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June 2002 Issue
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Muslims
Coming To Christ In Large Numbers
It may not be a church-planting
movement yet, but hundreds of Muslims across Israel and the Palestinian
areas have come to Christ in the past year or so.
The decisions have resulted in small groups of believers scattered
in villages and cities across this troubled region, leaping tense
borders as ex-Muslims share their newfound faith with others in
their extended families of parents, uncles, aunts and sometimes,
multiple wives.
"I've been working among these people for thirty years,
and I promise you I've never seen anything like this," marvels
one Southern Baptist worker.
They gather behind closed doors to study the Bible despite
the fact that professing belief in the Scriptures in Muslim areas
can result in violent attacks or worse.
This is not the kind of movement Southern Baptists are likely
to see covered on the six o'clock news. But Christian workers
here are praying and carefully trying to fan the fragile flames
of faith which seem near igniting into a mass movement.
As with most faith-related stories from the Middle East, neither
the Christian workers involved nor the new believers want names
or places publicized for fear of reprisals. Their fears are well-founded.
In May of last year, radical Muslims firebombed the homes of
four believers in the West Bank. A teen-age girl received third-degree
burns over much of her body. The girl now faces months of painful
skin-graft surgery as believers and workers from the West raise
thousands of dollars to cover her medical bills.
But the result has been more Muslims from her village receiving
Christ.
One ex-Muslim leader who has taught the Bible was ambushed
while trying to visit the family. Radical Muslims pitched a gasoline
bomb at him, which exploded at his feet, burning his face and
shoulder severely.
Radical Muslims have burned the cars of other leaders, run
down their children, destroyed their crops, dumped raw sewage
on one, and committed other acts of violence.
But these modern evangelists seem no more deterred by threats
or suffering than did Christ's disciples in the first century
here.
"Despite these problems, the Lord said, 'Keep going,'"
says Phillip,* a new believer. "We may go to bed without
supper for a week or a month, but He gave His own Son.
"In this Beloved Book," he continues, picking up
an Arabic Bible, "it says the cross costs."
Muslims have also used money in an attempt to stop the gospel.
One man stopped attending Bible studies after local Muslims paid
off all his debts in exchange for his dropping out. He later returned
to believers and begged for forgiveness.
Distribution of the Bible and gospel tracts by Christian workers
across this region for decades is undoubtedly a factor in the
new movement.
Phillip knew nothing of the gospel until he received a Bible
and began reading a few pages from it each day.
"After a month I got really attached to the Psalms,"
Phillip recalls. "Then I read the Bible from cover to cover.
As I got deeper in the faith, I realized the Lord was calling
me to share the gospel," he says.
He kept reading the Bible for five years, but feared telling
anyone because of the violence or death which can await many Muslims
who convert to Christianity.
Finally a friend introduced him to a Southern Baptist worker
who has discipled and trained him for more than two years.
Despite his fear, Phillip began sharing his faith. "Of
course I'm still afraid even today," he says, "but the
Holy Spirit gives me courage. The Lord is always with us and opens
the way for us," he declares.
One worker says Muslim responsiveness to the gospel increased
noticeably after the Gulf War ended in 1991 and Christians worldwide
began praying for the 10/40 Window, which includes most of the
Muslim world.
Another factor has been the years of violence between Israel
and the Palestinians; the recent months-long round of fight- ing
left hundreds dead. The almost daily violence has left many seeking
new answers.
Among others who have responded to the gospel, most noticeable
are the Messianic Jews Israelis of Jewish background who
now believe Jesus is the Messiah.
Christian workers in Israel plead for Southern Baptists and
other Christians to pray for Middle-Eastern believers, whatever
their background. True peace, they say, will come to the Middle
East only when people follow the Prince of Peace.
* Name changed for security reasons.
IMB personnel are currently working with more
than 300 predominantly Muslim people groups in seventy-five countries.
In the 2001 Annual Statistical Report IMB personnel and their
overseas Baptist partners reported the planting of 121 new churches
and 3,405 baptisms among predominantly Muslim groups.
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© 2010 Southern Baptist Convention Executive Committee
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