Fear slows the Gospel in Egypt
Fear slows the Gospel in
By Erich Bridges
BP News
Instead of keeping her faith a secret, as many Muslim-background believers do, she told her younger sister who also became a believer. One day, their mother overheard the sisters whispering about Jesus. Distraught, she slipped poison into the familys food - a little taste for everyone, a deadly dose for the older sister. The police later concluded it was an accident.
Better for her own daughter to die, the mother reasoned, than to bring shame and dishonor on the family. Such is the reality that faces many new believers in
Take courage! It is
But some storms are stronger than others.
Until you walk in their shoes, do not judge Egyptian believers too harshly if they sometimes respond as Peter did when he joined Jesus on the water. He stepped toward Jesus, but looked at the storm and began to sink beneath the raging waves. Later, in Jesus hour of deepest suffering, Peter denied knowing his Savior.
In turn, the Lord forgave Peter, filling him with holy boldness and strengthening him to lead the fledgling church in
Egyptian followers - and seekers - of God need to know that they, too, are not alone. The peoples of Egypt are the focus of this years Day of Prayer and Fasting for World Evangelization, set for June 4, which will unite Southern Baptists and other Christians in prayer for Egypt (see article in todays edition of Baptist Press: Day of Prayer and Fasting June 4 to focus on Egypts peoples. To order the video/DVD Blessed be
Egyptians have good reasons to fear following Christ - or leading others to follow Him. Persecution of the traditional Coptic Christian minority goes back many centuries and continues to this day. The smaller evangelical community also faces opposition. Islamic extremism finds some of its deepest roots in
But the deepest fears find their source closer to home: extended family, friends, local communities. Community is everything in
This culture is harsh, a Christian believer says. There is no one to turn to. They are scared of each other. They dont trust each other. Everybody is an informer. There are no secrets.
Such fear doesnt just oppress spiritual seekers or secret believers. It afflicts the church. Even if followers of Christ overcome the ethnic divisions or social taboos that divide Christians from Muslims in
Until that fear is broken, people will not pick up the cross, says a Christian believer. But when they say, I dont care anymore [about the consequences of reaching out], that is when the tide will turn and the church will start growing. I dont know what its going to take. It might be one person.
It might be someone like Rafik, a Coptic-background evangelical believer. He has endured the scorn of his own community and the rejection of others to go far from home. He shares Christ with Muslim Bedouin, who exist on the fringes of Egyptian society.
I started my ministry for Christians only, he reflects. But God opened my mind. He told me, I am sending you out for all people and all nations - perhaps even beyond
When the tide turns, scattered believers will gather. Churches will multiply. Persons of peace will become spiritual doorways to their communities. Believers will not only declare their faith but train other believers to do the same.
When the tide turns, persecution will not end. It will very likely increase.
So be it. For when the tide turns, the fear will be gone.
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Erich Bridges is a senior writer with the Southern Baptist International Mission Board whose column appears twice monthly in Baptist Press.
