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Global Church Network Equips Congregations as Refugee Crisis Reaches Breaking Point

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Faith Facts

  • The Anglican Alliance has launched a global resource to help churches respond to the escalating displacement crisis affecting millions worldwide
  • Refugee numbers are climbing dramatically across Africa as humanitarian systems face unprecedented strain
  • The new tool recognizes churches as frontline responders uniquely positioned to serve displaced communities with compassion and practical aid

As the global refugee crisis deepens to levels not seen in generations, a major Christian network is stepping forward to equip local congregations for their vital role in serving the displaced. The Anglican Alliance has unveiled a comprehensive global resource designed to help churches respond effectively to the rising wave of displacement affecting vulnerable populations around the world.

The timing of this initiative reflects the urgent reality on the ground. Refugee numbers are climbing sharply across the African continent, where conflict, persecution, and instability continue to force families from their homes. Humanitarian systems that were already stretched thin now face growing strain as the scale of need outpaces available resources.

This new tool acknowledges what many faith communities already know from experience: churches stand on the frontlines of the refugee crisis. Local congregations are often the first to welcome displaced families, providing not just material assistance but also the spiritual support and human dignity that institutional aid alone cannot offer.

The resource equips churches with practical guidance, theological frameworks, and best practices for ministering to refugees and displaced persons. It recognizes that Christian communities bring unique assets to humanitarian response—deep roots in local communities, networks of trust, and a mandate rooted in Scripture to welcome the stranger and care for the vulnerable.

For American Christians watching these global developments, the initiative serves as a reminder of the Church’s historic calling to be a refuge for the persecuted and displaced. From the earliest days of Christianity, believers have understood that serving those forced from their homes is not merely charitable work but a biblical imperative that reflects the heart of God.

The growing displacement crisis also highlights the consequences of instability and failed governance in many regions. While Christians are called to respond with compassion regardless of political considerations, the situation underscores the importance of policies that promote peace, protect religious freedom, and support stable governance that allows people to live safely in their own communities.

As churches around the world utilize this new resource, they join a long tradition of faith-based humanitarian response that has often proven more effective and sustainable than purely secular alternatives. The personal relationships, cultural understanding, and long-term commitment that local congregations bring to refugee ministry create outcomes that bureaucratic systems struggle to replicate.

The Anglican Alliance’s initiative demonstrates how the global Church can mobilize to address pressing humanitarian needs while maintaining its distinct identity and mission. Rather than simply replicating secular aid models, this approach centers the unique spiritual and community resources that make churches irreplaceable partners in caring for the displaced.

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Faithful Minister Dies Rescuing Earthquake Victims in Venezuela

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  • Joaquín Rodríguez, a minister at La Guaira Church of Christ, died of a heart attack after three straight days helping earthquake victims in Venezuela
  • Twin earthquakes of 7.2 and 7.5 magnitude killed at least 1,700 people and devastated coastal Venezuela on June 24
  • Christian nonprofits including Healing Hands International and One Kingdom are organizing relief efforts for the crisis-stricken nation

The devastating earthquakes that struck Venezuela last week continue to exact a heavy toll — now claiming the life of a dedicated minister who gave everything to help survivors.

Joaquín Rodríguez, a minister and leader at the La Guaira Church of Christ in coastal Venezuela, suffered a fatal heart attack after working three consecutive days in the aftermath of the June 24 disasters. The twin earthquakes measured 7.2 and 7.5 magnitude, killing at least 1,700 people and injuring thousands more.

Germán Chirinos, a minister in Falcón state in northwest Venezuela, described Rodríguez’s final hours.

“He was helping others and looking for survivors. Some brothers told me that they prayed together with him, and while he was driving, he died.”

La Guaira state sustained massive damage from the back-to-back quakes. At least four members of the La Guaira church are among the dead, Chirinos confirmed.

Chirinos remembered Rodríguez as a man of deep faith and servant leadership.

“He was a humble man with a big heart. [He was] very concerned and committed to the church in La Guaira.”

In Venezuela’s capital, Caracas, at least two church members also perished. Minister H. Jose Silencio painted a grim picture of conditions on the ground.

“The situation is critical. There are many dead, many injured and many missing. Many people have died in the rubble, and many survivors are left without hope.”

Christian nonprofits are mobilizing to bring relief to the beleaguered nation. Healing Hands International, One Kingdom, and Great Cities Missions — ministries associated with Churches of Christ — are collecting funds and organizing relief shipments for Venezuela, which has endured severe economic and political crises over the past decade.

Despite overwhelming loss, Christians across Venezuela are turning to Scripture for strength and comfort. Carlos León, a minister in San Antonio de los Altos, said believers are finding peace even amid profound suffering.

“In spite of the situation so difficult that we’re living through, we have a peace that passes all understanding. There’s sadness because of the pain people are suffering, that our brothers and sisters are suffering, and for the loss. There’s mourning, but there’s hope of something beyond.”

For León, the earthquakes call to mind the Old Testament prophet Elijah’s experience in 1 Kings, Chapter 19. When Elijah was overcome with grief, God told him to leave the cave where he had sought refuge.

“An earthquake appeared, but God wasn’t there in either the earthquake or the hurricane-force winds, but rather God was in the peaceful and gentle whisper that gives us peace, that gives us confidence,” León said.

The Venezuelan minister emphasized that Christians are called not to offer easy answers during times of suffering, but to provide genuine comfort and presence.

“Listen to victims and pray with them, pray or listen to them, cry with them and be there … be there serving them, so they feel our love and our empathy.”

Chirinos expressed gratitude for the global Christian community’s response.

“The whole congregation, nationally and worldwide, are together in this trying to help any way they can. So thanks to God and to all of you.”

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Spanish Churches Rally as Venezuelan Earthquake Survivors Flee to Europe

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Faith Facts

  • Church elder Juan Lázaro pivoted his Sunday sermon to address devastating earthquakes in Venezuela, focusing on Romans 8 and God’s sovereignty over suffering
  • The Church of Christ on Teruel Street in Madrid is 80% Latin American immigrants, with 15-20 Venezuelan members among the congregation
  • Over 1,700 people perished in the Venezuelan earthquakes, including members of Churches of Christ, as the tragedy strikes close to home for Spanish congregations

Juan Lázaro had already prepared his Sunday message when back-to-back earthquakes devastated Venezuela. So the elder of the Church of Christ on Teruel Street in Madrid decided to pivot from the New Testament’s call to evangelize to its affirmation that even life’s blows point to God’s glory.

“I want you to adopt a biblical perspective toward understanding the reason things happen,” Lázaro told the congregation in Spain’s capital, basing his sermon on Romans 8. “Don’t judge by human standards — instead, try to have God’s perspective on what happens in your life, your world, your moment in time.”

Although the South American nation of Venezuela is some 4,390 miles away from Spain, it feels much closer at Teruel Street, which could be called the mother congregation for Churches of Christ in Spain. While Spain was once the colonizer of the Americas, in recent decades the human flow across the Atlantic has reversed, with Latin Americans immigrating to the country for greater economic opportunities.

Lázaro said that the Teruel Street congregation has 15 to 20 Venezuelan members, along with immigrants from Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, Argentina, Guatemala and El Salvador. He estimates that 80 percent of the church is from Latin America.

In his sermon, Lázaro urged the congregation to take comfort in Paul’s assurance that the world and its suffering are moving toward redemption.

“What happens is not outside God’s control. God has sovereign control over events, circumstances and people,” he said.

And God is no stranger to suffering.

“The God of the Christian faith is not a God who takes it on himself to explain ‘why’ — why our Venezuelan brothers and sisters have died,” Lázaro said.

Rather, the leader argued, “he is a God who accompanies us with a view toward the pain that has entered human history.” Jesus was a “man of sorrows” who “suffered every kind of brokenness.”

For Venezuelans living in Spain, “distance does not lessen the pain we feel when tragedy strikes our homeland,” said Pedro Andrade, a longtime church planter in Venezuela who recently moved with his wife, Luisa, to Vigo, Spain. The couple works with the growing population of Venezuelans arriving in the port city.

“What makes this situation especially difficult is the feeling of helplessness,” Andrade said. In the past, he and his wife participated directly in disaster response, alongside Churches of Christ across Venezuela. “Today, being so far away, we cannot respond in the same way, and that reality weighs heavily on our hearts.”

Members of Churches of Christ are among the 1,700-plus souls that perished in the quakes. As the Andrades mourn the losses, they find comfort in passages including Psalm 34:18: “The Lord is near to the brokenhearted and saves those who are crushed in spirit.”

“Yet even in the midst of loss, we trust that God continues to work according to his purpose,” Pedro Andrade said. “We pray that those who have survived, those who witnessed these events and those whose lives have been spared will reflect on the fragility of life and seek the hope that is found in Christ. … This is a time for the church to demonstrate compassion, generosity and the selfless agape love that reflects the character of our Savior.”

Back in Madrid, Lázaro spoke of the tremendous changes Spain has undergone since Spanish author and evangelist Juan Antonio Monroy, now in his 90s, helped establish the Teruel Street congregation in the 1960s. Protestant Christians at the time felt threatened by Spain’s powerful Catholic Church, with its historic influence on Spanish society. Now 16 Churches of Christ meet in Spain, including five in Madrid.

Monroy later became a pioneering evangelist in Cuba, working with the Herald of Truth ministry. The Teruel Street leader sees today’s immigrant church members as a gift.

“From the perspective of the churches and people of faith, the fact that people from Spanish America have come has enriched Spain from a religious, economic and cultural perspective,” Lázaro said. “The presence of these brothers and sisters … is serving as a great blessing because they come with excitement … and get closely involved in the work of the church.”

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New Healing Center Offers Hope to Persecuted Believers in Africa’s Sahel Region

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Faith Facts

  • A new Christian healing center in the Sahel region provides trauma recovery for persecuted believers
  • The center focuses on Christ-centered healing of mind, body, spirit, and soul
  • Survivors of persecution are responding with forgiveness and a desire to share the Gospel with their abusers

In one of the world’s most dangerous regions for Christians, a beacon of hope has emerged for believers enduring persecution and abuse. The Sahel—a vast semi-arid region stretching across Africa from Senegal to Sudan—has become increasingly hostile to Christian communities in recent years.

A newly established healing center is now offering traumatized believers a pathway to recovery, placing Jesus Christ at the center of the healing process. The facility provides comprehensive care that addresses the full scope of trauma—mental, physical, spiritual, and emotional.

The center’s approach differs from secular trauma care by recognizing that true wholeness comes through faith in Christ. Survivors receive counseling, medical care, and biblical teaching designed to restore what violence and persecution have damaged.

Perhaps most remarkably, those who find healing at the center are demonstrating the transformative power of the Gospel in an unexpected way. Rather than harboring bitterness toward those who harmed them, healed believers are expressing a desire to share the love of Christ with their former persecutors.

This Christ-like response mirrors Jesus’ own words from the cross: “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.” The willingness of persecution survivors to extend grace to their abusers stands as powerful testimony to the genuine nature of their healing.

The Sahel region has experienced escalating violence against Christians, with Islamic extremist groups gaining ground in countries including Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger. Churches have been burned, believers killed, and entire communities displaced.

Despite these challenges, the establishment of this healing center demonstrates that the Church continues to advance even in places where faith carries a tremendous cost. The center represents not just a place of physical refuge, but a demonstration that Christ’s power to heal and restore transcends even the most severe trauma.

The ministry serves as a reminder that where darkness seems overwhelming, God continues to work through His people to bring light, hope, and redemption.

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