Relatable with Allie Beth Stuckey

Ep 1344 | Mexican Cartels’ New Target: Evangelical Christians. Here’s What’s Happening | Ryan Brown

64 min
May 8, 202623 days ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

Ryan Brown, CEO of Open Doors, discusses the persecution of evangelical Christians globally, with particular focus on Mexico, Syria, Yemen, and North Korea. The episode explores how the church grows despite intense persecution, the distinction between 'squeeze' and 'smash' persecution, and practical ways listeners can support persecuted believers through prayer and advocacy.

Insights
  • Christian persecution is increasing in strategic regions where the church is growing fastest, particularly Africa, suggesting persecution correlates with religious expansion rather than decline
  • Persecuted Christians prioritize prayer and solidarity over rescue, reframing Western assumptions about persecution response from extraction to accompaniment
  • Cartel violence in Mexico represents an emerging persecution vector targeting evangelical churches as threats to criminal operations, not just traditional religious opposition
  • Dreams and visions appear to be significant conversion catalysts for Muslims encountering Christianity, suggesting cultural and spiritual openness despite institutional opposition
  • The 'Circle of Silence' in Mexico demonstrates how geographic religious monopolies combined with cartel control create dual persecution mechanisms
Trends
Evangelical Christianity growth in traditionally Catholic regions (Mexico, South America) triggering organized opposition from both cartels and syncretic religious traditionsRegime change in Syria creating power vacuums exploited by extremist groups, causing dramatic spikes in anti-Christian violence and church destructionMuslim-to-Christian conversions accelerating in Middle East and Africa as moderate Muslims reject extremist ideologies, creating new persecution categoriesCartel-driven persecution emerging as distinct persecution category separate from state or religious persecution in Latin AmericaAfrican Christianity becoming global church center by 2030s, with corresponding increase in targeted violence against evangelical movementsSafe house networks and cross-border support infrastructure becoming critical for persecuted church sustainability in high-risk regionsReligious freedom advocacy shifting from political/legal frameworks to solidarity-based petition campaigns targeting UN and international bodiesPersecution preparedness training and trauma counseling becoming core organizational functions for persecuted church support ministries
Topics
Christian persecution in Mexico by cartels and syncretic religious traditionsEvangelical church growth in persecution contexts (Africa, Middle East, Latin America)Syria regime change and anti-Christian violence escalationNorth Korea concentration camps and religious freedom suppressionYemen humanitarian crisis and Christian vulnerabilityMuslim-to-Christian conversion patterns and persecution risksSqueeze vs. smash persecution framework and response strategiesOpen Doors international support infrastructure and livelihood programsReligious freedom advocacy and UN petition campaignsTrauma counseling and persecution preparedness trainingSafe house networks for persecuted believersCircle of Silence geographic persecution zones in MexicoChurch growth despite persecution in sub-Saharan AfricaBible smuggling and radio broadcast ministry modelsChristian persecution in Gaza and Israel context
Companies
Open Doors
International ministry supporting persecuted Christians in 80 countries through relief aid, livelihood programs, trau...
Alliance Defending Freedom
Legal organization defending religious liberty and constitutional rights for persecuted Christians in America and int...
Voice of the Martyrs
Persecuted church support organization providing resources, books, and advocacy for Christians experiencing religious...
People
Ryan Brown
Leads Open Doors US operations and discusses global Christian persecution, support strategies, and regional case studies
Allie Beth Stuckey
Podcast host conducting interview and providing American religious liberty context through 'sharing the arrows' frame...
Brother Andrew
Historical founder who began Bible smuggling into communist countries 70 years ago; subject of book 'God's Smuggler'
Pastor Humberto
Case study of squeeze persecution in Mexico; converted to Christianity and faced community opposition, imprisonment, ...
Quotes
"The Bible tells us that persecution will come. And when we come alongside our brothers and sisters that are experiencing persecution, they're not necessarily asking that we take their persecution away. What they are asking is that we not forget them in their persecution."
Ryan Brown~12:00
"I went into prison as a kitten, but I came out as a lion. And again, the presence of Christ is not devoid. He is present."
Ryan Brown (quoting Sudanese Christian)~28:00
"That which costs us little sometimes means little. And so he was inviting people into kinship, into relationship with persecuted believers as a way to even energize and to spark revival."
Ryan Brown~8:00
"The enemy doesn't oppose that, which is no threat. We could end Christian persecution tomorrow if we just said, let's lay down this great commission thing. But the fact that the church is not doing that, the fact that the church is advancing, there are many missiologists that say that in coming years, the greatest number of Christians in the world will be in Africa."
Ryan Brown~42:00
"Not even the crowning achievement of sin, even that has to bow its knee before the Lordship of Christ. And none of that is true without the resurrection."
Ryan Brown~65:00
Full Transcript
A lot of people think of Mexico as a popular vacation spot. They don't think about it as a hub of persecution of Christianity. And yet evangelical Christians are being persecuted on a daily basis in Mexico. Yet the church there is growing. That is the same story in violent countries like Yemen, like Syria, in North Korea, all throughout Africa. Despite intense persecution, the church of Jesus is growing today. We've got the CEO of Open Doors, Ryan Brown here, Open Doors is an organization that resources the persecuted church all around the world. And he's going to tell us what is really going on in Mexico, in these other countries. How can we be involved in helping these Christians? This episode is brought to you by Dwell Bible. Dwell Bible is an app that I use to listen to the Bible, to read the Bible. You can do their devotionals. They have one called Worthy Work. That's just for moms. That will be a huge encouragement to you. To download at DwellBible.com slash Alley, you'll get 50% off your subscription, DwellBible.com slash Alley. Ryan, thanks so much for joining us. Can you tell us a little bit about who you are and what you do? Yeah, my name is Ryan Brown. And I have the privilege of overseeing the team with Open Doors US. And for those not familiar with Open Doors, we are a ministry that has its roots dating back 70 years. Gentlemen by the name of Brother Andrew, who some of the viewers may be familiar with because it was a book written a number of years ago called God's Smuggler, which over 10 million copies of that book in print. But Brother Andrew was a young man from the Netherlands. And he and his friends at Bible College were just perplexed why they couldn't get people to show up to their meetings. And meanwhile in Poland, there was going to be a communist youth rally in which there were going to be tens of thousands of young people there. So he traveled there to find out why, what was the attraction. And during his time there, he went off the itinerary a little bit and met members of the church there. His heart was broken to discover that they did not have access to the word of God. These were entire congregations of believers where maybe only one person would have access to the scriptures or just part of scriptures. And so he felt compelled that he needed to respond. So he began smuggling Bibles into communist countries behind what was referred to as the Iron Curtain at that point. And I gave birth to a ministry that we're now working in about 80 countries around the globe where Christians are most persecuted and discriminated against because of their faith in Jesus. And does he note why people weren't going to his meetings, but the young people were showing up at these communist rallies? Like what did he learn? Yeah, I don't know that he actually came to a conclusion on that. He did come to a conclusion though that the church there in Poland, what we commonly refer to as the persecuted church, that they had something to offer because Jesus talks about a pearl of great price, about people willing to sacrifice for their faith. And what he was experiencing, that there was not a lot of sacrifice associated with that, but yet he saw men and women around the globe who were willing at great cost to follow Jesus Christ. There are elements there that, that which costs us little sometimes means little. And so he was inviting people into kinship, into relationship with persecuted believers as a way to even energize and to spark revival in the European context that he was working in. And what does open doors do today? Yeah, so again, coming alongside the persecuted church, I think the thing that is maybe a little non-intuitive about that is that I think that many of us, when we think of the idea of persecution, the immediate response is, well, the goal should be to end persecution, to stop persecution. The goal should be to pull people out of persecution that are experiencing that. But that's not necessarily with how the Bible frames persecution. The Bible tells us that persecution will come. And when we come alongside our brothers and sisters that are experiencing persecution, they're not necessarily asking that we take their persecution away. They're not asking that they be removed. What they are asking is that we not forget them in their persecution. That we stand with them, that they not stand alone. They ask that we pray for them. They ask that we continue to resource them and support them so that they can stay rooted as a church in these areas that are so opposed to the message of the gospel, that they can continue to be a light in those areas that are most opposed to the message of the gospel. And so what kind of resources is OpenDoors providing? Yeah, so it can look different because persecution looks different in different contexts. So in some places, we tend to generally categorize persecution in two different ways. One is this idea of a smash of persecution. Those are the things that I think a lot of us more intuitively gravitate towards when we think of persecution. These are things like people that are murdered or martyred for their faith. Like what's happening in Nigeria. Exactly. This is church buildings being attacked or bombed or destroyed. But there's also a very real dynamic that we refer to more as a squeeze of persecution. And this is a reality when people are denied access to education for their children. They are denied access to employment. It's a reality where life is made untenable for Christians in particular areas because of their faith. And what happens if Christians leave those areas, the church is decimated. So it can have the same impact, whether it's through fear or intimidation seeking to break the back of the church or whether it's through these pressures that make life difficult. Both of those things can cause the church to come under threat in different areas. And so the way that Open Door seeks to respond is that the way that the church is asking for support in those particular areas. In areas where there is the smash of persecution, a lot of that can look like traditional, honestly, relief type aid where Christians are needing access to food, shelters. Many are living as internally displaced people, like you mentioned in Nigeria. Another big piece is trauma counseling. They're Christians who have experienced atrocities that I think you and I would have a difficult time even trying to fathom or wrap our mind around. And men, women, and children have been through these things. And so we're able to provide counseling that rooted in the gospel, but yet also allows people to go deep in processing through these things they've experienced. In other areas where it's more the squeeze of persecution, where Christians have been denied access to employment, we're able to offer livelihood programs where Christians can find new vocations and means to provide for their families in places where children have been denied access to school, often able to provide educational opportunities or advocate on behalf of those children so that they can get the education that they're entitled to. OK, quick pause to tell you about Share the Arrows, y'all. The Share the Arrows Mother's Day sale is happening just for a couple more days. If you go to sharethearrows.com and you go to buy tickets, it'll take you to Ticketmaster. At the top, you'll see a little filter button. Press the filter, enter in Mother's Day 20. You'll get 20% off your tickets. It's going to be amazing. October 11th and October 10th. October 10th, I knew that wasn't right. In Dallas, Texas, it's brought to you by our friends at Range Leather, Adele Natural Cosmetics, a WeHeart nutrition. It's going to be amazing. Before we get back into that conversation, let me tell you about Seven Weeks Coffee. Seven Weeks Coffee is America's pro-life coffee company. They're called Seven Weeks Coffee because it's Seven Weeks gestation. That little baby inside the womb is just the size of a coffee bean. Yet, he or she is fully worthy of life, made in the image of God. And that's why 10% of every sale of Seven Weeks Coffee goes to pregnancy centers across the country. They have raised well over a million dollars to save these babies, to help moms make the most life-affirming choice. Mold-free, pesticide-free, totally clean, great tasting. We love Seven Weeks Coffee in our home. My mom's hooked on Seven Weeks Coffee. It's just a win all around. You can allow your coffee to serve a higher purpose. When you go to SevenWeeksCoffee.com and use code ALI, you'll save 10% on your first order. SevenWeeksCoffee.com code ALI. Do you have a story of someone recently so people can wrap their mind around, maybe let's do one story of the squeeze of persecution, which you're right. I don't think most people are even thinking about that, especially outside of the United States. And then the smash of persecution that open doors has had the opportunity to reach and help maybe get educational opportunity. So we'll start with someone who maybe was in a country where they're not getting murdered, but they're getting persecuted through exclusion or discrimination. Yeah. And that goes fairly close to home here, even in Mexico. I live in Arizona and Mexico, obviously, very, very close. Church youth groups constantly sending trips to Mexico and those types of things. But yet, the realities of persecution aren't necessarily ones that are routinely talked about, but there are very, very real dynamics. And so, especially in some of the southern areas, there's a gentleman, Pastor Humberto, down in these southern areas that he came to faith as an adult. And this is a community, I think when people here in Mexico, it can be somewhat confusing because we think of it as a predominantly Christian country, a Catholic country. Yet in many of these areas, the flavor of Catholicism isn't Catholicism, it's yours, I might know it. There's a lot of witchcraft, correct? Exactly. A lot of syncretism, as far as taking ancient, in many cases, Mayan beliefs and honestly just kind of sprinkling some Catholicism on top of it. And so, when he came to faith as an adult, his community, they didn't want that. They rejected that. The immediate reaction was that they cut off his electricity and they cut off water to his house. He continued in his faith and a few other families came to faith as well. His children were told that they couldn't attend the local school. He was eventually thrown into prison on two different occasions as he continued to share his faith. But what is so amazing to see is that this pastor, coming to faith as an adult, he had some rough years. He said his initial response when he received persecution was, if you're coming swinging at me, I'm going to come back swinging at you. He could have pulled it off. He was a tough guy. But as he began to dive into some of the training and we have curriculum that we walk people through as far as persecution preparedness and began recognizing the teaching of Jesus that you'll love your enemies. Pray for those who persecuted you. He began to realize that his natural response that he needed to keep that in check with his new biblical worldview. And so, he began to respond in love, trying to reach out to his neighbors. As the community was continuing to ramp up what they were going to do to try to drive him back to his ancestral faith, there was a meeting of the community one night. He was on the outside looking in and a gentleman raised his hand and said, Pastor Humberto and these several others that have come to faith, he said, they're not going to come back. They're not going to abandon their newfound faith, but you know what? They're good neighbors. So, let's just leave them alone. Let's just let them be. And so, the community decided to do that. And what happened over a period of time is more and more people began to see how they were living their lives in this community. More and more of these people that had been persecutors began coming to faith in Christ. More and more until the point where it became the majority of the community was Christian. Now, this community, I was down there for one of the ways that this church has funded a lot of the work that they are doing is through a bakery. And they're not just working in their own community, but they are actually, they've planted churches in 11 surrounding communities that are also antagonistic towards the Christian faith. And so, we were able to partner with them and they've actually launched a commercial grade bakery now that they're utilizing to fund this work that they're doing. But it's amazing to see as men and women respond that even with that squeeze of persecution, they can continue to be a light in the dark. Now, you asked about the smash of persecution and what that looks like. Yeah. If I could just, if I could say one thing for my audience here, obviously here in America, we are so incredibly blessed by a constitution and constitutional rights. But we are always needing attorneys to fight on behalf of Christians like Jack Phillips and Colorado, so many other Christians for celebrity, alliance defending freedom. They're all people who are trying to defend these freedoms. And even though it's not quite the same as somewhere like Mexico or other of these squeeze countries, I do want to encourage my audience, yes, of course, to think about the persecuted Christians abroad, but also to realize, we have a concept on the show called sharing the arrows, that when you see a fellow Christian who has been condemned, lambasted, excluded for their faith rather than us saying, okay, I'm so glad that's not me. And now I know not to speak out. Now I know not to do that. You stand up and you say, you know what? I also believe that I believe the same thing. So whatever arrows you're launching toward me, you or whatever arrows you're launching toward her, you can launch toward me too. And we encourage prayer, support, helping that person's business. And it sounds a lot like on a much smaller and different scale and an Americanized way, some of what you're doing, you're not necessarily going down there. And as you said, trying to end all persecution. You are sharing the arrows. You're going down there and you're saying, you're not alone. And let us give you what you need to persist, what you need to stand up. You're not necessarily always removing them from the situation. And it sounds like through that, God has given the space that is needed for others to see the light of Christ and to become Christian. That is a really unique and different perspective that I feel like we don't hear about a lot, I just wanted to give some more American context for my listeners that we do a very small form of that. And it sounds like what y'all are doing on a bigger and more tangible scale. Absolutely. When I think in that American context, I think in many cases is we've engaged in the conversation of persecution. It's whether that be at a macro scale like in Nigeria or even in a smaller case like we might experience here, there can often be a fear associated with that. And this idea that, OK, we need to avoid that. But what I've heard from so many of our brothers and sisters around the globe is that Christ is present in their persecution. They are not alone. Christ is with them. And his Holy Spirit strengthens them in the midst of those things. And so I was humbled by a gentleman I met from Sudan a little over a year ago. And this was Sudan for those not familiar, a country that's just been ripped apart by civil war. This is a country where Christians can very much experience that the smash of persecution as well. They not only are navigating the incredible humanitarian crisis that's going on because of multiple years of civil war, but there is also an antagonism towards specifically for those of a Muslim background faith that have come to faith in Christ where people will be ostracized by their communities, by their families. And that was the story of this gentleman that I had the opportunity to meet. He had come to faith as an adult as well and was immediately cut off by his family, was ostracized by his community as he began to share his newfound faith with his community. He was thrown into prison. And as he was describing that prison experience to me, he said that at times they kept him in a cell that was so small he didn't even have enough room to lay down at night to sleep. He said other times they kept him in a cell that was completely devoid of any light, not just natural sunlight, but as well any type of light bulb or artificial light was complete in utter darkness. They just sought to break his back. And I had been studying the Sermon on the Mount and Jesus says blessed are the persecuted. And my definition of blessed isn't necessarily that that didn't really align. The experiences that he was describing as being blessed. And so I asked him about that and he said that I wouldn't have chosen these experiences, but he said I am thankful for them. He said I'm thankful because when I was in the darkness of that cell, the light of Christ was burning for me brighter in ways than I'd ever experienced before. When I was in that cramped confine, I knew that the Christ was there with me. He said in terms of my faith, he said I went into prison as a kitten, but I came out as a lion. And again, the presence of Christ is not devoid. So whether it's the pressure that we feel from a coworker or things like that that might ridicule our faith or whether it's a Christian Nigeria that is rightfully fearful for their life, Christ is an absent. He is present. Next sponsor is a very fitting sponsor and that is Voice of the Martyrs. Voice of the Martyrs also exists to help the persecuted church and they have a resource that you can get right now if you go to vom.org slash alley. They've got all kinds of books like Hearts on Fire, all kinds of resources for you to be able to connect with the stories of Christians around the world who are being persecuted, who are risking everything for their faith. If you want to know more about Voice of the Martyrs, how to get involved, very similar origin story. They were missionaries in the Nazi world and the Communist world where the Bible and Christianity were banned. They pushed through that and now they have this incredible organization that continues to equip the church. Go to vom.org slash alley that's vom.org slash alley. Tell us about Syria because I noticed on your, you have a world walked list, open doors does and these are countries where persecution is very heavy and Syria has gone up in its slots. So why is that? Yeah, it was one of the largest single year jumps that we had seen and certainly in recent history with that report. It had been number 18 last year and jumped up to number six. And to unpack that, some may be familiar was there would, the Assad regime had been in power for roughly 50 years or so and it was not easy for Christians in those areas. There were certain parts of the country where Christians were relatively left alone or things along those lines. There was certainly for those who had been converted from a Muslim background, there were hostilities and there were difficulties. But what happened as the Assad regime was taken out of power and in HTS, which is a group that has ties to Al Qaeda and the history there, they stepped forward. They have been very, very vocal in proclaiming their intention for religious freedom and liberties and for people to worship according to conscience. But in the midst of this regime change, the rule of law was virtually non-existent in some places. And yeah, it was very, very difficult and the extremists have definitely seen that as an opportunity to step into the void there. And so while some of these historical things have continued to be present, what was the dramatic changer for Syria this last year were the incidences of violence and how that persecution, if we go back a year ago on the World Watch List, no Christians had lost their life that we had record of in Syria that year. This year there were 27 that were killed because of their fate. 22 of those were killed in a specific church bombing that was just an absolute horrific event. When you take a look at the number of churches that had been destroyed or vandalized or damaged in our previous reporting period, we had recorded four that we could substantiate and verify through our on-the-ground presence. This last year there were over 100 of those. And so while all of these realities that made life difficult and where Christians were experiencing persecution continue to be present, we amped on top of that, threw on top of that unfortunately, an increase in violence. There is the actual risk that comes with violence itself, but that violence has a psychological impact as well on the church where people that had lived relatively and safely and suddenly where that relative safety is no longer there, it's taken away. That has a huge impact. As a result, we've seen that church in Syria over the recent years, it has gone from hundreds of thousands of left. This last year we estimate there's about 300,000 Christians left remaining in Syria. So it has become a remnant, a small church that remains, that has been profoundly impacted by these changes in the regime. And I don't know if you can answer this, because I know that the work that is being done by those who work for open doors can be very dangerous. And so you have to have some privacy in that. But is there anything you can tell us just about how you get into these countries? I imagine it is very difficult. There's a lot of peril that you have to overcome. Or is it just communication with the Christians already in Syria? What does that look like? Yeah, so it's a great question, because we are not a traditional missionary sending organization. If people go to our website, they're not going to sign up for the two-week trip to go visit these places. We have a rich history and a rich legacy of relationships. We talk about presence ministry on the ground. And so, Brother Andrew, our founder, lived that out, that he sought to be present with folks. And so we come alongside the church that is there, with Christians that are there seeking to support them. These are men and women that love their countries, despite the intense persecution that they experience. But these are men and women that are committed and believe that there is a future and that there can be a hope in some of these places that are so opposed to their faith. So when we come alongside, it is coming alongside those deep relationships that have been forged over years. Those aren't easy to create. Those take time. Many times, those with nefarious intent will position themselves as a new convert to faith, to find out who is who and where people are meeting and those types of things. So there are many of these places where we have to exercise extreme caution and extreme care. But it is all birthed out of that fabric and that foundation of relationship and trust that gets built over time. And it is a similar story in Yemen. I think that they are number three on the list. Tell us what is going on there. I know the children are launching a campaign to shine a light on what Christians are enduring in these two countries. Yeah, so it is really throughout sub-Saharan Africa that the campaign that we are focused on. But Yemen in particular is a country that unfortunately has been in those top spots in the world watch list for many years. This is a country where there has been civil war and great instability. You can only have so many years of that before it starts to create humanitarian crisis. Yemen is in the throes of that right now that there are, it is a dire humanitarian crisis, what is going on in Yemen. The Christians in those contexts, there is an additional vulnerability. You know, obviously they experience the same hardships that all experience because of the violence of civil war because of the lack of food, lack of water, lack of healthcare. They experience all of those types of things. But in this area where Christianity, in this case, I am talking specifically evangelical Christianity, is not in essence kind of an authorized religion. It is not a religion that is allowed for people to worship according to their conscience in those areas. These individuals are typically last in line when it comes to receiving aid, when it comes to receiving support, the powers that be that are struggling for power. They do not gain favor with the populace by coming to the aid of Christians. Christians have an incredible vulnerability that all of those in Yemen are experiencing. They are the faith component on top of that. It is a difficult situation for the Christians in Yemen. So, multiple years where this has been compounding, and the Christians in Yemen, it is a remnant that continues to persist there. We have a gentleman in so many of these places, you are absolutely right, that because of security, there are times where I am telling a story where I cannot even identify the name of the country, let alone the individual, for fear of exposing them to greater risk. But we do have a gentleman in Yemen that specifically stood up this last year and said, no, I want the world to see my face. I want the world to know my name. I am a gentleman by the name of Aweez. He has spoken and recorded videos that we have been able to share with the rest of the world. What we see happening right now in Yemen, what we see happening in Nigeria, what we see happening in Sudan, these things are happening throughout sub-Saharan Africa. What we have seen over multiple years is that, again, there can be a squeeze and a smash of persecution in so many of these places, but the smash has just grown exponentially. The levels of violence that are being experienced continues to mount. Why is that? Do we know? Well, ultimately, when you go to the Bible, it is sin. I think there is also a dynamic at play here that the enemy doesn't oppose that, which is no threat. We could end Christian persecution tomorrow if we just said, let's lay down this great commission thing to go into all the world and make disciples. We are not going to do that. We are opted out. If the church were to take that posture, Christian persecution would end. But the fact that the church is not doing that, the fact that the church is advancing, there are many misciologists and many around the world that say that in coming years, the greatest number of Christians in the world will be in Africa. The church is advancing in Africa. The church is growing. Is it mostly, I'm just curious, is it mostly evangelical Christianity, Catholicism, Orthodox? There are all of those threads come into play, but there is great growth in the evangelical church. There are also growth, though, in some of these other areas as well. It can be very, very localized as far as where some of that growth is. There are areas where the Orthodox Church is continuing to be a strong and viable presence there. But many would say that the center of Christianity in coming years will be Africa rather than North America, where it had historic, over recent years has been, or Europe prior to that, that the face and the heart of the global church is increasingly in Africa. I don't think that's coincidental as far as why Africa is seen so much persecution. Much of that persecution in this area has taken the form of Islamic extremism. These aren't necessarily moderate Muslims. These are the extremists that are seeking to wipe out Christianity, that the growth of Christianity that's seen as a threat, seeking to see those extremist ideologies become a caliphate-type state, where that becomes the way of life for all on the land. Okay, y'all. I have a challenge for you with this next sponsor. The next sponsor is pre-born. They are a network of clinics across the country that offer free resources to pregnant moms in need. I want us to sponsor 600 ultrasounds, the cost of one free ultrasound session, for a pregnant mother to be able to actually see that baby. That's not just a clump of cells, but a human being, a part of her. To hear that beating heart is $28. She is so much more likely to choose life when she sees the truth of the humanity of the life inside of her. And so just $28, can I get 600 of you to donate $28 to pre-born? Or maybe you can donate more than that. Maybe you can donate six times 28. Whatever you can do helps. Or maybe you can't do $28 and that's okay. Maybe you can do $5, $2.80. Every little bit helps save a life. Go to preborn.com slash Allie. That's preborn.com slash Allie. Before we get back into it, just want to remind you, subscribe to Belize TV. You'll get subscriber exclusive content, see stuff you can't see on YouTube. And this is how you protect the things that you want to watch and the community that you want to be a part of. It won't ever be de-platformed by big tech. If you go to BelizeTV.com slash Allie, use code ALLIE. You'll get $20 off your subscription, BelizeTV.com slash Allie. What is the most dangerous country to be a Christian? Yeah. So the country that we have placed on the top of our world watch list, and this, we've been publishing this data for about 30 years now. And the country that has been on the top, the majority of those years has been North Korea. And this is a country for those not familiar with the realities there that you and your entire family, if you're even found to be in possession of a Bible, you and your entire family are likely going to be thrown into a concentration camp, or a work camp for the rest of your days, never to be heard of, never to be seen again. To be identified as a Christian, to be found as a Christian, is the equivalent of a death sentence in this area. The North Korean government would see the state as the highest form of authority that where all allegiance lies. And so for Christians who have a higher authority than the state, Christians are immediately seen as enemies of the state. They're assumed to be enemies of the state, or in some cases, assumed to be allies of the West that might have different political intentions or things of that nature. So Christians in these areas face dire circumstances. So North Korea would be the place that we would place on the top of the list where it is most difficult and most dangerous for a Christian to be. And I read also that executions there for your faith have reportedly increased over the past several years. So even though it has been dangerous for a very long time, it seems like the smash is getting greater there too. In many cases, these sense shock waves, these very public executions, very public awareness. And in many cases, if they feel like, okay, it's been a little too long, we need to remind people that we're in charge, we need to remind people what the consequences are. We can see these upticks in these very public types of executions. Yeah. I read a book several years ago called Nothing to Envy, and it was just a journalist's account of what it's like in North Korea and what it's like for children there. I mean, it's just beyond, I think, anything that I can truly comprehend. That book was very disturbing, but I do encourage people to read it and just realize that they're a rich bearers of God who are enduring this every single day. And in North Korea, who truly have no connection to the outside world at all. And yet the fact that the Holy Spirit is able to intervene and intercede, and that it truly is for the Lord, like an open door that he can go through whatever door he wants to, that shows the power of God. Because it's hard to even imagine how it's even possible for someone to know and believe in the gospel. And for us just to realize that those people who know that they will get executed, they will get thrown into a prison camp, they will be separated from their family. The love of Jesus and the desire for the gospel is so strong there that those people are willing to risk everything for it. And that's not just something that happened 500 years ago or in Nero's time. That's something that's happening right now. Absolutely. And you talk about the heart of these men and women, a couple of things that I think just illustrate that so well. One of the ways that we support Christians, and there are about 400,000 Christians in North Korea. Incredible. And it is growing. But one of the ways that we support is we are able to broadcast via radio, messages across the border. So from South Korea? Yeah, or in China as well, depending upon the locations. And the North Korean Christians, one of the things that they had asked in those broadcasts was to get information on Christians elsewhere in the globe that were experiencing persecution because they wanted to be able to pray for their brothers and sisters. They're on top of the world watch list, but yet they wanted to be praying for others around the globe that were experiencing persecution. There's also, we are able to operate a series of safe houses, not in North Korea, but across the border where in China where individuals are able to come, be nursed back to physical health. Because as you mentioned, the reality is for most North Koreans that there are humanitarian lack of food and those types of things. And so we're able to nurse people back to physical health, emotional health and spiritual health. It has again just humbles me to see that there, men and women that have in essence escaped from North Korea have come to these safe houses, been nursed back to health and their goal and their intent and what they have done is to go back to North Korea so they can continue to minister. Rather than, like I think many of us would say, well gosh, I'm free, I'm out of there, thank God. Dave instead, you know, taken a posture of how can I be equipped so that I can go back and continue to share the gospel with my friends and neighbors. Are there any countries that you find surprises people here in America when you say, yeah, this country makes it hard to be a Christian? I think all of us, even if we don't know the extent of persecution in North Korea or Yemen or Nigeria, doesn't surprise us because we know communism, secularism, reigns in North Korea, then we know Islam, reigns sub-Saharan Africa in the Middle East. But are there any nations that you wish people knew to pray for? Because it's just not as well known that Christians are persecuted there. I think one of those, I mean honestly, it's Mexico even. We mentioned a few moments ago, I mean, how many people vacation in Mexico or go there. But there are realities of persecution there. I mean, there's a couple of drivers of persecution there. One, like I mentioned, Pastor Umberto and some of those traditional faiths, ancestral type faiths, where those who come to faith in Christ can be seen as an opposition, and so there can be hostility there. But one of the very also present realities there are with the cartels, an organized crime, because just simply stated that the Christian church is bad for business, whether it be young men that are not getting drafted into the ranks of the cartel or folks that are being pulled away from the devices of drug use or alcohol that so many of them make their living on, many can see that of these cartel leaders see the Christian church as a threat. And so they will look to at times strike with violence. I met a pastor, and this was in northern Mexico, so not far from the border. And he was pastoring congregations where the cartels had basically come to town and said, we're setting up shop. Pastor and men and women of the church, you can step in line, you can grow what we tell you to grow, you can help, you'll get things from point A to point B as in when we tell you to do them or you can suffer the consequences. And there was a portion of the church there that said, okay, we acquiesce, we fall in line, we don't think that we can stand against this, but there was another portion of the church that said, no, we won't go along with it. And you'll to make an example of these folks that the cartels came in one night and with guns ablazing and forced people out with the clothes on their back, they corralled them in a school building and held them captive there, wouldn't allow them to escape, wanted people to see that they were being held there. Men, women and child, there was one bucket in the middle of the room to utilize as the bathroom for a period of 10 days, no water provided, they had to drink water from puddles and the cartels are saying, this is what awaits those that stand against us. Those are the realities that they're having to pastor their congregations through as far as what does that look like? And so, yeah, I think that is one that's not too... Yeah, talked about. Yeah. Talked about. What is the circle of silence? Yeah, so that is there's an area of about seven, eight states that geographically actually form a circle. And Christianity there, well, most of us think of Mexico as a Christian or a Catholic nation. This is an area where those faith traditions, Christianity and Catholicism are not heavily represented. You'll represent a very small minority of the population. And so, there is not a strong presence of the church there to vocalize and to make that the message of the gospel known. So that's one area of silence. But then again, these forces that come into play that would seek to silence the church that is there, the remnant that is continuing to be active and looking to proclaim the gospel. There are forces that would seek to silence that, whether it be the cartels or whether it be the traditional religions in the area. They want no presence of Christianity there. They want it to be silenced. Next sponsor is Alliance Defending Freedom, fighting on the front lines for our first amendment rights. The rights of women and girls everywhere. When there is a Christian who is being persecuted for their faith unjustly, unconstitutionally, you can bet Alliance Defending Freedom and their fleet of top-notch attorneys are going to be there. Defending them, which in turn defends our rights and defends the rights of our children, our children's children. They're going all the way to the Supreme Court protecting our religious liberty and our freedom of speech. We're celebrating America's 250th year. We love our constitution. We love our freedoms. This conversation should remind us of that. ADF is making sure that those freedoms are secure. If you go to joinadf.com slash ally, they just want you to sign up to pray. Will you sign up to pray for our country? To pray for the security of the rights that we have been given in our constitution. Praise God for them. Joinadf.com slash ally. And I've seen reports of South America and the religious makeup changing. It has been for a very long time predominantly Catholic, kind of similar to Mexico. Some syncretism there, some mix in with some voodoo and some witchcraft practices. But there seems to be a movement towards evangelicalism in South America. Can you talk a little bit more about that? Yeah, you know, it's, I think similar to Africa. There are these places where the church is continuing to grow. You know, the Christian church in many places in South America and South America, that is the case. I mean, that historically people have sent, you know, missions, long-term missionaries there for years and Bible colleges and, you know, different types of trainings and things that have, you know, continued to lay foundations for the work that is happening. But, you know, I think what all of these, these mission works desire to see is when that growth is locally owned, when that growth is being, you know, held by believers that are there and are looking to grow and expand the church. And despite, you know, the opposition that many of them face, we see that. We do see a church that is present, a church that is not just seeking to, you know, revel in anonymity or, you know, just looking to hide in the shadows. But a church is saying that, no, we're to be a city on a hill. We have, we are image-bearers of Christ. We have a light that our darkened communities desperately need. And, you know, there's a lot of debate that I see about how Christians are treated in Israel specifically. Is Israel on the list of nations where Christians are persecuted? It is not. Israel doesn't make that top 50. I will say that, you know, and this is illustrative of this idea that persecution never exists in a vacuum, that, you know, there will be, you know, societal factors, there will be geopolitical factors, there will be all of these different things that, you know, get intertwined into that reality. And, you know, there is a church, you know, the Big C church, you know, in these areas that has felt neglected. It has not necessarily been the type of persecution that we've seen in other places. But there's a church under threat, certainly, in these areas that as the hostilities, as the instabilities, you know, without being political, there's, you know, churches in areas of Gaza that are saying, you know, put your politics aside, you know, we're Christian brothers and sisters, you know, don't, don't, don't leave us neglected. Don't, don't, yeah, don't, don't ignore us. And don't just say, well, I'm on the side of this political issue, so I'm going to ignore the plight of Christians in Gaza or in any place, because it really does go beyond that. And our affiliation with them transcends our politics. Absolutely. Absolutely. I have no doubt that, you know, and even in the times of the early church and the Book of Acts, as they were, you know, mobilizing resources from one place to another to support those, those Christians that were, you know, experiencing, you know, hunger, that I'm sure that there are all sorts of geopolitical things that play there too, that the church recognized that, no, those things need to take a second tier of priority, not that those things go away or that we completely ignore them, because, you know, we do want to be voices of justice in those areas as well. But we, we can't allow those as an excuse to, to ignore, yeah, the greater issues. Totally. I've heard reports that Muslims in the Middle East and Africa, that there are a number of them, I can't say it's a huge number, how much it is, but turning to Christ. And obviously, we know that the penalties, especially for those who leave Islam and become Christian are very, very high. But is that something that you're seeing, that Muslims are becoming Christian in these places? We are. And ironically, this, it's in some of the areas as well, where we hear about much of the extremists, you know, that, and it's, you know, for those who are more moderate Muslims, you know, as they have been confronted with these ideologies of the extremists, they haven't known what to do with that, that they have, they don't believe it, they don't believe what, you know, the extremists are saying. And so, for many of them, that's set them on a path of discovery. And we are hearing and, you know, experiencing many stories in which folks that have in essence been disillusioned by the extremist ideologies that they're, you know, you're hearing around them and are coming to faith in Christ because of that. You know, there was a gentleman that I met a couple years ago now. And, you know, he was, you know, the son of an Imam and, you know, a Muslim ruler. And, you know, he was, you know, being trained to, you know, take on mantles of leadership there and was sent to Germany, in essence, as kind of an Islamic missionary to better understand and, you know, to, you know, the enemy. And as he arrived there and began to engage with some of the Christians, he realized that, you know, that the stories I've been told, you know, of who these people are, that they're not true. And he began to question everything. And, you know, he spiraled downwards into all sorts of drug abuse, alcohol abuse. And, you know, he said he had hit bottom. And one night he was just praying. He said, you know, God, if you're even real, you know, show yourself to me. And that night over a period of a couple of nights, he had a dream. And, you know, this was a dream in which he was, you know, walking down the streets. And there was a shopkeeper that you said, hey, come into my shop, come into my shop. And he came into the shop and the tables were just filled with, you know, gold and jewels and those types of things. And the shopkeeper said, take these, these are for you, take them. And so, you know, he filled up his bags and the dream, you know, he's walking down the street, you know, so thankful that, you know, he's, I'm rich, I'm rich, I'm rich. And then his roommate woke him up. And he was so disappointed to, you know, be back into his everyday life that the next night he had a dream and he was standing in a throne room. And there was a gentleman that he recognized was the shopkeeper. And in this context, he realized that that person was Jesus. And Jesus said, you know, I'm giving you the riches of the kingdom of heaven, you know, come, come to me. And, you know, at, for those of a Muslim faith that they don't have the same type of assurance of salvation that we as Christians do, that, you know, they're the only way to, to guarantee your salvation is to die in jihad. And so, beyond that, it's really this preponderance of your works, you know, as far as, you know, have you, you earned a right for, you know, eternal glory. And, you know, so he, you know, again, he was living a life of, of, of brokenness and debauchery at the time. And, you know, as Jesus said, come to me, he said, I, I can't, you know, I'm, I'm, I'm sinful. And he said, you know, Jesus, Jesus said to him, I forgive you. And he said, he looked down upon himself and he said, he can't find the words, but he said, it's like his sin was a physical manifestation on his body that just started to peel away. And, you know, he had his, his fresh clean skin underneath it. And so he, the next day, he woke up and said, okay, well, I need to start talking to some of these Christians that I've been, you know, trying to learn from in order to, you know, know how I can attack them. I need to, to learn from them. And so he, he became, you know, a believer to this day, you know, he, he was not able to return home because of his faith. It became found. And because of the prominent position that his family had, you know, he came under fire and, you know, the, the, there have been fought was that have been issued that basically a calling for his, his death and execution, not just for him, but for his wife, as well as his newborn son. And so, you know, the church is growing in these areas and we are seeing that. Last sponsor for the day is Shopify. Okay. If you've got a side hustler, maybe it's your main gig and you are selling products. Maybe you're an artist, you're a business, you're selling merchandise like we do, then you can do what we do and use Shopify. Shopify is a really easy way to sell your stuff online. They make it so easy. You don't have to be a tech was in order to use Shopify. They've got e-commerce down pat. They make it so simple. They help you with product descriptions, your pricing, all of that. It could not be easier. So you can actually get back to doing what you want to do, why you got into the business that you do, whether it's creating whatever it is, Shopify makes that easier and it makes it easier for you to make money doing what you do. Go to shopify.com slash alley. It's time to turn those what ifs into with Shopify today. Sign up for your $1 per month trial at shopify.com slash alley. That's shopify.com slash alley. I've read a lot of stories about Muslims specifically seeing God in dreams or seeing Jesus in dreams, which is just interesting. That's not something that we talk a lot about in the evangelical world, especially in my Reformed Baptist tradition. But the truth is, is that God is going to do what he wants to do and the means that he chooses to draw his sheep to himself. And God can do anything. I do think it's interesting how he seems to manifest himself in certain ways, in certain cultures at certain times and in others. But God's going to do what he has to do to make sure that his sheep hear his voice. And that's something that I take away from what you're saying is that, gosh, God is so faithful and relentless that there is nothing that can impede his will. There's nothing that can stop him from gathering his flock. And then also just the common theme that I'm seeing that Christianity is seen as a boil on the back of tyrants. We are seen as the obstacle to corruption. And we are very inconvenient to bad powers and always have been from Nero to today, Jesus himself. And that even, that's the pattern. It's like Christians speak truth, they kill us, the church grows. Speak truth, kill, church grows. And you would think that eventually we would be extinguished, but the gates of hell can't prevail against it. We see that every day. We do. And it's, perhaps it's a beautiful irony that the things that this world would most seek to do to destroy the church, would most seek to destroy faith in Christ. Christ not only is present in those things, but even those things bend their knee to Christ and his purposes. Gosh, death itself was sin's crowning achievement, but yet God utilized the death of his son to create atonement for all of us. So not even the crowning achievement of sin, even that has to bow its knee before the Lordship of Christ. And none of that is true without the resurrection. Amen. The resurrection is where we find hope in the midst of persecution and martyrdom, because if Jesus conquered death, then he gives us the authority to do so, then we know that we get to be with him forever and one day every knee will bow and every tongue will confess that Jesus Christ is Lord. Tell me just the immediate action step that someone can take, they're listening to this and they're like, okay, I want to get involved. What can they do? How can they get involved in open doors? Yeah, one of the first things I would point people to right now is we have launched, and this is not just open doors that has launched this, this is in response to the pastors on the ground that we have the privilege of working with in Africa. One of the things that they vocalized to us a few years ago is that the persecution that we are experiencing, I feel like the world doesn't know. We feel like the world is unaware. I spent some time this last year with a pastor who is from Nigeria, who spent the last 15 years of his life trying to tell the broader world about the realities of what is going on just to be routinely dismissed and people doubting the word that he says. And so what our brothers and sisters have said is that they feel alone, that they feel like it's one thing for politicians to ignore and to turn away. It's another thing for their brothers and sisters in Christ to be unaware or to turn their eye. And so we have in partnership with pastors throughout the continent of Africa have launched an Arise Africa initiative in which we've collected a little over 500,000 signatures right now. Our goal is by November to collect a million signatures. And there are really two goals from this initiative. One of those is that we will take this petition to the UN, to the European Union, to the African Union, as well as within our own State Department relationships there to let people know that this is important, that there are men and women around the globe that are aware of what's going on in Africa and what we don't want to be silent. We want to share the arrows with our brothers and sisters. That is one goal of that petition to say that I stand in solidarity and to raise that awareness to elected officials and calling them to be aware of this, that more broadly define freedom of religious belief as it relates to policy, as state, as it relates to international aid and in those types of things. But beyond that, and I would say even more important, what this petition seeks to do is it allows the church in Africa to know that we're not forgotten. It allows the church in Africa to know that there are, our hope is to a million brothers and sisters that are saying we're aware and we're standing with you, we're going to lift you up in prayer. We're going to stand with you in that. Again, the thing that our brothers and sisters most ask for, not to end their persecution, not to pull them out from persecution, but to pray, to pray and be present with them in that. So that would be a very practical step that anybody can take is just to go online and to sign that petition and say, yeah, I'll let my voice and my name be counted. Yeah, well, we'll put the link in the description of this episode so people can easily find it. And of course, joining in prayer. And it's easy to be focused on what's right in front of us, and God cares about those things too. He cares about what happens here in the United States too. But Jesus says, whatever you do for the least of these my brothers, fellow Christians, you do unto me. God really cares. And when we're instructed not to forget those in prison, yes, it's important to remember everyone in prison, but specifically that passage is talking about Christians, Christians around the world who are being persecuted. So this is really important to God that we don't forget about these vulnerable people and our prayers and our resourcing. So thank you so much for what you do. And thank you for joining us today. Oh, yeah, absolutely. No, it's a privilege to do so. And I've seen time and time again that, you know, so many times we can create this dichotomy of there and here. But Christ has one church. We're all part of one church around the globe. And there is something beautiful that happens when we all come to the table together collectively. And our brothers and sisters, you know, I think one of the greatest ways to spark revival at a church here in the United States is to actually engage with the persecuted around the globe, that there are stories of faith and conviction and courage that just inspire us to take our own faith seriously, to be willing to act on that and to see, you know, is my faith a pearl of great price? Is it something that I am really truly willing to pursue above all else? Amen. Well, thank you so much. Thank you.