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Evangelicals, Pentecostals Are More Likely Than Other Christians to Be Persecuted
WASHINGTON — Evangelicals and
Pentecostal Christians are most at risk among persecuted Christians in
part because of their zeal to evangelize, a new study shows.
Key findings of "In Response to Persecution," a new study of Notre Dame's Under Caesar's Sword project,
were revealed Thursday at the National Press Club where panelists
mentioned several times during a discussion that evangelicals and
Pentecostals are targeted for persecution more intensely than mainline,
Catholic, and Orthodox believers for several reasons.
In many nations, the report reads,
"evangelicals and Pentecostals are comparatively recent arrivals and
thus have not established patterns relating to surrounding populations
and government to the same degree with churches with centuries of
history in a given region."
They are also perceived as being supported by like-minded believers in the West, the research finds.
But
perhaps most importantly, because evangelicals and Pentecostals
understand evangelization and the necessity of conversion as "verbal,
urgent, and sometimes dramatic processes," they actually anticipate
being persecuted.
Both governments hostile to Christianity and
non-state actors like terrorist groups and militant varieties of other
religions thus view them as more of a threat.
While a pattern and
not an exact correlation since other churches also evangelize sometimes
and in some cases evangelicals and Pentecostals seek cooperative
relationships with the state, the trend does hold in several nations.
In
Central Asian Republics and in Russia, where ever since the conclusion
of the Cold War extensive missionary activity has risen dramatically,
persecution is strong.
The repression of evangelical and
Pentecostal Christianity is particularly severe in Iran; Christians in
that country routinely "disguise their faith in public, aiming to appear
little different from the surrounding Muslim culture."
Such a survival strategy is not at odds with their faith, the report notes in another of its key findings.
Yet many Christians are willing to
profess their faith publicly and contend for their rights, and thus risk
being killed, which comports with their theology. When Christians in
repressive countries do dare to confront regimes opposed to their faith
they do so with the expectation of harsh consequences. The word martyr,
the study notes, is derived from the Greek for "witness" and those who
die for their faith "embody the fullest expression of Christian freedom,
testifying with their lives to the ultimate triumph of the God in whom
they hope."
"When Chinese Catholic and Protestant leaders accepted
decades of imprisonment for their refusal to join the Communist
government's official church structures, and when Pakistan's Shahbaz
Bhatti stood for persecuted minorities, knowing that a form of martyrdom
was their likely fate, they bore witness not only to their God but also
to the dignity of all, Christians and non-Christians alike," the report
reads.
The Under Caesar's Sword project is a three-year research
endeavor and a collaboration of 17 scholars and academic centers
including the Notre Dame Center for Ethics and Culture, the Religious
Freedom Institute, and Georgetown University's Religious Freedom
Research Project.