Faith
Church of Scotland weighs apology over slavery ties and justice response
Faith Facts
- The Church of Scotland is reviewing a report on historical ties to the transatlantic slave trade.
- Church leaders will vote on an official apology and possible justice initiatives at the General Assembly on May 16.
- The report says some church members may have defended or benefited from slavery, even after it was outlawed in Scotland.
The Church of Scotland is preparing to review a detailed report on historical connections to the transatlantic slave trade.
The assessment will examine whether past members profited from, or theologically defended, the practice of slavery.
As believers, we know that every person is created in the image of God and deserves dignity.
The proposed apology seeks to address past moral failures and point toward repentance and reconciliation.
“We are grieved beyond telling by the extraordinary suffering we have inflicted – through our actions and our inaction – on our brothers and sisters.”
True repentance requires us to acknowledge where we have failed to love our neighbors as ourselves.
By naming these past wrongs, the institution hopes to bear fruit worthy of faith and align more closely with Biblical justice.
Pray that the Church seeks wisdom and truth as it navigates these complex historical accounts.
May the pursuit of reconciliation always be grounded in the grace and transformative power of the Gospel.
Faith
What the Persecuted Church in Lebanon Teaches American Believers
Faith Facts
- Christian missionary Carla Miller serves churches across the Middle East from Lebanon, focusing on helping young believers withstand persecution
- The Faith Without Frontiers podcast explores how Middle Eastern Christians maintain their faith under extreme pressure and cultural opposition
- Miller’s ministry emphasizes building spiritual resilience in young people facing threats to their Christian identity
The third episode of Christian Daily International’s podcast Faith Without Frontiers brought powerful testimony from the front lines of Christian persecution. Carla Miller, a missionary serving churches throughout the Middle East from her base in Lebanon, shared how she helps young believers build unshakable faith in hostile environments.
Miller’s work centers on equipping young Christians to maintain their identity and conviction when cultural forces and direct persecution seek to silence their witness. Her ministry provides a sobering reminder of the cost many believers pay simply for identifying with Christ.
The conversation revealed how Middle Eastern Christians display remarkable resilience despite facing pressures most American believers never encounter. These persecuted believers offer profound lessons about maintaining faith when following Jesus carries genuine risk.
From her position in Lebanon, Miller witnesses firsthand how young Christians navigate societies where their faith marks them for discrimination, social exclusion, and worse. Her ministry focuses on spiritual formation that prepares believers not just to survive but to thrive spiritually under persecution.
The Faith Without Frontiers podcast continues Christian Daily International’s commitment to amplifying the voices of believers worldwide who demonstrate extraordinary faithfulness. Miller’s testimony challenges comfortable Western Christianity and calls American believers to deeper commitment.
Her work demonstrates that the global church remains vibrant and growing even in regions where Christianity faces its greatest opposition. These stories of perseverance should inspire American Christians to value their religious freedom while standing in solidarity with suffering believers.
The conversation with Miller explored how persecution often strengthens rather than weakens authentic faith. Young believers learning to count the cost of discipleship develop spiritual maturity that surpasses what many Western Christians experience.
Miller’s ministry illustrates the biblical principle that the church grows strongest under pressure. The resilience she witnesses in Middle Eastern youth challenges the shallow commitment often found in cultures where faith costs nothing.
Let us know what you think, please share your thoughts in the comments below.
Faith
Pakistani Court Ruling Threatens Christian Charities Serving the Persecuted
Faith Facts
- A Pakistani high court ruling has restored strict government oversight rules on NGOs receiving foreign funding, threatening Christian organizations serving persecuted communities.
- Christian advocacy groups warn the decision could severely restrict their ability to operate and help vulnerable believers in one of the world’s most dangerous nations for Christians.
- The ruling comes amid broader efforts by Pakistan’s government to control civil society organizations, particularly those with international connections.
Christian organizations working to defend persecuted believers in Pakistan are sounding the alarm after a high court decision restored sweeping government controls over nonprofits receiving foreign funding. The ruling has sparked concerns that religious freedom groups could be silenced at a time when Pakistan’s Christian minority faces mounting threats.
Rights groups, including Christian organizations advocating for persecuted communities, warn that the recent high court ruling could significantly expand government oversight of civil society. The decision threatens to restrict the ability of nonprofits to operate, particularly those reliant on foreign funding to carry out their mission.
For Christian advocacy groups, the implications are especially grave. These organizations often depend on international support to provide legal defense, humanitarian aid, and protection for believers facing violence and discrimination. Pakistan ranks as one of the most dangerous countries in the world for Christians, where blasphemy laws are frequently weaponized against minorities and forced conversions remain a persistent threat.
The court’s decision restores regulatory powers that give Pakistani authorities broad discretion to monitor, restrict, or shut down organizations deemed problematic. Christian groups fear this will be used to target faith-based charities that shine a light on religious persecution or challenge government policies affecting minority communities.
By empowering officials to scrutinize foreign funding streams, the ruling creates additional barriers for organizations already operating in a hostile environment. Many Christian charities rely on donations from believers in the West to sustain their work protecting vulnerable populations, including women and children escaping forced marriages and religious violence.
The decision represents a troubling trend of governments using bureaucratic mechanisms to silence dissent and control independent voices. For Christian organizations committed to defending the persecuted church, this ruling is yet another obstacle in their mission to bring hope and justice to those suffering for their faith.
Advocates are calling on the international community to monitor the situation closely and hold Pakistani authorities accountable for protecting religious freedom and civil society. The ability of Christian groups to operate freely in Pakistan has direct implications for the safety and wellbeing of the nation’s besieged Christian minority.
Let us know what you think, please share your thoughts in the comments below.
Faith
Egyptian Christian Faces Five Years Hard Labor for Sharing His Faith Online
Faith Facts
- A 37-year-old Coptic Christian researcher was sentenced to five years of hard labor in Egypt for posting YouTube videos about Christianity
- The Christian YouTuber has filed an appeal to overturn his conviction for sharing his faith online
- Religious freedom advocates warn that Egypt’s blasphemy laws are being weaponized against Christian evangelism and expression
In a stark reminder of the persecution facing Christians in the Middle East, a Coptic Christian researcher and YouTube evangelist has been sentenced to five years of hard labor simply for sharing his faith online. The 37-year-old believer was convicted in January for posting videos about Christianity on his YouTube channel, a sentence that has sparked outrage among religious freedom advocates worldwide.
The case highlights the dangerous environment Christians face in Egypt, where blasphemy laws are increasingly being used to silence Christian voices and evangelism. This faithful servant of Christ now faces years of grueling imprisonment for exercising what Americans would recognize as a fundamental right: the freedom to share one’s religious beliefs.
The researcher has filed an appeal seeking to overturn his conviction, but the prospects remain uncertain in a legal system that has shown increasing hostility toward Christian expression. His attorneys are challenging the legitimacy of using blasphemy statutes to criminalize peaceful religious discourse and evangelism.
This case represents a disturbing trend across the Muslim-majority world, where Christians are routinely targeted for practicing and sharing their faith. Egypt, despite having a significant Coptic Christian minority comprising roughly 10 percent of its population, has seen numerous instances of believers being prosecuted under laws ostensibly designed to prevent religious offense.
The harsh sentence of five years with hard labor sends a chilling message to Christians in Egypt and beyond: sharing the Gospel can cost you your freedom. Religious freedom organizations have condemned the verdict as a clear violation of international human rights standards and a direct assault on the freedom of conscience.
For American Christians, this case should serve as both a wake-up call and a call to prayer. While we enjoy constitutional protections for religious expression, our brothers and sisters around the world face imprisonment, torture, and death for living out their faith. The researcher’s courage in continuing to share Christ despite the risks exemplifies the kind of bold witness the early church demonstrated.
The appeal process may take months or even years to resolve, during which time this faithful Christian remains imprisoned for his witness. His case underscores the urgent need for Western nations to prioritize religious freedom in their diplomatic relations with countries like Egypt, where persecution of Christians continues with alarming regularity.
As this case moves forward, the global Christian community must stand in solidarity with our Egyptian brother. His willingness to suffer for the name of Christ challenges comfortable Western Christianity and reminds us of Jesus’s words that His followers would face persecution for righteousness’ sake.
Let us know what you think, please share your thoughts in the comments below.
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