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Imagine being at your parish church this Sunday celebrating the Eucharist. Just as your pastor finishes his homily, gunfire erupts from the back of the church. As you quickly turn around you see several armed men firing their weapons into the assembly. And with added horror, you see numerous fellow parishioners lying dead. Amid screams and cries, people rush toward the exits, running for their lives. Some escape, others are shot and killed. The assailants then proceed to burn the church to the ground.

May this never happen to you. But tragic scenes similar to this, as well as other brutal forms of persecution, are happening to fellow Christians in many countries throughout much of the world.

In the just released 2021 annual report “More Precious than Gold,” the international ecumenical organization Open Doors reports that over 360 million Christians live in areas where they are subject to high levels of discrimination and persecution.

The report further highlights that last year, 6,175 Christians were unjustly arrested or imprisoned, 3,829 followers of Christ were abducted for faith-related reasons, 5,110 churches or Christian buildings were attacked, and 5,898 fellow believers in Jesus were murdered for their faith.

The international Catholic assistance organization Aid to the Church in Need (ACN) states in its 2021 “Religious Freedom in the World Report” that in the last two years, the human right of freedom of faith was not respected in 62 countries. And in 42 countries changing or renouncing one’s religious affiliation can bring on serious legal and social consequences – even death.

ACN reports that at least 75 percent of all religiously motivated violence and oppression is suffered my Christians.

The ACN report adds that authoritarian governments have also intensified religious persecution. In some Hindu and Buddhist majority countries in Asia persecution against religious minorities has increased.

Many places in Africa reflect a worsening situation for Christians which is due most often to Islamist violence, says Fionn Shiner, press officer for ACN in the UK. (see: https://bit.ly/3RisBPf).

ACN, in their report “Persecuted and Forgotten” states that “Christianity is the world’s most persecuted religion.” It cites that Islamist violence in Africa is a major cause of persecution. And it highlights that Nigeria is the sad country where most African Christians are killed (see: https://bit.ly/3Kw0KsI).

And regarding religious persecution in the West, Pope Francis has coined the phrase “polite persecution” to describe how new cultural norms clash with individuals’ right to freedom of conscience, attempting to limit religion “to the enclosed precincts of churches, synagogues or mosques.

Please contact your national and regional government representatives urging them to protect everyone’s right of freedom of faith.

In the U.S., regularly email and phone your two U.S. senators and congressperson (Capitol switchboard: 202-224-3121) urging them to pressure all countries engaged in hostilities toward Christians, other people of faith and minorities, to completely stop the persecution. And urge that far more aid to those suffering persecution be appropriated in the 2023 budget.

Also, sign up to receive advocacy updates from Open Doors (see: https://bit.ly/2URRK5G).

Additionally, assist Aid to the Church in Need’s efforts to provide persecuted Christians with the financial help they need to survive (see: https://bit.ly/2vxeFsz).  

And let us regularly in private and liturgical prayer remember those suffering for the Christian faith. These are our brothers and sisters in Christ. We cannot look the other way while they suffer.

Comments from readers

Jose Ignacio Jimenez - 09/12/2022 01:20 PM
Thank you for reporting on this crisis; Christian persecution is on the rise. The Catholic Church has been targeted by communist governments in our hemisphere: they've infiltrated the Church in Nicaragua, Venezuela and Cuba to silence faithful priests and religious who express the Truth of the Catholic faith in the public square. In the United States faithful Catholics are targeted by secular extremists that would deny Constitutional rights to groups simply for publicly advocating for a moral code of behavior in society. Thank God we are not the victims of massacres as in Nigeria or Syria, but our culture is being decimated by repression on one end and indoctrination on the other. The effect on society is devastating even if it's slower and less dramatic. The martyrs of Nigeria, China, and the Middle East should inspire us to live our faith more fully. In Nigeria the seminaries and convents are full. Catholic Churches are full on Sunday, and their numbers are growing. We have not been graced with the crown of martyrdom, but we must do our part to defend the faith for the future our country and Catholicism.
Rafael María Calvo Forte - 09/12/2022 12:04 PM
Hay dos lecturas: Una flagrante injusticia y a su vez, somos signo de contradicción. Les molesta el firme testimonio que les echa en cara a sus desviadas vidas. Me consta que la persecución purifica y fortaleza la fe, pero la injusticia hay que denunciarla .
Gloria Robelo Vasquez - 09/12/2022 10:17 AM
La Paz de Cristo en oracion por la persecusion de todos los Cristianos que anuncian la buena nueva y como todos los profetas van en contra de la maldad.Pido oracion por Nicaragua y Nigeria donde los Sacerdotes son perseguidos y muchos han muerto por anunciar a Jesucristo.

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