The Week of Prayer for Christian Unity is
actually an eight-day observance or “octave” of
prayer. It has been this way since the
beginnings of this international movement in
1908.
This is now the Sword of the Spirit’s 10th year
of participating in this worldwide observance!
Similar to last year, we want to take a special
approach to the materials used in our observance
based on the concept of ‘the ecumenism of
blood’.
The ‘ecumenism of blood’ is a simple concept on
one level: hearing of the persecution of our
Christian brothers and sisters around the world
speaks directly to our hearts. As we hear of
their suffering, our hearts call out in
intercession; theological differences shrink in
significance as we pray for their protection.
The ‘ecumenism of blood’ is first and foremost
an ecumenism of the heart.
There is also a deeper level to the ‘ecumenism
of blood’, wrapped up in the mystery of
persecution and martyrdom. The Father brings His
kingdom, including the unity of His kingdom,
through the seeds of his suffering church. The
‘ecumenism of blood’ is therefore a part of the
larger mystery of God’s bringing salvation and
unity to the world.
We want to use this year’s observance to
explore these topics and let them shape our
intercession for the unity of God’s people.
How will we do this? For each of the eight days
we will focus on a different country or region
of the world and examine the persecution of
God’s people in that place. We’ll look at places
where the persecution is more overt and places
where it is more subtle. We’ll look at
persecution from Hindu extremism, Islamic
extremism and secular pressures in more first
world environments. We will also have a daily
scripture for meditation and two short topical
essays from Dr. Dan Keating and Jean Barbara.
May the Holy Spirit lead us and give us grace
as we seek to understand, appreciate and
intercede for the unity of the suffering church
around the world.
We have also included a short Lord’s Day prayer
that can be inserted in the section following
the blessing of the wine which can be used like
the other seasonal variations in the Lord’s Day
prayers.
Please use these materials in any way you find
most helpful in your personal and family worship
times during this season of prayer.
Note: The Psalms listed in this booklet follow
the numbering of the Hebrew tradition.
Scripture for the day: John 15:18 “If
the world hates you, know that it has hated
me before it hated you.”
Sub-Sharan Africa: In Africa, Christianity is
experiencing explosive growth. As a recent Pew
report states: “By 2060, a plurality of
Christians – more than four-in-ten – will call
sub-Saharan Africa home, up from 26% in 2015.”
This is a remarkable statistic: 40% of all
Christians worldwide will reside in
Sub-Saharan Africa.
Despite this growth and many positive
examples of Christians and Muslims living
together peacefully in southern Africa, there
are several countries where Christians are
under threat and are being stopped from
exercising their religious freedoms.
Some of the worst Christian persecution is
taking place in Nigeria, Eritrea, Sudan and
the Central African Republic. For most of
these countries the persecution comes from
Muslim extremists.
One survivor from the Central African
Republic described an attack which occurred in
May 2019:
“Several armed Islamic gunmen, wearing
military fatigues and armed with automatic
rifles arrived in my village and asked to
see the community leaders to organize a
general meeting,” says Alphonse, a survivor
who was injured in the attack. “The people
then gathered under a mango tree,” he said.
“Then they started to tie us up. They tore
my shirt to tie my arms,”
Alphonse continued. “They piled us on top of
each other, then started shooting. It felt
like it was raining bullets.”
Similar acts of violence are occurring
throughout the entire region. According to a
recent report by Open Doors USA, one in every
six Christians in Africa experiences high
levels of persecution.
Intercession: Lord be at work
powerfully in these dire circumstances. Draw
all the people of the Sub-Sahara to yourself
and away from retaliation. Please give wisdom,
peace, protection and courage to the churches
and their leaders that, as they encounter this
persecution, they may continue to build the
Kingdom of God in Africa.
Prayer for the Lord’s Day
This prayer may be used after the Blessing of
the Wine, similar to the seasonal variations
in the Lord's Day Opening Ceremony.
Leader: Let us thank Him this day
especially for the unity we enjoy in the Body
of Christ and for our call to ecumenical life
in the Sword of the Spirit. May we all become
perfectly one, so that the world may know and
believe. Lord our God, You are bringing us
into the fullness of unity through the work of
Your Son, our Lord, Jesus Christ.
Group: Now we live with Him through
the Holy Spirit, and we look for the day when
we will dwell with Him in Your everlasting
kingdom.
How can the ‘ecumenism of blood’ lead to a
deeper ecumenism of heart and mind?
You might not be familiar with the phrase,
‘ecumenism of blood’. It is an idea that has
gained momentum among Christians especially in
the past 5-10 years.
The sense of an ‘ecumenism of martyrs’ was
widely publicized by Pope John Paul II twenty
years ago around the time of the millennium.
What is the vision behind this? If Christians
– of whatever background and conviction – die
for their faith in Christ, then they
demonstrate the ultimate act of ‘witness’ to
him. Martyrs in the modern world in fact come
from all the different churches. And all of
them give their ‘all’ to Christ in a
definitive way.
The idea is that if martyrs from various
churches can be joined in this common act of
complete witness to Christ, then this shows a
unity achieved beyond what we have been able
to attain in the normal life of Christians.
The martyrs, then, by their act of this
complete gift of their lives, show that unity
is possible and already being reached.
As we gaze on our common martyrs, we are then
strengthened to pursue unity here and now—to
serve together, witness together, and suffer
together.
The ‘ecumenism of blood’ has become Pope
Francis’ favorite way of speaking about how
Christians are called to witness together
today. Here is an excerpt from his address to
an ecumenical gathering of Christians in
Phoenix, AZ (USA) in 2015. (In case you don’t
spot it, he is talking about the ‘devil’ in
the opening sentences.)
“There is someone who ‘knows’ that,
despite our differences, we are one. It is
he who is persecuting us. It is he who is
persecuting Christians today, he who is
anointing us with (the blood of) martyrdom.
He knows that Christians are disciples of
Christ: that they are one, that they are
brothers! He doesn’t care if they are
Evangelicals, or Orthodox, Lutherans,
Catholics or Apostolic … he doesn’t care!
They are Christians. And that blood (of
martyrdom) unites. Today, dear brothers and
sisters, we are living an ‘ecumenism of
blood’. This must encourage us to do what we
are doing today: to pray, to dialogue
together, to shorten the distance between
us, to strengthen our bonds of brotherhood.”
A striking example of this ‘ecumenism of
blood’ occurred in North Africa in 2015. A
video was released showing the beheading of
twenty-one Coptic Christians along the Libyan
coast. Why were they killed? Simply because
they were Christians and confessed to being
so. Fellow Christians across the world joined
in mourning their deaths but also rejoiced in
the power of their witness. For these
twenty-one Coptic men, ‘the adventure of
discipleship’ ended suddenly and with great
cost. It was probably not what any of them had
planned. But to them was granted the great
privilege to die for Christ – and so to prove
themselves Christ’s friends.
As we witness fellow Christians giving their
lives (their blood) for Christ, we can take
heart that they are forging a unity in Christ
deeper than anything that divides us. May we
be strengthened by their example, to live and
to die for the Lord.
Dr. Dan Keating is an elder in the
Servants of the Word and teaches at Sacred
Heart Seminary in Detroit, Michigan, USA.
Scripture for the day: Matthew 5:10
“Blessed are those who are persecuted for
righteousness’ sake, for theirs is the
kingdom of heaven.”
India: Hinduism is the largest
religion in India followed by Islam and
Christianity. According to Indian tradition,
the Christian faith was introduced to India by
Thomas the Apostle, who may have reached the
Malabar Coast in southwestern India in 52 A.D.
Since that time Christianity has been a small
but active presence in certain parts of the
country (though small in percentage terms,
there are 28 million Christians in India).
Christians in India are mainly represented by
the Malabar, Roman Catholic and Malankara
Orthodox churches. There is also strong growth
among Evangelical and Pentecostal communities.
However, India is also seeing a dramatic rise
in persecution as more and more churches and
individual Christians come under attack,
mainly from Hindu extremists. The latest
figures indicate that cases of hate and
violence against India's minority Christians
jumped 57 percent in the first two months of
2018. According to the Evangelical Fellowship
of India, a total of 77 incidents were
documented against Christians between January
and February 2019. In addition to
violent attacks, there are recorded cases
where Christians faced social boycott and have
been ‘excommunicated’ from their villages or
forced to flee for their lives.
Here are just two examples of incidents which
occurred this past summer. On July 28 while he
was praying for his congregation, Pastor Raju
Prassad, pastor of a small Christian
fellowship in Uttar Pradesh was attacked,
dragged from his house church and beaten. He
was accused of converting local Hindu
villagers. In August the attendees of a
Christian wedding were attacked by a Sikh mob
and threatened with beating and death. Police
were called but rather than arrest the
attackers, several Christians were arrested
for allegedly converting people.
Intercession: Let us pray for our
brothers and sisters in India, that the Lord
bring them safely through this persecution and
that through this adversity the Lord would
continue to advance the church in India.
Scripture for the day: Romans 8:35 “Who
shall separate us from the love of Christ?
Shall tribulation, or distress, or
persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or
danger, or sword?”
Western Europe: In Western Europe Christians
do not often face the same direct threat of
violence as in other parts of the world.
However, in recent years there has been a
sharp rise in intolerance and discrimination
towards Christians. Intolerance refers
to cultural or social pressures which at its
worst can include violent hate crimes. A
recent report ranking 200 nations for social
hostility to Christianity ranked the UK 17th
in the world, Germany was 23rd; the USA, by
comparison, was 49th.
Discrimination includes legally sanctioned
interference with freedom of expression,
religion, conscience, association and
assembly, the rights of parents, governmental
removal of Christian symbols, laws that
negatively impact Christians, and unequal
access to justice. The same report
estimated that in the UK, government legal
restrictions on Christians grew by 60% between
2000 and 2010. In Germany the figure was 23%.
Pope Francis has been quoted as saying that
there are two types of anti-Christian
persecution. The first is overt which is clear
and explicit and undeniable. The second is
“polite persecution” disguised as culture,
disguised as modernity, disguised as progress.
The shift away from Christian foundations in
Europe has seen an array of human rights
elevated in comparison to religious
principles. Courts have portrayed the
Christian faith as irrational, the trend being
to not accommodate citizen’s religious
conscience. Faith then becomes a private
matter increasingly expunged from public
discourse and the world of employment.
In this climate an increasing amount of
discrimination has been documented. Many
of these incidents attack our freedom to obey
established Christian teaching.
In France, a pharmacist was sanctioned for
refusing to sell an IUD, the abortifacient
device. In Sweden, which allows medical
practitioners no right of conscientious
objection, pro-life midwives who refused to
participate in abortions lost their jobs and
were ordered to pay court costs in appeals
challenging their employment
termination. A Catholic nursing home in
Belgium was fined for preventing doctors from
giving a lethal injection, and a Christian
nursing home in Switzerland was ordered to
allow assisted suicide on its premises or risk
losing its charitable status.
Intercessions: Let us pray that our
brothers and sisters in Western Europe would
remain confident to speak and act in
accordance with the law of God.
live
Scripture for the day: 2 Corinthians
12:10 “For the sake of Christ, then, I am
content with weaknesses, insults, hardships,
persecutions, and calamities. For when I am
weak, then I am strong.”
Southeast Asia: China, Vietnam, Malaysia:
From a little more than 62 million Christians
in East and Southeast Asia in 1970, by 2015
the number of faithful had grown to more than
266 million. The World Christian Database
estimates that by 2050 there will be 431
million Christians in Asia, nearly 20 per cent
of the projected population.
In 2018 nearly 140 million Christians
suffered high levels of persecution in Asia,
according to a new report, which described the
situation facing the faith in China as the
worst since the Cultural Revolution. While
nearly everyone is aware of the religious
oppression in China, little is commonly known
about the difficulties in countries like
Vietnam and Malaysia.
In Malaysia, it is illegal to evangelize
Malays, and Malays may not convert to another
religion. In one high profile incident which
occurred in 2017, a free church pastor,
63-year-old Raymond Koh, was kidnapped in
broad daylight and is still missing. A recent
Malaysian Human Rights Commission report,
released in April 2019, claimed that Pastor
Poh, “fell prey to ‘enforced disappearance by
state agents’ from the national police” for
his evangelistic mission.
Vietnam has a repressive Communist government
which actively persecutes Christians. Even
though the practice of Christianity is legal,
the government still sees it as a threat.
Minority tribal groups, such as the Hmong,
typically face the most violent and harshest
forms of persecution. Yet, the country’s
churches continue to grow even while
experiencing overt, as well as more subtle,
forms of religious persecution. These
Christians are often denied social services,
utilities and education in an attempt to
pressure them to reject their faith.
Intercessions: Let us pray that the
Christians of China, Malaysia and Vietnam will
stand firm in their faith, despite opposition.
Let us pray that all Asian Christians will be
free to practice their faith in Jesus Christ
and that their witness in the face of
persecution will bring many to Christ.
Martyrdom: By martyrdom, we normally
mean dying for Christ. But the Greek word for
‘martyr’ also is the word for ‘witness’. Every
disciple of Jesus is essentially a ‘witness’
(Acts 1:7-8), and thus a ‘martyr’.
Traditionally, martyrdom was understood under
three forms: a witness by word, that is, an
evangelist; a witness by life, that is,
obedience to Christ and to his will (Acts
5:24-32); and a witness by blood, that is, the
pouring of one’s blood for the truth of the
Gospel. Acts 6-7 describe how Stephen
lived these three forms of martyrdom in an
excellent way.
While the first two forms of martyrdom are
the bread and butter of every disciple, the
last form is reserved to a few. Although,
saying ‘a few’ is perhaps an understatement.
During the two years of 2015 and 2016 alone,
there were more Christian martyrs than all the
martyrs since Stephen.
But, how did men and women embrace with joy
the idea of dying as martyrs? I believe the
answer is because they loved to be with God in
heaven more that they desired life on earth
(see Philippians 1:23).
We could ask: “Why is there such a thing as
martyrdom?” The answer lies in the mystery of
a God who accepts the sacrifice of the life of
one martyr and pours it back to bring forth
new life for many. After Stephen’s martyrdom,
the Good News quickly spread beyond the
borders of the Holy Land, imparting spiritual
life to the gentiles. In our times, when the
number of martyrs has reached unprecedented
proportions, should we not expect an
unprecedented spread of the Gospel and an
outpouring of the Holy Spirit?
Persecution: No person in his right
mind would seek persecution, but the Lord
promised us blessedness and joy in it (Matthew
5:10-12). And today persecution is coming from
the most unsuspecting places, from modern,
so-called ‘civilized’ society that worships
‘tolerance’ but is so intolerant towards
Christianity that it has enshrined persecution
into national law.
Considering this, what should our spiritual
posture be? Fundamentally, the same as that of
the Apostles who boasted and rejoiced when
they ‘merited’ persecution (Acts 5:41, 1 Peter
4:12-15).
Sometimes, we must flee (Matthew 10:23), and
we need to be shrewd, innocent, and on our
guard, but we don’t need to be worried,
because the Holy Spirit will speak and act in
us in an exceptional way (Matthew
10:16-20). As in martyrdom, there is a
mystery in persecution: it not only advances
mission, it also hastens it (Matthew 10:23).
Unity: Perhaps there is another
mystery at work when martyrdom and persecution
go together, as so many Christians in the
world are experiencing today: they lead to
deeper unity among those who suffer. Our
differences, though important, now seem petty
as we come to fight together for a cause that
is far more important than our differences –
the salvation of the whole world – a cause for
which our Lord himself suffered both
persecution and martyrdom.
Jean Barbara is the President of the Sword
of the Spirit and lives with his family in
Beirut, Lebanon.
Scripture for the day: 1 John 3:13 “Do
not be surprised, brothers, that the world
hates you.”
Turkey: It is estimated that there are
194,000 Christians who live in Turkey out of a
population of 81.9 million. The vast majority
of Turks are Sunni Muslims.
Many Christians in Turkey are Orthodox and
there are also many Christian expatriates,
including thousands of refugees from Iraq and
Syria. There are also between 5,000 and 7,000
Turkish believers who came from Muslim
backgrounds.
Although Turkey is officially described as
secular, religious nationalism has grown in
recent years.
Christians from traditionally established
ethnic minorities such as Greek Orthodox,
Armenian and Syriac Christians experience
indirect discrimination in the workplace.
Religious affiliation is recorded on ID cards,
so it is easy to discriminate against
Christian job applicants.
Christians from Muslim backgrounds often hide
their faith. If they are discovered, they will
face pressure from their families. Leaving
Islam is seen as a betrayal of their Turkish
identity and a source of shame to the family.
They may be threatened with divorce and the
loss of inheritance rights. Although converts
from Islam can legally change their religious
affiliation on ID cards, it can be a difficult
and stressful process.
Christians in Turkey have faced death and
imprisonment for confessing their faith and
for preaching the gospel.
In the early 20th century Christians suffered
violent persecution as the Ottoman Empire
systematically persecuted Armenians living in
Turkey. It is estimated that over
800,000 Armenians were killed at this
time. This has, of course, made a huge
impact on the size of the Christian population
of Turkey.
More recently in 2007 three Christian men
working in a Christian publishing house were
tortured and brutally killed by Islamist
extremists. Two of these men were converts
from Islamic backgrounds and the third was an
expatriate Christian from Germany. Another
expatriate, Andrew Brunson, a Presbyterian
Pastor was imprisoned for 2 years from 2016-18
after being charged with terrorism, espionage
and “Christianization.”
Intercessions: Let’s pray for a rich
blessing on our brothers and sisters in
Turkey, that they would receive grace to
remain faithful and joyful in the face of
these pressures.
My name is Ramy, I am 32 years old and live,
work and serve in Lebanon together with my
lovely wife, Myriam, and 3-year old son,
Andrew.
It is difficult to state all the challenges
Lebanon faces. The country has not yet
recovered from a 17-year civil war fueled by
many foreign countries and now the war in
Syria is blocking our only land access out of
Lebanon. We also face constant threats of war
with Israel and major socio-economic problems.
This is aggravated by corruption at all levels
of government and exacerbated by the presence
of up to 1.5 million Syrian refugees and
several hundreds of thousands of Palestinians.
These refugees constitute around 50% of the
Lebanese population. This has strained
Lebanon’s economy, public finances and public
support services. Poverty and unemployment
levels have soared to unseen peaks. The risk
of imminent war (ISIS, Syria, Iraq, Yemen,
etc.) and economic collapse has become the
daily topic of every news channel.
What did all these challenges lead to in my
life and the life of my family? LIFE &
HOPE!
I had no other option but to turn to the Lord.
These times of difficulty have taught me to
grow in humility, surrender my life and trust
in the grace of God: “My grace is sufficient
for you, for my power is made perfect in your
weakness” (1 Corinthians 12:9). I have grown
in relying on God’s providence, my eyes have
seen Him “opening his hand and satisfying the
desires of every living thing” (Psalm 145:16).
When everyone around me was in despair, the
Lord filled my heart and soul with hope, hope
that He would not lead me astray, “I am with
you always, to the end of the ages” (Matthew
28:20).
This particular season has motivated me to
seek –in a deeper way- holiness, accepting
that for me there is God and God alone, and
asking for a “Christian life that is a good
defense before the awesome judgment seat of
Christ” (The Divine Liturgy of Saint John
Chrysostom from the Orthodox Church). I have
come to realize the greatness of the treasure
I have. How can I focus on myself when
everyone else (colleagues, friends, relatives,
etc.) is drowning in distress? An urge for
evangelism filled my heart; I started
declaring the “Good News” to my colleagues, to
the youths I serve, to my extended
family. What else could I offer? “Silver
and gold, I do not have, but what I do have I
give you: in the name of Jesus Christ of
Nazareth, rise up and walk” (Acts 3:6).
I pray that we may continue at all times, in
times of peace and in times of persecution, to
lay down our life before the Lord, doing
nothing but His will, knowing that “for such a
time as this, we are called to give our all,
to follow Christ, to spread His Light, to do
not our will but His” (For Such a Time as
This, song and lyrics by John
Keating).
Scripture for the day: Romans 12:14 “Bless
those who persecute you; bless and do not
curse them.”
United States--university campuses: Though
almost never violent, the persecution being
experienced on college campuses throughout the
US is no less menacing. According to the
American Center for Law and Justice, “The rise
of anti-Christian discrimination on public
university campuses is astounding in its
breadth and shocking in its shamelessness.”
At campuses throughout the country, outspoken
Christians are regularly demeaned, debased and
targeted for their beliefs. At one university
in the southern US, students in an
intercultural communications class are
directed to write the name “Jesus” on a piece
of paper and step on it as a way to explore
intercultural values. Academics, social
groups, and college organizations regularly
ridicule Christians by calling them hateful,
bigoted, and privileged, among other labels.
Dr. Mike Adams, a Christian professor of
Criminology at the University of North
Carolina, said “every group is protected from
offensive speech on campus except for
conservative Christians.” There is a case
before the 9th circuit court involving a
Christian fraternity and sorority at San Diego
State, which declined to agree to the
university’s nondiscrimination statement that
membership cannot be denied to people who are
opposed to Christian belief. As a result, the
university rejected their applications to
become officially recognized student
organizations. “That means the groups cannot
meet in campus buildings for free, cannot set
up tables in the main mall where students walk
each day,” noted attorney Jordan Lorence. “The
Christian groups are in effect banished from
the main avenues of communication with
students and relegated to a second-class
status.”
Intercession: Let us pray that all Christians
on every college and university campus be
compelled by charity in the face of
discrimination. May they be strengthened with
fortitude, patience and perseverance so that
in every place the Gospel of Jesus Christ may
be lived and proclaimed powerfully, fruitfully
and freely.
Scripture for the day: 1 Peter 4:16 Yet
if anyone suffers as a Christian, let him
not be ashamed, but let him glorify God in
that name.
Egypt: There are 10 million Christians
who live in Egypt, making up 10 per cent of
Egypt’s population of 99.4 million. Most are
members of the Coptic Orthodox church. Egypt
is home to half of all Christians in the
Middle East.
Egypt is a strongly Islamic nation with
approximately 90 per cent of the population
identifying as Sunni Muslims. Although
major political and religious leaders have
spoken against radicalism and called for
reform in Islamic teaching, direct and
indirect persecution of Christians remain. In
rural and impoverished areas in particular,
radical imams and less tolerant brands of
Islam are growing in prominence and followers
of the self-proclaimed Islamic State have
vowed to wage war against Christians in
Egypt. Violent attacks are common.
Egyptian Christians are often victims of
social exclusion, and face indirect
discrimination in areas such as justice,
education and basic social services. In rural
areas, Christian women have been targeted for
abduction and forced marriage. Christian
believers from Muslim backgrounds face
pressure from their families and communities –
they may be beaten or expelled from their
homes and dismissed from their employment.
In recent years there have been dozens of
attacks on churches. For example, on December
11, 2016, a suicide bomber killed 29 people
and injured 47 others who were worshipping at
St. Peter and St. Paul’s Church in Cairo. In
early November 2018, Islamic State militants
attacked a bus carrying Coptic Christians from
a monastery in Minya, killing eight and
injuring more than 13 people.
And yet, even in the face of terrible
violence, Christians in Egypt have shown
incredible grace and forgiveness. Coptic
Christians were even nominated for the 2018
Nobel Peace Prize for their refusal to
retaliate.
One of those severely injured in the 2016
attack in Cairo was Samiha Atopi who
testified to feeling Jesus’ presence close to
her throughout the incident and during her
time in hospital. She has stated: "If I
would meet the family of the attacker, the
only thing I would ask them is: ‘Do you know
Jesus?’ I pray they will find the right way.”
Intercessions: Let’s pray for our
brothers and sisters in Egypt that they may
continue to witness for Christ in patient
endurance and that the gospel would break
forth as a result of their testimony of blood.
Scripture for the day: John
16:33 “I have said these things to you,
that in me you may have peace. In the world
you will have tribulation. But take heart; I
have overcome the world.”
In this our final day of the octave of prayer
we will hear from a brother in South America,
Alejandro Velosa, and his essay considering
the ecumenism of blood from his vantage point
in South America.
If my Church suffers, I suffer with her.
If my brother is being persecuted, I am
persecuted too.
Here I am writing about the suffering Church
and the ‘ecumenism of blood.’ But, how
am I supposed to do it? How can I write about
a church that lives martyrdom with courage or
about the suffering of my Christian brothers,
if they live in countries far away from mine,
being persecuted and discriminated for
declaring themselves faithful to our Lord
Jesus Christ?
I have two problems to be able to do this: I
live in a country where I can express my faith
without fearing for my life and I have never
experienced persecution and suffering for
declaring my faith in Christ.
Three questions come to my mind. Could it be
possible that this apparent comfort has
hardened my heart and made me blind to see the
need and pain of my Christian brothers? Am I
really that far away from the suffering
church? Are there, close to me, Christians
suffering for Christ?
This is what I found looking for answers to my
questions: in Colombia, my country of more
than 49 million inhabitants, 46 million are
Christian. Despite these numbers, we rank 47th
among the countries in the world where it is
most dangerous to be Christian (Source: Open
Doors USA).
Currently, violence against Christians in my
country has two main sources. On the one hand,
in the countryside, in regions where guerilla
dissidents and drug dealers take control of
the territory, church leaders are being
threatened, extorted and even murdered.
Sometimes the violence is directed toward the
church leader´s family or their home community
to discourage anyone wanting to convert to
Christianity.
In daily living, the secularized society
ridicules our Christian values especially for
topics concerning gender, marriage and
abortion. Political parties and ordinary
citizens reject faith- based opinions and try
to enforce agendas that contradict Christian
values.
It is also reported that Protestant Christians
often experience less tolerance and acceptance
than Roman Catholic believers.
How can this be explained? How can this be
happening in front of me and I didn´t even
notice it? How could I have thought that the
violence against my church was happening far
away from me?
After meditating on these questions my eyes
opened and turned to the Word of God. There
Peter reminded me of something I will never
forget:
Be sober, be vigilant; because your
adversary the devil walks about like a
roaring lion, seeking whom he may
devour. Resist him, steadfast in the
faith, knowing that the same sufferings are
experienced by your brotherhood in the world
(I Peter 5, 8-9).
Lord, help me understand and not forget that
the suffering of my Christian brothers and the
persecution of the Church is my suffering and
my persecution. I pray for the unity of all
Christians, unity in our suffering, unity in
Christ.
Intercessions: As we close the octave
of prayer, let’s enter into the spirit of
prayer articulated so well by Alejandro:
“Lord, help me understand and not forget that
the suffering of my Christian brothers and
sisters and the persecution of the Church is
my suffering and my persecution. I pray for
the unity of all Christians, unity in our
suffering, unity in Christ.”