Christians
fear for their lives in certain parts of the Middle East. Islamic State (ISIS) has called them its primary
target – its “favorite prey.” And still,
the plight and the tragedy of Middle East Christians go relatively unnoticed by
the larger Christian and Western world according to a political commentator and TV host – Micah Halpern – for the Jerusalem Post.
The
Christian community in Egypt numbers about 9-million. It is the largest Christian community in the
Middle East – and ISIS has hit it hard. Most
in Egypt are Coptic Christians. They
have their own pope and their own tradition and they do not genuflect to Rome. They date themselves back to St. Mark in
Alexandria during the period of Roman Emperor Claudius at about the year 42 AD,
just after the death of Jesus. Copts
call themselves “Christians of Egypt.” They
are arguably the oldest Christian community in the world.
In December 2016,
about 30 Egyptian Copts (mostly women and children) were massacred and many
more were wounded, in their church, by ISIS. Other than AP
and Reuters only a handful of media
in the world covered the terrorist attacks by running the wire releases. Even fewer made more than casual mention of
the atrocities against and persecution of Christians in the Middle East.
The events
befalling the Christian community in Egypt are not simply newsworthy – they are
an essential tool with which to elucidate the fragile status of a minority
community in the Middle East (Christians among Muslims). These persecutions are important tools in
measuring the activities of Arab governments and their responses to the
challenge.
Jews are standing
up and calling attention to the plight of Christians living under Muslim regime
and being murdered by ISIS while worldwide Christian leadership remains silent
smacks of only a slight touch of irony.
Micah Halpern says, “We
need to prevent the oppression of minorities, and we know the importance of
defending those who cannot defend themselves. And while there are those in the Arabic world
who say that Jews are exaggerating these atrocities only to make these Muslim
regimes look bad, I say poppycock. When
extremist groups like ISIS are freely murdering it becomes big news in Israel. The most obvious reason is because Israel may be
next, because Israel – as the world should know – is on the front line.”
Over the
past few weeks ISIS has produced and posted a “hit list” of Christians it
intends to murder. So far ISIS has
murdered 7-people – one beheaded, another was burned alive. A father and son, members of the Hana family,
were dumped on the side of the road after ISIS shot the father dead and burned his
son alive.
Micah Halpern goes on
to say, “The symbolism should not be lost. In Islam the symbol of dumping a dead body on
the side of the road outside a town, in this case the town was al-Arish, is
very telling. It means the victims are seen
by the murderers an unfit for human burial and instead worthy only of being
thrown to the dogs to be mauled and eaten. The victims are seen by the murderers as
subhuman. And that is the way ISIS views
all Christians, but most of all, the Christians of the Middle East.”
Many
Christians are fleeing the Sinai where these attacks have taken place. They have seen the writing on the wall and
heard the promise of future threats.
Egyptian
President Abdel Fattah Sisi condemned the recent attacks, much in the same way
that he condemned the December massacre. But that’s all he’s done – little else has
happened and the Christians rightfully fear for their lives. Despite the AP and Reuters coverage
of the persecutions the massacres of Christians in the Middle East has barely
made a blip on the radar of the Western news media. Sisi is reacting much the way Western media
is reacting.
The Copts
are not a part of the mainstream; they don’t belong. Their tradition, their practice looks nothing
like Western Christianity. There are no
significant populations and affiliations outside of Egypt to take up the battle
cry and defend them. Libya and Sudan
have small Coptic communities, but they’re not going to make waves and risk
their relative safety to help out in Egypt. Western Catholic and Protestant groups are not
connected to these Christians who are part of the Eastern Church. That leaves Israel and Jews around the world.
Micah Halpern concludes,
“Defense of Egypt’s Christian community is not purely selfless.
We have, as they say, skin in the game. We must call attention to the plight of the
Christians under ISIS and other oppressors in order to make certain that
moderate regimes in the region remain stable.
Egypt must protect the Christians and destroy ISIS because otherwise ISIS
will destabilize the entire country and the region. ISIS is recruiting members to help oppress the
Christians. Protecting Christians will
protect the region. Ultimately, it will
protect Israel, too.”
Will the plight
and the tragedy of Middle East Christians go unnoticed by the Western Christians? What are you doing for your fellow Christians
worldwide?
The Bible
says – “If one part of the body [the
Church] suffers, all the other parts
share its suffering.” (1 Corinthians 12:26)
Rev.
Dr. Kenneth L. Beale, Jr.
Chaplain
(Colonel-Ret), U.S. Army
Pastor,
Ft. Snelling Memorial Chapel
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