Faith
Sudanese Teen Expelled for Faith in Christ
Faith Facts
- An 18-year-old Sudanese refugee was cast out by her family in South Sudan for accepting Christ as her Savior.
- Her family demanded she renounce her new faith or face permanent rejection and loss of her family name.
- Sudan ranks among the most challenging nations for Christians, facing ongoing persecution and societal pressure.
Amona Ibrahim Kaki turned to Jesus after secretly studying a Bible she discovered in her brother’s room.
Her encounter with Christ, coupled with prayer and Christian fellowship, changed her life and led her to declare her faith publicly at a local church.
Upon learning of her conversion, her Muslim family responded with anger, confiscating her phone and threatening her with expulsion if she did not return to Islam.
“This has never happened before in our family – she must leave the house before my arrival or else she will see the consequences.”
Her brother warned, showing the severe cost of choosing Christ in her community.
Despite isolation, threats, and uncertainty, Amona’s experience is a powerful testimony to faith’s transformative power and the courage required to follow Christ in the face of persecution.
In Sudan, Christians are a minority, making up just 2.3 percent of the population, and they often contend with intense social and legal opposition to their religious freedom.
As believers, let us pray for Amona and all Christians facing persecution, and let us stand firmly for religious liberty and the freedom to follow Christ without fear.
Faith
Bangladesh Christians Grapple with Shifting Religious Landscape Under New Political Era
Faith Facts
- Bangladesh Nationalist Party secures landslide victory, Tarique Rahman becomes prime minister after 18 months of turmoil.
- Government announces first-ever monthly allowances for clergy of all faiths, including non-Muslims.
- Christian leaders voice cautious hope, urging justice, security, and religious liberty for minorities.
Bangladesh’s Christian communities greet the BNP’s electoral triumph and Tarique Rahman’s leadership with prayerful optimism, viewing it as divine response to believers’ pleas amid past violence against minorities.
Symbolic steps like financial support for clergy signal potential progress, yet leaders stress the need for real protections beyond gestures.
“The election mandate is in answer to the prayers of the church,” Rev. Asa Michael Kain declared.
“I personally congratulate the government,” Rev. Albert Rozario stated, pledging prayers for harmonious rule.
Bishop Sebastian Tudu refused the stipend, warning of possible political pressures on the Church dedicated to God.
Archbishop Bejoy Nicephorus D’Cruze called for Bangladesh to become a haven of comfort and hope for all.
Bishop Philip P. Adhikary emphasized translating constitutional rights into daily safety and fair representation for Christians contributing to society.
Scripture reminds us in Proverbs 21:1 that God directs leaders’ hearts; may Rahman govern with Biblical justice, impartial courts, and freedom for faith expressions.
Join in prayer for Bangladesh’s faithful, that this new era upholds God’s values of liberty and protection for His people worldwide.
Faith
Churches Face a Faith-Enduring Choice: Purpose Over Preservation for Revival’s Sake
Rev. Jamie Sewell upholds the sacred beauty of church tradition, echoing generations of faithful Anglican worship that grounds believers in eternal truths.
Reflecting on his ancestor’s role as canal lock-keeper, he stresses that vital paths served purpose, carrying national life forward, much like the church must proclaim Christ.
Faith Facts
- Sewell’s teenage runs along Rugby canals revealed family heritage of purposeful service, not mere sentimentality.
- Parish introduced second service amid grief over losing traditional beauty, balancing reverence with missional outreach to youth.
- Church, like evolving canal to railway to motorway, adapts forms to deliver Gospel effectively across generations.
Sentiment honors forebears who opened gates of faith, yet clinging solely to forms risks forsaking the Great Commission.
Beauty without purpose becomes a museum, sidelining our duty to carry salvation to the nation under God’s sovereign call.
Stand firm for biblical faithfulness in worship and evangelism—share this wisdom with your church family today.
Faith
A Sudden Policy Push Risks Deepening Isolation Among Today’s Youth
Faith Facts
- Youth clubs, sports, arts have eroded, leaving social media as key peer connection for unsupervised engagement.
- Algorithms exploit young people, but banning access ignores broader loneliness from closed centers and protective parents.
- Church of England funds 30 youth workers via ‘Ignite’ in Lancashire to rebuild community spaces.
Bishop Philip North warns that banning social media for under-16s, as debated in Parliament, risks worsening isolation amid declining youth opportunities guided by Biblical community principles.
While algorithms from profit-driven corporations manipulate youth, punishing young victims ignores the sins of perpetrators and fails to prepare them for a tech-driven world rooted in family and faith.
Adults must replace restrictions with reinvested youth work, sports, arts, and residential experiences to nurture whole persons as God intends, not mere economic units.
Scripture calls us to shepherd the young; let’s advocate for rich, fulfilling opportunities where phones pale in comparison, honoring faith, family, and freedom in our nation.
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