Showing posts with label martyrdom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label martyrdom. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

A Book Worth Dying For


As Christian, we believe the Bible is the Word of God. It was inspired by Him (2 Tim. 3:16) and will help us in all areas of life. However, not everyone looks at the Bible in that way.


Muslims (among other religious groups) have a great disdain for the Bible. Why? There are many different reasons, a couple of which are, it shows Jesus to be God and they believe it is corrupted by Christians. Many times we read about Christian having to choose whether or not they will stand with the Bible or reject it. Sometimes followers of Islam will try to force Christians to spit on the Bible or in someway reject and desecrate it.


However, the true believers always stand with the Word of God, even if it means that their life will be taken from them. Through out the centuries, Christians have had to make this choice. Time and time again, they have picked honoring God by standing with His Word, over apparent "life".


Is the Word of God something that you're willing to die for? If you had to pick the Bible over life, would you do it? Get a hold of Foxe: Voices of the Martyrs or subscribe to VOM's newsletters and read about people who are dying for the Lord and His Word.

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Rachel Scott

" I have no more personal friends at school. But you know what... it's all worth it to me. I am no going to apologize for speaking the name of Jesus, I am not going to justify my faith to them, and I am not going to hide the light that God has put in me. If my friends have to become my enemies for me to be with my best friend Jesus, then that's fine with me. Ya know, I always knew that part of being a Christian is having enemies... but I never thought that my "friends" were going to be those enemies."

Those astounding words came from Rachel Scott right after having some good friends reject her when she took a stand for Christ.

Many of you will probably remember the Columbine High School shooting of April 20, 1999. Rachel was one of the students killed in that shooting. The two young men that perpetrated the crime had, before-hand, singled her out to die because they had a great disdain for her Christian faith.



On that fateful day, Rachel was outside eating her lunch with a friend when the gunmen came out and open fire on her. She was wounded in the legs and was trying to crawl to safety when they returned and asked her if she believed in God. She said she did and a bullet to the head ended her life here on earth. She was a believer in life, a martyr at death, and a child of God that is now in heaven with her Savior.

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Review of the book, Safely Home

I recently re-read a novel about the persecuted church in China. In Safely Home by Randy Alcorn, two worlds collide. After not seeing each other for twenty years, Ben Fielding, a wealthy American business executive, and Li Quan, a humble Chinese locksmith, are thrust into each other’s lives again. They had been roommates at Harvard years ago, but have had little contact since those times. That was when Ben thought he was a Christian and Quan had been a selfish, communist boy. However, Quan becomes a Christian and after graduating, heads back to China to answer the call of God on his life.

The years pass and Ben Fielding becomes the Vice President of a multi-million dollar, international business. He has gone through a divorce, he is estranged from his children, and he thinks life is all about him and making money. God has been crowded out of Ben’s life and he even fires his own cousin for taking a public stand for his Christian faith.

At what appears to be a normal business meeting, Ben’s boss throws out his “wonderful” plan to further the company’s foothold in China. Why not have someone from their company stay with a Chinese family? That way they’d be able to say the company knows China because they’ve lived there. Martin Getz, the president of the company and Ben’s boss, remembers that Ben Fielding’s old college roommate was Chinese. Ben is then told to find Li Quan and see if he can stay with him for six weeks! This is most definitely not to Ben’s liking, but he has his secretary begin a search for Quan.

Once Quan was found, Ben journeys overseas and stays with Quan’s family. On all his other trips, Ben Fielding has enjoyed the finest of all China has to offer. Dinner at the best restaurants, all the drinks he needs, and anything else he desires. When he arrives at Li Quan’s home, Ben is in for a rude awakening. The house isn’t the posh hotels he’d stayed at or the nice homes of his Chinese associates. It’s just a small, one room brick house, with a chicken coop and outhouse in the back, nothing too impressive by the world’s standards. This was just the beginning of the shock Ben was in for.

To cut a long story short, Ben starts realizing that the sterilized picture he’d seen of China on the news and on his business trips wasn’t all there was to the country. He had always thought religious freedom was allowed by the communist party and that there were fair human rights, but he finds out his old college roommate has been imprisoned multiple times for going to a house church and distributing Bibles. Near the end of the story, Mr. Fielding realizes that he was never truly born again and becomes a Christian due to the unwavering witness of Quan - even while he is in prison.

This novel is what stirred me up for the persecuted church when I read it the first time several years ago. On reading it again, I would have to say that God has again renewed my passion to get the message of the Persecuted out and for praying for our brothers and sister who are suffering for Christ’s sake. This book brings the cold realities of what Christians are going through in China to the light. I highly recommend it.

The Early Church on Martyrdom

"Allow me to become food for the wild beasts, through whose instrumentality it will be granted me to attain to God. I am the wheat of God; so let me be ground by the teeth of the wild beasts-so that I may be found to be the pure bread of Christ. -Ignatius

"Though threatened with death, we do not deny His name." -Justin Martyr

"We call martyrdom perfection, not because the man comes to the end of his life as others, but because he has exhibited the perfect work of love." -Clement of Alexandria

"On martyrdom, the Lord has spoken explicitly...'But I say unto you, Whoever confesses Me before men, the Son of man also will confess before the angels of God: but whoever denies Me before men, him will I deny before the angels.'" -Clement of Alexandria

"If the spiritual man is pointed out [as a Christian], he glories in it. If he is accused, he offers no defense. When questioned, he makes voluntary confession. When condemned, he gives thanks."-Tertullian

"Condemnation gives us more pleasure than acquittal." -Tertullian

"I stoutly maintain the martyrdom is good. It is required by the God by whom likewise idolatry is forbidden and punished. -Tertullian

"Did he not previously ordain eternal punishment for those who deny Him? Did he not ordain saving rewards for those who confess Him? -Cyprian

[ADDRESSED TO PAGANS:] "The greater our conflicts, the greater our rewards. Your cruelty is our glory. -Tertullian

"The first fruit for the martyrs is a hundredfold." -Cyprian