Wednesday, September 16, 2015

The Penalty of Death to Anyone Praying Aloud to Jesus


The Islamic State (IS) has issued a “safety contract” for Christians living in Qaryatian, Syria.  It’s comprised of 11 specific commandments, including one which prohibits praying out loud to Jesus Christ under penalty of death.

According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, Christians in the captured town will have to pay the jizyah or jizya tax imposed on non-Muslims, in addition to the other commandments issued by the extremist group’s leader – Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.  The watchdog group listed the 11 stipulations, which prohibit: the establishment of churches, the displaying of crosses, making Muslims hear Christian prayers or rituals of worship, the hiding of spies, offending Islamic religious beliefs, the carrying of weapons, the sale of pork or wine to Muslims, and failing to dress modestly.  The list of rules concluded, “If they comply with these conditions, so they have are safe in their lands, money and souls, and they are not going to pay one-tenth except they bring money to trade from outside the IS territories not oppressor nor oppressed.  None of them is going to be punished under a sin committed by another else of them.  In case they violate the conditions of this writ, then ‘Islamic State’ is going to deal with them as they deal with people of war (warriors).”

The Assyrian Christian community has faced heavy persecution from ISIS in recent months, as the jihadist group is known for killing those who do not swear allegiance to its particular brand of Islamic extremism.

As reported by the Gospel Herald, the jihadist group captured Qaryatain after heavy combat with the Syrian army in early August.  At least 230-people were kidnapped amid the fighting, including numerous Christians who were seeking refuge in a church.  The town is thought to have a mixed population of around 40,000-people, including Sunni Muslims and Christians, as well as thousands of people who have fled fighting elsewhere in the country, the BBC notes.

Speaking to the International Business Times, Nahren Anweya, an Assyrian-American activist, said that the extremist group is seeking to suppress any Christian presence in the region.  “Our entire ancestral homelands have been completely taken and now they won’t even allow us to sustain our religious faith in one God and his son Jesus Christ,” Anweya said.  “We have been purged out of Mosul, Nineveh, Khabour, Hassaka, Qaryatian and many more ancestral Assyrian homelands.  They took our native homelands, our girls, our churches and now they want the few lives we have left.”

At least 450,000 of Syria’s pre-2011 Christian population of 1.17-million are either internally displaced or living as refugees abroad, the Catholic Herald reports.

Earlier this week, a senior Catholic leader in Syria encouraged Syrian Christians to stay in the war-torn country despite the persecution they continually face, warning that Christianity is disappearing from the region.  “Given this tsunami of emigration ... what future is left for the Church?  What will become of our homeland?  What will become of our parishes and institutions?” said Melkite Greek Catholic Patriarch Gregorios III in an open letter.  “Despite all your suffering, stay!  Be patient!  Don’t emigrate!  Stay for the Church, your homeland, for Syria and its future!  Stay!  Do stay.”

Fellow Christians: As you go into your church this coming Sunday without a threat, take a seat in ‘your pew’ where you’ve traditional sat for years, listen to a sermon that fills the air with nothing that convicts the heart of your personal shortcomings, and contemplate your ‘to do’ list or how you’re going to spent the balance of ‘the Lord’s Day’ – take a moment to think (even pray) about your persecuted brothers and sisters of faith in Christ.  And then ask yourself: How long will it be before the likes of IS comes to the U.S. and what am I doing to stop it from happening?

Rev. Dr. Kenneth L. Beale, Jr.
Chaplain (Colonel-Ret), U.S. Army
Pastor, Ft. Snelling Memorial Chapel

No comments:

Post a Comment