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Can we mourn every murdered Christian, wonders BosNewsLife’s Martin Roth.

By Martin Roth, BosNewsLife Senior Columnist

MELBOURNE/NAYPYIDAW (BosNewsLife Columns)– On my blog some weeks ago I reprinted portions of a speech given in the Australian Parliament by a politician who had secretly travelled into a rebel-held region of Myanmar, also known as Burma.

Luke Simpkins, a member of Australia’s ruling Liberal Party (which is actually a conservative party), attended a military parade and Revolution Day ceremony with rebel fighters and presented them with an Australian flag.

In his parliamentary speech he reported on ongoing atrocities by the Myanmar military against the rebels, including this: “Two Kachin girls were raped and killed on January 19, 2015, by troops of the Burmese Army. The girls were named Maran Lu Ra, age 20, and Tangbau Hkawn Nan Tsin, age 21,” he recalled.

“They were Kachin Baptist volunteer missionaries working in northern Burma along the Kachin-Shan state border. The rape occurred in the KBC church compound in northern Shan state. On the night of 19 January, Burmese Army troops came into the church ground where the girls were sleeping, raped them and then beat them to death.”

I later got a reader’s comment on my blog: “I try to keep abreast of what’s happening regarding Christian persecution, but I was not aware of this. Thank you for this report. I will be praying for this situation.”

CHRISTIANS AWARE?

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Burma’s army has been accused of involvement in atrocities against Christians.

I suspect many, many Christians are not aware that – despite some recent talk of liberalization in the country – the Myanmar Army has quite brutally and systematically been persecuting the country’s Kachin people, many of whom are Christians.

For example, in a report of the rape and murder of the two young Baptist women, the Christian Daily website noted that over 70 instances of sexual violence by Myanmar Army troops in Kachin and other ethnic regions have been recorded in recent years.

Yet Myanmar ranks just 25th in the Open Doors 2015 World Watch List of the 50 countries where Christians face the most persecution. It is another sign that persecution of Christians is escalating around the world. And, with the eyes of most of us focused on horrific events in the Middle East and Nigeria, it’s too easy to forget about Number 25.

We sometimes hear references to compassion fatigue – a kind of burnout from having to cope with an ever-increasing influx of grief. I wonder if some Christians are afflicted by persecution fatigue.

It is fortunate that we have a God who knows intimately all His suffering children. He has already wiped the tears from Maran Lu Ra and Tangbau Hkawn Nan Tsin, and He holds them safely in His arms.

(Martin Roth (www.authormartinroth.com), BosNewsLife’s Senior Columnist, is an Australian journalist and a former Tokyo-based foreign correspondent. He is the author of “Journey Out Of Nothing: My Buddhist Path to Christianity” and of the Brother Half Angel series of thrillers, which focus on the persecuted church. BosNewsLife Columns distributes opinionated columns and commentaries providing a fresh perspective on issues in the news. They do not necessarily reflect the opinion of BosNewsLife News Agency or its parent company).

2 COMMENTS

  1. It’s sad indeed that Christians are being persecuted on all fronts. And of course, mainline news never pick these stories up. Let’s continue to pray for our brothers and sisters in the Lord.

  2. You make an important point. When we start feeling overwhelmed, it is easy to become numb. Desensitized. We check out emotionally, because there is too much gore to process.
    I don’t know how I should deal with the emotional stress of knowing about the rising persecution. I feel it, and I sometimes want to turn away and quit knowing it.
    Yet I know that Christ cares about every person who suffers for his name’s sake. I owe him my life, and I know that I may at some point suffer as others do. I learn daily that the unthinkable is suddenly right next door where I must think about it. I owe my brothers and sisters in Christ the time it takes to read their stories and enter into God’s love for them in prayer, even if it hurts very much and feels daunting to contemplate such things.

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