Beware of christian groups surrounding you.
 
 
From: assalamu alaykum
CHRISTIAN MISSIONARY SCANDAL BLOWN WIDE OPEN BY ADMISSIONS OF GUILT


Assalamu aleikum.

"This [disaster] is one of the greatest opportunities
God has given us to share his love with people," said
K.P. Yohannan, president of the Texas-based Gospel for
Asia."


---


Some Christian groups spread supplies - and the word
They see disaster relief as an opportunity to create
converts. Other evangelical groups disagree.
By Jim Remsen
Inquirer Faith Life Editor
Sun, Jan. 09, 2005
http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/news/nation/10598841.htm?1c

As Western humanitarian organizations unleash an
armada of relief supplies and workers into Asia's
crisis zone, some evangelical Christian groups aim to
bring the Gospel to the victims, as well.

Religious groups promise to be a major presence in the
massive relief and reconstruction effort. InterAction,
the largest alliance of U.S.-based nongovernment
organizations, reports that of its 55 member agencies
providing tsunami aid, 22 are faith-based.

Most of the religious players, including the Red
Cross, the American Jewish World Service, and Lutheran
World Relief, have rules against proselytizing.

At the same time, though, evangelical groups active in
Asia, including the Southern Baptists' International
Mission Board, Gospel for Asia, and the Christian and
Missionary Alliance, say the Bible always impels them
to create converts to the faith.

"This [disaster] is one of the greatest opportunities
God has given us to share his love with people," said
K.P. Yohannan, president of the Texas-based Gospel for
Asia. In an interview, Yohannan said his 14,500
"native missionaries" in India, Sri Lanka, and the
Andaman Islands are giving survivors Bibles and
booklets about "how to find hope in this time through
the word of God."

In Krabi, Thailand, a Southern Baptist church had been
"praying for a way to make inroads" with a particular
ethnic group of fisherman, according to Southern
Baptist relief coordinator Pat Julian. Then came the
tsunami, "a phenomenal opportunity" to provide
ministry and care, Julian told the Baptist Press news
service.

In Andhra Pradesh, India, a plan is developing to
build "Christian communities" to replace destroyed
seashore villages. In a dispatch that the evangelical
group Focus on the Family posted on its Family.org Web
site, James Rebbavarapu of India Christian Ministries
said a team of U.S. engineers had agreed to help
design villages of up to 400 homes each, "with a
church building in the center of them."

Not all evangelicals agree with these tactics.

"It's not appropriate in a crisis like this to take
advantage of people who are hurting and suffering,"
said the Rev. Franklin Graham, head of Samaritan's
Purse and son of evangelist Billy Graham.

Samaritan's Purse is rushing $4 million in sanitation,
food, medical and housing supplies to its teams in Sri
Lanka and Indonesia. But Graham, in a phone interview
from his North Carolina headquarters, said there were
no plans to hand out Christian literature with the
relief.

"Maybe another day, if they ask why I come, I'd say
I'm a Christian and I believe the Bible tells me to do
this," Graham said. "But now isn't the time. We have
to save lives."

As Graham knows, laws and customs in non-Christian
lands also can inhibit proselytizing. Plans by
Samaritan's Purse and other evangelical groups to join
postwar reconstruction efforts in Iraq in 2003 raised
concerns that they would violate Muslim bans on
proselytizing and undercut U.S. efforts to improve
ties with the Islamic world.

Yohannan said Sri Lankan officials are "extremely
angry" with Christian missionary work and want to
outlaw proselytizing. Some states in southern India
have anti-conversion laws that bar "fraudulent
manipulation," he said, adding: "I cannot tell you
there is a hell awaiting you because it can be
interpreted as a fear tactic." But one of the states,
Tamil Nadu, recently repealed its law, and others
don't enforce theirs, Yohannan said.

Indonesia, a major arena of relief work, does not ban
evangelizing, said Riaz Saehu, spokesman for the
Indonesian Embassy in Washington.

Though the country has a Muslim majority, Saehu said,
it accords official status to Catholicism,
Protestantism, Hinduism and Buddhism, and "people can
do whatever to try to influence others."

Grassroots resistance may be a greater impediment to
evangelists. Saehu said residents of the hard-hit Aceh
province are strict Muslims who "couldn't accept
[missionary] activities regardless of the law."
Yohannon said Hindu and Muslim extremists have burned
Bibles and beaten pastors from his churches in the
past.

"It's a very sensitive issue," Saehu said.

The U.S. government has said it hopes American tsunami
aid improves its image abroad, particularly with
Muslims. At the same time, it has not tried to impede
evangelical efforts, nor has it received complaints
about them, State Department spokesman Edgar Vasquez
said.

"We can't control them," Vasquez said. "They are free
to do what they're going to do."

Meanwhile, other religious relief groups eschew
evangelizing. Many are signatories of a Red Cross-Red
Crescent code of conduct that requires, among other
things, that aid "not be used to further a particular
political or religious standpoint."

Church World Service, the humanitarian arm of the
National Council of Churches, is among the
signatories.

"We carry out our work as a calling as Christians, but
it's not carried out based on any form of
proselytization," said Rick Augsberger, director of
the agency's emergency-response program. Faith issues
might be shared informally, he said, "but not as an
objective."

http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/news/nation/10598841.htm?1c


           



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