Challenges Facing Turkish Christians
In spite of the fact that Turkey passed widespread measures last month to expand civil liberties including freedom of religion, Turkish congregations are still being challenged constantly with the need to remain faithful and strong in the face of "unofficial" oppression.
A Washington Times article reports on the difficulty these Christian congregations are facing and the fact that, though the laws have been passed allowing for free movement of missionaries, legal gatherings, and free evangelism, the Turkish government is clearly using it to its advantage to try and inch its way into the European Union.
The motives of the government would be largely inconsequential, except that these congregations are still receiving ill treatment since the deeply held conviction for most of the country is that to be Turkish is to be Muslim. This, of course, is all that is needed to lead to problems for these Christian groups. The following is an excerpt from the article highlighting some of the challenges these groups face:
Read full text of "The Cost of Faith" here.
A Washington Times article reports on the difficulty these Christian congregations are facing and the fact that, though the laws have been passed allowing for free movement of missionaries, legal gatherings, and free evangelism, the Turkish government is clearly using it to its advantage to try and inch its way into the European Union.
The motives of the government would be largely inconsequential, except that these congregations are still receiving ill treatment since the deeply held conviction for most of the country is that to be Turkish is to be Muslim. This, of course, is all that is needed to lead to problems for these Christian groups. The following is an excerpt from the article highlighting some of the challenges these groups face:
To understand the other problem facing Christian congregations...one need only look out a church window into the street, where a police officer dozes in a van while a colleague keeps watch from a plastic chair.It is a good reminder that there are still plenty of places around this globe in which followers of Christ still receive ill treatment, including outright persecutions. It would serve us all well not to get too comfortable with the freedoms we possess. This level of persecution could be coming to a community near you. I wonder how we will respond?
The building has been under guard since last year, when a mentally ill visitor became abusive, unsheathed a knife and tried to set fire to the downstairs meeting room.
Other Turkish congregations have suffered worse. In Ankara in April, gasoline bombs were hurled at the International Protestant Church, causing $10,000 in damage.
Last November, in the southeastern city of Gaziantep, an American missionary was bound and gagged by two assailants claiming to be members of al Qaeda.
Although they didn't follow through on their threats to kill him, they warned that they would come back and finish him off unless he and his family left Turkey immediately.
Missionaries have long been treated with suspicion in Turkey, where rampant conspiracy theories link them to international attempts to divide the country.
The latent mistrust grew into something approaching paranoia in the first half of this year, when news outlets and some members of Turkey's government aroused fears.
On June 11, the staunchly secularist daily Cumhuriyet quoted intelligence sources as saying that evangelists were promoting ethnic divisions by concentrating their efforts on Turkey's Kurds.
The Islamic weekly Aksiyon said in March that 35,000 clandestine congregations were meeting in Turkey. The claim was wildly exaggerated but typical.
Rahsan Ecevit, the secularist wife of a former prime minister, charged in January that missionaries were paying Turks to convert to Christianity.
"We cannot ignore this activity," she said. "At a time we say we are entering the [European Union], we're losing our religion."
Timur Topuz, who attends church in Altintepe, thinks such prejudices stem ultimately from a widespread notion that being Turkish equals being Muslim.
His own grandmother, a Muslim, found it hard to credit his joy at watching Turkey defeat Ukraine in a recent soccer match, he said.
"You, a Christian, happy that Turkey won?" he quoted her as saying.
"People here still haven't realized that nation and religion are different things," he said with a shrug.
Read full text of "The Cost of Faith" here.
Labels: David C. Price























3 Comments:
David:
I don't know if I ever ran into you in KY. I was at Southern from Jan 2002 till Sept. 2004. Your post on Turkey caught my eye because we are hoping to go there as missionaries. Thanks for the info on the Wash Times article. I try to keep track of Turkey in the news. Do you have a specific interest in Turkey? I noticed a previous post on Islam.
Grace & Peace
Will Turner
I don't know, William. I was there from September, 2003 through May, 2005. Our paths probably crossed, but I was only in apologetics and worldview related courses, so my world there was pretty small.
Man, God bless you, especially if you end up going into Turkey. I'm am interested specifically to the extent that Christians there have a wonderful opportunity and I want to see it flourish. It may be that they do so more in the current situation than if they win complete and unfettered freedoms...enough to move and speak freely but not so much as to take it for granted as we do here in the West.
I visited your blog and enjoyed reading it. Keep me posted in your journey towards hopeful appointment.
By the way, I like your post on culture and worldviews. Good insights.
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