a meaningful, purpose-driven life, and yet others as the authoritative Word of God and the power unto salvation. Depending where you fall in the range of these ideologies will dictate how you see God and yourself in relation to him.

All of Christianity comes down to believing God is who he said he is, he has done what he said he has, and believing in the fullness of his deity in Jesus Christ and the atonement for our sins he paid on the cross. The way in which we get this faith is through his spoken Word, the Bible.

 

 

Read the rest of the story here:

 

Interpret the Bible by first learning the word of God

Sunday, June 14, 2009 4:58:43 PM UTC  #    Comments [0]  | 

 

 

 

 

More Than 30 House Church Leaders Arrested in Sichuan

 

SICHUAN – On June 9 more than 30 house church leaders were arrested while gathering in a house church in Langzhong city, Sichuan province. Thirteen leaders were given 15 days of administrative detention, and five of the leaders were placed under criminal detention. The other leaders were released

 

 

Read the rest of the story here:

  • More Than 30 House Church Leaders Arrested in Sichuan

     

     

  • Sunday, June 14, 2009 4:46:06 PM UTC  #    Comments [0]  | 

     

     

    Sorry, no Christian talent allowed
    7-year-old blocked from using religious song in sign language performance

     


    The sign for "Jesus Christ"

     

    A public elementary school in Oakley, Calif., told a seven-year-old second grader that she would not be able to perform her sign language accompaniment to the song "We Worship You" at the school's evening talent show because the song is Christian.

    According to the Pacific Justice Institute, officials at Vintage Parkway Elementary School praised Bette Ouellette's talent, but informed her after auditions that the song was unacceptable for the school's June 1 talent show.

    Read the rest of the story here:

  • Sorry, no Christian talent allowed / 7-year-old blocked from using religious song in sign language performance - WorldNetDaily
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    Sunday, June 14, 2009 4:30:49 PM UTC  #    Comments [0]  | 

     

     

    China: Bookstore Owner Sentenced to Three Years in Prison

     

    LOS ANGELES (Compass Direct News) – A Beijing court today found Christian bookstore owner Shi Weihan guilty of “illegal business operation” and sentenced him to three years in prison and a 150,000 yuan (US$21,975) fine.

    Sources said Shi’s store operated legally and sold only books for which he had obtained government permission, and that his Holy Spirit Trading Co. printed Bibles and Christian literature without authorization but only for free distribution to local house churches

     

     

    Read the rest of the story here:

    China: Bookstore Owner Sentenced to Three Years in Prison

     

    Sunday, June 14, 2009 4:21:49 PM UTC  #    Comments [0]  | 

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