
West
Africa, one of ABWE's most challenging fields, has an 88% Muslim
population and follows a version of "folk Islam." ABWE missionary
Dana Oldfield describes persecution as a major factor that contributes
to the number of unreached West Africans: "In many Muslim countries,
new Christian believers are persecuted. Although we have not seen
any of the believers here killed for their faith, we have seen
them threatened, ostracized, refused food, and expelled from their
villages."
" Worse yet," Dana Oldfield continues, "prejudice
towards Christianity is a great barrier to the church in Islamic
West Africa. To be a Wolof [a traditional ethnic group] in rural
areas is to be a Muslim. To be an American is to be a Christian.
The identities don't mix. Their opinion of Christianity is based
on Western television programming, non-missionary expatriates,
and tourists. Bitterness lingers from slave trade and the colonial
era. Christian missionaries do not begin their ministry on neutral
ground—inevitably, they start in a negative position."... Read
More. |
 |

What feelings did you have when you first saw images of the World
Trade Center towers collapsing? Fear? Panic? Dread? Were you filled
with the desire to run for cover? Did you begin to look over your
shoulder? Or did you immediately begin to pray? What of those who
live and minister constantly in the midst of conflict and even
terror?
Some of the greatest leaders in the Bible
struggled with fear. Abraham struggled with fear and almost lost
his wife and the opportunity
to fulfill the promise of God. Moses' struggle with fear nearly
kept him from accepting one of the greatest leadership roles in
history. In 2 Corinthians, Paul writes, "For, when we were come
to Macedonia, our flesh had no rest, but we were troubled on every
side; without were conflicts, within were fears" (7:5).
Having spent years traveling into Eastern
Europe both before and after communism, and more recently in
the Balkans during the conflicts
in Bosnia , Kosova, and Albania , I experienced life under conditions
of fear. Often, national partners and fellow missionaries asked, "Do
you think the Christians back home are praying for us now?"... Read
More. |
 |

"The terrorist attack was shameful for me. I feel guilty. No more Qur'an,
no more Islam—you have betrayed your own sons. I wore the face of Islam for many
years. But no longer will I be frightened or ashamed. Yes, my friends will leave
me…but my new friends will be good."
Muhammad bravely sent the above email to 200 other Muslims
in his online discussion group the week after 9/11. He is but one of
a growing number who question the faith of their fathers. Many others
are at least rethinking what it means to be a Muslim. They are educated,
independent thinkers who interact with each other using the Internet.
They also welcome non-Muslims, like me. I joined that group to share
Christ as a "cyber-missionary." Since 1999, I have witnessed
to countless followers of Islam from all over the globe, many in
countries where face-to-face evangelism is impossible... Read More. |
 |