Your Voice

Your Voice

Prisoners of faith need US religious freedom agency

By Andrew Brunson
Pastor and former prisoner

Little more than a year ago, I stood in a Turkish courtroom facing 35 years in prison — an effective life sentence. 

This day of reckoning had come after two years of detention on preposterous charges that I had aided a terrorist organization and had engaged in espionage through my ministry as the pastor of a small Christian church in Turkey.

Instead of life, I was given a sentence of time served and allowed to return home to the United States, my freedom granted thanks to the tireless efforts of President Donald Trump and his administration, as well as many members of Congress. 

But my release was aided in no small part by the dedication of a small government agency: the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, known as USCIRF.

USCIRF is an independent, bipartisan U.S. government commission that monitors religious freedom abroad and makes policy recommendations to the president, secretary of state and Congress. 

It is led by nine commissioners appointed by the White House and congressional leaders from both parties, who are in turn supported by a full-time staff of fewer than 20.

Over its 20-year existence, the commission has played a critical role in sounding the alarm and highlighting the world’s most severe cases of religious persecution — including that of Uighurs in western China, Rohingya in Burma, Baha’is in Iran and Christians in many countries.  

[USCIRF] has also advocated passionately and effectively on behalf of individuals imprisoned for their faith, like me.

Turkish authorities detained my wife, Norine, and me in 2016 as potential “threats to national security” after we had spent 23 years living and serving primarily in the coastal city of Izmir in western Turkey.

My wife was released after 13 days, but I was moved to prison and placed with over 20 other inmates in a cell that was only built to hold eight. While prison authorities periodically permitted my wife and U.S. Embassy officials to visit me, I feared that I would be forgotten in that dark and despairing place.

A spark of hope was kindled in October 2017 when, a year into my imprisonment, two then-USCIRF commissioners, Kristina Arriaga and Sandra Jolley, traveled with a USCIRF staffer to Turkey to visit me in prison. 

They reassured me that I would never be forgotten and that they would do everything within their power to secure my release and to return me to my family.

USCIRF brought attention to my case as an example of religious persecution, an opening created when the Turkish authorities charged me with attempting to divide their country through the “Christianization” of Turkey’s ethnic Kurdish population.

USCIRF’s commissioners and staff advocated for my release as part of USCIRF’s Religious Prisoners of Conscience Project, which has so far contributed to the release of 14 religious prisoners. 

USCIRF also raises the profile of additional individuals imprisoned or otherwise targeted for their beliefs in its recently launched Freedom of Religion or Belief Victims List.

After that first prison visit, USCIRF continued to support and fight for me by attending three of my subsequent court hearings, including my final trial in October 2018. The day before that last hearing, Tony Perkins, then a commissioner and now the chair of USCIRF, personally delivered letters to me from Trump and Vice President Mike Pence. On the day I was allowed to leave the country, Perkins accompanied my wife and me on our flight home.

I will always be grateful for the crucial role they played in ensuring that I was not forgotten. It is imperative that Congress [fund] USCIRF so its commissioners and staff can continue to bring to light religious freedom abuses around the world and to advocate for other victims, like me, imprisoned for their faith.

Our world is in dire need of greater emphasis on the importance of religious freedom for all peoples, and USCIRF is uniquely placed to do so. 

Congress, and by extension the American people, must stand behind the commission and its mission by seeing that it survives and succeeds for many years to come.

EDITOR’S NOTE — Andrew Brunson, an American who spent 23 years as a pastor in western Turkey before being falsely accused of and imprisoned for terrorism, is the author of “God’s Hostage: A True Story of Persecution, Imprisonment and Perseverance.” (RNS)

_____________________________________________________________________________

My Jesus Story

As we begin this new year, I want to talk to you about a clean slate — a fresh start if you will. Many who read this already know Jesus but maybe you don’t. 

Regardless of where you are in your relationship with Him, I’m going to challenge you to make a fresh start.  

If you’ve never been saved, find a Bible-believing church, open your heart and your mind, confess your sins, give Him your life, be baptized and become a new creation in the Lord (Acts 2:21). Make a fresh start.

If you’ve not been to church in a while, go this Sunday. Find somewhere to plug in. You may not need church but I bet church needs you (Heb. 10:25). Make a fresh start.

Finally, if you’ve been a faithful church-attending, Bible-reading Christian, pray for a new perspective, a new heart. I’ll pray with you (Prov. 3:5–6). We’ll both make a fresh start. 

I hope you take me up on my challenge, I’m challenging myself as well. You never know where it may lead.

Jenni Ingram
Gantt, Ala.

_____________________________________________________________________________

A revival is nothing else than a new beginning of obedience to God.

Charles Finney
19th century American minister

We must stop bemoaning the death of cultural Christianity. Such whining does us no good. Easy growth is simply not a reality for many churches. People no longer come to a church because they believe they must do so to be culturally accepted. The next time a church member says, “They know where we are; they can come here if they want to,” rebuke him. Great Commission Christianity is about going; it’s not “y’all come.”

Thom Rainer
Founder, Church Answers

Every day we work with youth who will be aging out of foster care, having never had a permanent home. These are amazing young people who have great potential. Helping them helps all our communities.

Children’s Aid Society of Alabama
via Facebook

I am grateful The Alabama Baptist highlights the ministries and missions projects of churches of all sizes. We are all partners in Great Commission work and we can learn a lot from each other.

Carrie Brown McWhorter
Content editor, TAB

Friends are very special people

Who will share your joy and pain,

Through days that are fair as heaven,

Or when dark clouds may bring the rain.

Friends cannot be separated

Even when they are far apart.

Friendship is not in where you are,

But it lies deep within your heart.

Excerpt from “Friends in Times Like These”
By Charlie Button
Huntsville, Ala.

In Paul’s day, there were those who were critical of the apostles who taught the Word without apology and let the Holy Spirit do the work. Paul could rejoice that the testimony of his conscience before God was clear. At the end of the day, that’s all that matters. 

D. Jay Powell, Author
“Be Inspired: 101 Thoughts for Every Christian Writer”

Statistics show that by 2050, almost 40% of the world’s Christians will be in Sub-Saharan Africa. That’s the way the population and the shift of evangelicalism is going. So the question is: What kind of evangelicalism, what kind of Christianity is that going to be? At the moment it’s largely a charismatic, neo-Pentecostal, faith healing, prosperity gospel brand of Christianity. We recognize that. The only way to really shape the future of the church is to begin shaping the future leaders so that they are equipped to rightly handle the Word of truth.

Nick Moore
IMB missionary in Zimbabwe

You can’t down a generation you have taken time to invest in.

Pastor Jarman Leatherwood
House of Hope and Restoration
Huntsville, Ala.

If the year ahead were turned into a map with all its intersections named and its terrains described, would you dare study it? 

We have no such maps. The year ahead is as a dense, close fog. The road is there but we cannot see its ups and downs, its twists and turns. 

When we think about how unknowing we are concerning the future, we tend to grow afraid and become pessimistic. We need not fear or despair. 

One travels with us who has perfect knowledge of the road. He has traveled it and done so successfully, and now He whispers to us, “Follow Me.” Will we?

Bob Adams
Retired pastor

Very few people live as if a resurrected Lord Jesus is alive and a vital part of their lives in the moment.

President Jeff Iorg
Gateway Seminary

_____________________________________________________________________________

@jedcoppenger

Jesus meets us where we are, not where we wish we were.

@BethMooreLPM

Proverbs 11 this morning. First half of verse nine grabbed my attention and won’t let me go: “With his mouth the ungodly destroys his neighbor.” Has a generation ever been more relentlessly and thoroughly trained to use mouths as weapons? Jesus, rescue our neighbors and us from our own mouths.

@isickadams

“It seems to please God more to change people slowly rather than circumstances quickly.”
— @DonWhitney

@kristenpadilla

This is the confidence we have through Christ our God. It is not that we are competent in ourselves to claim anything as coming from ourselves, but our adequacy is from God. He has made us competent to be ministers of a new covenant, not of the letter but of the Spirit. (2 Cor. 3)

@LifeWay

“We must not abandon the church if we want to persevere in the faith. We must keep going to keep ourselves going.” — @_MichaelKelley

@KSPrior

Controversies and debates abound. When one side says “up” and the other side says “down,” it’s hard to know where truth lies. One thing to consider as you weigh sides: Is truth really the sole motivation? Or are attacks made and specific names invoked to build platform and get clicks?

@DanaWatson

God does not accept me just as I am. He accepts me because of what Jesus did. He loves me, not because of what I do but despite what I do. His grace is extravagant. His love is boundless. (Eph. 2:3–5)

@careharrington

If you’re weary, worship. If you’re worried, worship. If you’re winning, worship.