How to read a persecution news story

By Jeff M. Sellers |
Bad news
Prostock-studio/Envato

Any of you who regularly follow persecution news may find that it gets hard to read after a while. One can become either despondent or desensitized. This is how I handle it...

The horror of some of the stories, along with the sense of helplessness they leave in their wake, can be wearying. I’ve heard many a reader sigh that they just don’t want to read it anymore; it’s too depressing. Imagine what it’s like, then, for a journalist to write about and edit it for 14 years.

The only thing that can parry the effect of the continual buffeting of the soul—giving it over to God.

The incessant flow of bad news has led me to the only thing that can parry the effect of the continual buffeting of the soul—giving it over to God. Sometimes when my 19-month-old daughter would fall asleep in my arms, I would pray for parents in Nigeria whose children have been slain in their beds by Muslim extremists. When my 4-year-old son cried after falling down, I would be reminded later to send up a prayer for children in Somalia who cry out for mothers and fathers lost to murderous Islamists.

A slight chill wind might lead me to pray for Christians in North Korean labor camps who suffer icy temperatures day and night without adequate food, clothing and medicines.

The annual International Day of Prayer for the Persecuted Church (IDOP, November 3 an 10, 2024) reminds us that persecution news is meant to elicit prayer. But how to pray?

Without a Kingdom perspective, it is difficult to imagine how to pray for people who have suffered beyond imagination. Theology is not just for beard-scratchers. One cannot read about, write about, or pray for persecuted Christians for long without having one’s theological ducks in a row, so to speak.

Putting the Kingdom of God front and center is crucial.

Putting the Kingdom of God front and center is crucial. When Christians suffer for their faith, Paul notes in 2 Corinthians 4:17, it prepares them for an eternal weight of glory. Thus, such suffering displays the faith that adds weight to the Kingdom of God, both now and later. Jesus told Peter that upon such faith He would build His church (Matthew 6:18) in this world. In the same breath he said that faithful acts today, among other things—what we “bind on earth”—will be bound in the next world (Matthew 6:20). One example being, faith to the point of suffering on earth adding to the glory of the heavenly Kingdom.

Contrary to persecutors’ designs, persecution of the faithful actually expands and enhances the substance of the Kingdom. If Christ’s birth ushered in the Kingdom of God (an era, more than a place) and his cruel death followed by resurrection conquered sin and death, so likewise those who suffer for following him ultimately add the brilliance of their faith, hope, and love to the Kingdom.

We can pray for the Lord to console with his mere presence those who mourn.

This foundation may be merely cerebral, but where the Kingdom expands, the evil that leaves us despondent or desensitized is diminished. And upon this foundation we can place the biblical authors’ more soulful assertions that God is the Father of mercies and God of all comfort (2 Corinthians 1:3, for example). We can pray for the Lord to console with his mere presence those who mourn. Paul also said in 2 Corinthians (4:14) that He who raised Jesus “will raise us also with Jesus and bring us with you into his presence.” On the premise that survivors ultimately will be brought into the presence of the Lord alongside their loved ones who have died, we can pray that those who mourn will feel the certainty of being restored to those they have lost.

I pray God will draw close to those orphans in Somalia, Nigeria, Egypt, Pakistan, Kenya, India, Iraq, Colombia and other nations with the comfort of the Lord's presence, and I pray that those children will know the hope of embracing their parents anew on the other side. So also do I pray for the parents and other relatives who have suffered the brutal loss of their children, grandchildren, brothers and sisters, nieces and nephews.

To pray for the persecuted is to enter into their stories.

Lord, draw near to them in a tangible way, that Your presence would remove the sting of hopelessness from their grief, and that their hearts would be permeated with the faith that soon enough they will be reconciled to those for whom they now so ache.

To pray for the persecuted is to enter into their stories as Jesus entered into ours—incarnationally. So, there is no need to shy away from praying with tears.

I am not sure the heavenly rewards for martyrdom are much consolation to survivors left behind, but as described in the book of Revelation they do speak to the victory at the end of the Christian meta-narrative or cosmic story. That victory is part of the Kingdom. To each of the seven churches that the Lord addresses in the first three chapters of Revelation, he includes rewards for those who “conquer” in faithful obedience, including steadfastness in persecution, and those rewards may give some indication of what God is preparing for brothers and sisters today who persevere in the face of temptation and persecution:

  • To the faithful in the church in Ephesus, “to eat of the tree of life, which is in the paradise of God.”
  • To the faithful in the church in Smyrna, “the one who conquers will not be hurt by the second death.”
  • To the faithful in the church in Pergamum, “I will give some of the hidden manna, and I will give him a white stone, with a new name written on the stone that no one knows except the one who receives it.”
  • To the faithful in the church in Thyatira, “authority over all the nations, and . . . I will give him the morning star.”
  • To the faithful in the church in Sardis, “I will confess his name before my Father and before his angels.”
  • To the faithful in the church in Philadelphia, “I will write on him the name of my God, and the name of the city of my God, the new Jerusalem, which comes down from God out of heaven, and my own new name.”
  • To the faithful in the church in Laodicea, “I will grant him to sit with me on my throne, as I also conquered and sat down with my Father on his throne.”

Perhaps more striking than these rewards is the description of the One giving them, “one like a son of man” with eyes “like a flame of fire,” and his voice “like the roar of many waters" (Revelation 1:14-15).

It is for that “one like a son of man” that the young and the old in Christ are suffering today. If that figure were not also God who gave them the deposit of the Holy Spirit as a guarantee, they would have little impetus to remain faithful. It is to that God that we endeavor to intercede, and were he not the one who also suffered cruelty for their sake and ours, some of us might have little impetus to pray to him. But he did. And we do.

Originally published by Morning Star News. Republished with permission.

Jeff M. Sellers is founder and editor of Morning Star News (morningstarnews.org), an independent news service covering persecution of Christians. He has reported on persecution, economy, politics and cultural issues as a freelance journalist in Madrid, Spain and Mexico City, and after obtaining a Master’s in Marketplace Theology from Regent College in Vancouver, British Columbia, he served as an associate editor at Christianity Today magazine and as an editor at Open Doors International.

The views expressed in this or any other opinion article do not necessarily reflect the views of Christian Daily International.

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