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Religion: Baghdad Pastors Fear For Future Of Christian Church In Ira

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  • Religion: Baghdad Pastors Fear For Future Of Christian Church In Ira

    BAGHDAD PASTORS FEAR FOR FUTURE OF CHRISTIAN CHURCH IN IRAQ DESPITE GROWTH
    By Joni B. Hannigan, Managing Editor

    Florida Baptist Witness
    Oct 26 2011

    Young adults 'choked' by persecution, lack of jobs & uncertainty
    about the future

    BAGHDAD, IRAQ (FBW)-Despite a growing wave of persecution, one of
    the first independent evangelical, Bible-believing churches in Iraq
    has risen from the ruins of an embattled Baghdad-and it is thriving.

    In a city still besieged by blackouts and curfews well after the 2003
    U.S.-led toppling of Iraq's longtime dictator, the congregation has
    increased 10-fold from 30 to 300.

    *Sammy Thompson, a 42-year-old Iraqi Armenian, who started the church
    by secretly leading Bible studies in homes-something he was jailed
    for during the Saddam Hussein era-is no longer on the wrong side of
    the law, but instead faces threats from his own neighbors.

    Though worship in an evangelical Christian church was seen as
    anti-government and political in 2001, now when the fabric of Iraq's
    culture is stretched thin by those who clamor for a better way of
    life-Thompson said some will stop at nothing short of ridding the
    country of Christian believers.

    "The government is OK and happy that we are there," Thompson said
    Sept. 27 during an interview in Northern Iraq. "But the Islamic groups,
    they are unhappy, they are uncomfortable with us."

    Death threats are common. The pastor has received phone calls and
    letters with the chilling words: "We are going to come and kill you
    today. We are going to slaughter you. It would be better for you to
    leave Iraq. We are watching your family."

    So while expansion and growth has positioned the church to reach
    into the community, to provide activities for young people, to help
    widows and orphans-to encourage education and morality-it has given
    detractors an excuse to hurl insults.

    "They say you are invented by the Americans because you did not exist
    before," Thompson said, folding his arms over his chest and shaking
    his head. "We had ministered before, but had no official church
    before that time. We have a building now, it has a cross on it,
    it has a name on it."

    SAFETY IS PRIMARY CONCERN Concerned about safety, Thompson does not
    broadcast the name of the church, fearing its members-especially
    its youth-could become targets for radicals. He has a reason to be
    cautious. Opening the door of the church one morning in 2007, he and
    youth pastor *Paul David came face-to-face with the horrifying sight
    of a mutilated corpse.

    "We saw they had slaughtered a girl and dumped her in the church.

    Murder is cheap here," Thompson said. "We couldn't figure it out. She
    was disfigured and abused." Eyes downcast, he shuddered. "And we even
    have a slogan in this country, 'A penny a bullet.'"

    Safety is a daily challenge for all of the residents of Baghdad who
    worry about getting caught in the crossfire between Sunni or Shiite
    Muslims or waylaid by a car bomb or a suicide bomber. "Danger is all
    the time, all the time. Everywhere we go. Intentional and unintentional
    danger," Thompson said.

    At a pastors' conference in Iraqi's Kurdistan, Thompson sat in the
    back, scanning the room. At a restaurant, during the interview, and
    chatting with other pastors in the smoke-filled lobby of a hotel,
    he faced the outside door, his back to the wall. "Anybody can come
    and shoot you," he said. "There is lawlessness."

    Despite the reported thousands of military troops in Iraq, Thompson
    said, "We don't see their presence," at least "not in Baghdad."

    Commenting briefly on the war and the subsequent state of affairs in
    Iraq, Thompson and David said they were happy the American military
    helped rid the country of Saddam Hussein, but in their opinion the war
    has not been well managed and security goals have not been met. The
    pastors indicated the infrastructure, already weak before 2003, is
    weaker, at least in Baghdad-and people are unsettled and confused as
    to their next steps.

    Surprisingly, however, and perhaps because they don't believe American
    decision makers are sensitive to or willing to be involved in their
    issues, Thompson said the planned withdrawal of American troops by
    the year's end won't affect how the Christian believers are treated
    in Iraq.

    "There will be no change for us in Baghdad," Thompson predicted. "The
    defect is in the Iraqis, the defect is in our people."

    Violence towards churches has continued to escalate since a 2004
    series of bombings in which five churches were targeted. In 2009 seven
    Chaldean and Orthodox churches in Baghdad were hit by a series of car
    bombs. The Chaldean Church of St. Mary in Sharaa Philistine was hit
    by a car bomb that left four dead and dozens seriously injured. After
    the 2009 attack, Thompson said the Iraqi government posted guards in
    front of the church.

    In 2010, another attack on a Baghdad church, Our Lady of
    Salvation-where 58 people were massacred-pointed to the unraveling of
    any diversity that once existed. Nearly all of Iraq's Jews have left,
    and the Christian population, one time between an estimated 800,000
    and 1.4 million is thought to have dwindled to at least half that.

    GOD'S WORK Believing his ministry is to lead the church in Baghdad,
    Thompson said he's been given opportunities to leave-but won't forsake
    his church.

    "We are weaker than the traditional churches which are more powerful
    and capable," Thompson said of his independent church. "We try
    to get help but nobody interferes to help us. These churches need
    encouragement because our work is the same as God's work."

    Thompson currently is in discussions with Dr. Farouk Hammo, pastor of
    The National Evangelical Baptist Church of Baghdad, and Nabeeh Abbassi,
    of the Jordan Baptist Convention, to align his church with a handful
    of other Iraqi Baptist churches. He is prayerful about being part of
    a larger family of believers in that region of the world.

    Leading services in the church's 1,800-square-foot leased facility,
    the pastors also head to an "embattled area" of Baghdad several times
    each week where families who cannot travel for fear of explosions and
    gunfire gather in six homes. "We go to them because they cannot come
    to us," David said.

    "To believers, the church is everything," Thompson said. And the
    modest pastor wishes the church could do more, especially in the
    light of the cultural vacuum created when theaters closed, music
    halted, and organized community events came to a standstill. "We
    wish the church would be a source of refuge, but we cannot because
    the resources are limited."

    Sunday worship, a Tuesday ladies' Bible study, and Friday youth day
    are all the church can afford on a shoestring budget-the bulk of
    which goes to pay a $500 fuel bill to run a generator since Baghdad's
    electricity is off more often than it's on.

    When temperatures reach 130 degrees in the summer, Thompson said,
    the church is "crippled" from doing much.

    At the Baghdad church, youth Fridays are like gold. They are an oasis
    in the desert where some of the more traditional customs are set
    aside and girls wear conservative, but modern clothes, eschewing any
    head coverings, and young men and women mingle for "milk and chips"
    despite the inherent danger in an all-day meeting.

    After worship and praise, Bible study and sports, young adults meet
    at an "Agape" table to drink juice and talk. Despite few romantic
    inquiries, however, not much happens because the young men don't
    have jobs.

    "They are tied up. They are choked," David said of the teens and
    young adults. "They are postponing everything and only a few get
    married because they cannot get married financially."

    FUTURE OF THE CHURCH Faced with a severe economic decline related to
    the eradication of a mandatory conscription of males into the Army
    for 15 years after high school-few jobs are available for most of
    the young men. And fewer still for Christians that face systematic
    discrimination because of their views. They are shut out by the
    political Islamic parties in control, Thompson said.

    "This situation will have a negative impact on the future of the
    church," said Thompson who believes the church outside of Iraq should
    consider how they might "support and protect" the church inside Iraq,
    "because we are in trouble."

    Both pastors readily encourage the young men to stay in Iraq with
    their families instead of emigrating elsewhere. They dream of being
    able to provide 15-20 young men with small businesses so couples can
    stabilize themselves.

    "They say, 'I'm leaving the country because I don't know what the
    future holds. It's like I'm dead here, so let me take a shot and go
    on out and see what's going to happen with me," Thompson said. "When
    all the doors are shut and the only door open is to leave, what can
    a church do?"

    Many of the families receive assistance from relatives outside of
    Iraq since they have long gone through any savings and assets they
    had prior to the war, David said. "If somebody's being supported from
    the outside, they don't leave, they stay."

    Still, this doesn't enable the young people to marry. "This is our
    dream, that we can provide a project so they can work and provide
    for themselves to stay in this country."

    David, 33 and single, opened his eyes wide at the thought of leaving
    Iraq. "I have many opportunities to leave but I want to serve the
    Lord," he said. "This is where the Lord called me to serve, so I need
    to serve here and not leave."

    Nudging him, Thompson launched into an explanation of a ministry the
    church started in 2005 of reaching out to widows and orphans. Though
    preaching the Word meets their spiritual needs, the pastors quickly saw
    a need for clothing and other supplies. "Unfortunately the government
    has no plans to see how to help these people," Thompson said, lamenting
    at the ability of the church to offer more.

    In spite of the difficulties, David again said he is happy to stay
    even when he is forced to hide out, as he did for a few months last
    year when a family chased him down after one of their members became
    a Christian believer.

    Though religious freedom is technically granted in the Iraqi
    Constitution, the document also contains a contradictory clause
    elevating Islam as the majority religion.

    "I thank the Lord that through the work I have done, I have baptized
    Muslims," David said, acknowledging his greatest challenge is "danger
    of life."

    In the 10 years since Thompson was jailed for preaching the Word,
    nine families have converted to Christianity through the ministry of
    the church, Thompson said. Five of the families left the country; the
    remaining four haven't openly proclaimed they are believers outside
    of the church. "I have been threatened," David said, "but now they
    are Christians."

    *Names changed

    Jalil Dawood, of Dallas, translated for this interview.

    http://www.gofbw.com/news.asp?ID=13420&fp=Y

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