Google Groups Home
Help | Sign in
Martyrdom awaits North Korean Christians on Christmas Day
There are currently too many topics in this group that display first. To make this topic appear first, remove this option from another topic.
There was an error processing your request. Please try again.
flag
  1 message - Collapse all
The group you are posting to is a Usenet group. Messages posted to this group will make your email address visible to anyone on the Internet.
Your reply message has not been sent.
Your post was successful
Pastor Dale Morgan  
View profile
 More options Dec 19 2007, 2:14 am
From: Pastor Dale Morgan <dgrmor...@telus.net>
Date: Tue, 18 Dec 2007 23:14:17 -0800
Local: Wed, Dec 19 2007 2:14 am
Subject: Martyrdom awaits North Korean Christians on Christmas Day
*Faith Under Fire

Martyrdom awaits North Korean Christians on Christmas Day*

'Nowhere in the world is such a high price paid for being a Christian'

Posted: December 19, 2007
Voice of The Martyrs

In a nation where being a Christian can bring the death penalty for the
"offender" and his entire family, where tens of thousands of Christians
are held in terminal prison camps, and the populace is taught to revere
its dictator as a god, there will be martyrdom for Christians on
Christmas Day, according to an international ministry.

"Just like on other days of the year, at Christmas time there will be
Christians who perish in the death camps of North Korea, ranked No. 1 on
the Open Doors World Watch List of countries where Christians suffer the
greatest persecution," said a spokesman for the group.

Reports of the execution of Christians in North Korea circulate
routinely, sometimes for an offense no worse than having a Bible.

"The state is working hard to wipe out Christianity," said Open Doors
USA spokesman Jerry Dykstra.

"Nowhere in the world is such a high price paid as in this country with
its tyrannical regime," he said.

Dykstra released a statement on the "celebration" in North Korea of
Christmas, as an observance of the birth of Christ one of Christianity's
most significant dates.

"No bright lights, no Christmas dinner and not even a Christmas Eve
service for the followers of Jesus Christ," will be on tap for the holiday.

"This Christmas – just like any other day in the year – there are no
festive lights in the streets of Pyongyang. The city is largely shrouded
in darkness. North Korea is the only country in the world where the Cold
War is not yet over, and one of the few countries in which it is not
permitted to celebrate Christmas at all," he said.

But even under such repression, "Christians find ways to celebrate
Christmas," he said.

Confirmation comes from "Brother Simon," who coordinates the work of
Open Doors from a secret location.

"But, of course, Christians do reflect on the birth of Jesus Christ," he
said. "Only they can't just go along to church to sing or listen to a
sermon. They can't even visit one another to read the Bible together.
Being a Christian in North Korea is very lonely."

He said most often Christians gather in groups of only two, trying to
keep underneath the social radar that alerts authorities to groups that
meet. Only sporadically, and in secret locations, do numbers higher than
that assemble.

"For example (on an ordinary Sunday), a Christian goes and sits on a
bench in the park. Another Christian comes and sits next to him.
Sometimes it is dangerous even to speak to one another, but they know
they are both Christians, and at such a time, this is enough. If there
is no one around, they may be able to share a Bible verse which they
have learned by heart and briefly say something about it. They also
share prayer topics with each other. Then they leave one another and go
and look for Christians in some other part of their town. This continues
throughout Sunday. A cell group usually consists of fewer than 20
Christians who encourage and strengthen one another in this way. Besides
this, there are one-to-one meetings in people's homes," Simon said.

It's similar with Christmas.

"Christmas is mainly celebrated in the heart of the Christian," said
Simon. "Only if the whole family has turned to Christ is it possible to
have something like a real gathering. For fear of retribution it is
necessary to keep your faith hidden from the neighbors. It is sometimes
possible to hold a meeting in remote areas with a group of 10 to 20
people. Very occasionally, it is possible for Christians to go
unobtrusively into the mountains and to hold a 'service' at a secret
location. Then there might be as many as 60 or 70 North Koreans gathered
together."

But he noted that like any other day of the year, there will be those
martyred for their faith on Christmas Day.

This repression, however, is proving unsuccessful at halting the
church's growth, he confirmed. "The church is growing," he said, based
on information from his networks of sources, and largely is due to
refugees who have fled North Korea, but come to Christ in the relatively
free society of China, and return to their homeland as missionaries.

The escape of a North Korean man from the bondage of that nation's
dictatorship, who reported many North Koreans believe dictator Kim
Jong-il actually is a god.

The Christian, now living in South Korea, was identified only as Mr.
Kim. He told Voice of the Martyrs that Kim Jong-il, and his late father
Kim Il Sung, both are portrayed as gods.

"All North Koreans really believe that Kim Il Sung is a god. He [hid]
the bad things he had done, to preserve his godlike status to the
people. I think 70 to 80 percent of what is said about Kim Il Sung is
similar to the Bible," he told the ministry, for which he also recorded
himself singing .

While comprehensive information about Kim Jong-il's present rule in
North Korea is hard to obtain because of the absolute dictatorship that
exists, anecdotal evidence abounds about his cruelty and excesses.

For example, Camp 22, the nation's largest concentration camp can hold
up to 50,000 men, women and children accused of political "crimes,"
while reports of atrocities such as the rampant murder of babies born to
inmates are supported by witnesses.

Meanwhile, his expensive tastes have become known internationally.
Reuters reported, "No one enjoys luxury goods more than paramount leader
Kim Jong-il, who boasts the country's finest wine cellar with space for
10,000 bottles. … His annual purchases of Hennessy cognac reportedly
total to $700,000, while the average North Korean earns the rough
estimate equivalent of $900 per year."

Mr. Kim said while growing up he had no real knowledge of religion, and
had not even heard about Christianity. He had seen filmed
representations of Christmas parties but had no idea they were related
to Jesus.

"We were taught that religion is the opium of the people, and that
pastors were spies of South Korea, trying to bring imperialism to North
Korea. I was taught that religion was bad and school text books
reinforced this idea, explaining that people from other countries built
the hospitals, schools and did all kinds of good deeds for North Korea
in order to spy," he said.

Then, like others, he went to visit relatives in China as a college
student during 1998, and was shocked.

"The conditions overall were better in China, but one thing I really
noticed was that people were energetic and had dreams. In North Korea,
even college students were depressed and under a lot of pressure. When I
returned to North Korea, I couldn't forget the faces of those in China,"
he said.

He went back to China, "escaped" is how he described it, just a few
months later.

"I had heard if you go to churches the members would help. That's why I
went to a church," he said. There he first got financial and other help.
"I also went to a church in Shanghai, where I met a man who was
president of a company who offered me a job… I found out later that this
man was also an elder in a church," he said.

At that company, he was exposed to worship services morning and night.

"I spent one and a half years studying the Bible, underlining passages
and taking notes," he said. "I really focused on studying the Bible, and
this was the time that I became a Christian."

Not all Christians are so fortunate.

Son Jong Hoon and his brother, Son Jong Nam, who has been condemned to
execution in North Korea for being a Christian

An international campaign was launched by the Voice of the Martyrs to
generate worldwide pressure on North Korean officials who have ordered a
man executed for being a Christian.

Son Jong Hoon told a news conference in Washington, D.C., that his
life's goal now is to save his brother, Son Jong Nam, a former North
Korean Army officer turned underground evangelist.

"I pray to God for my brother's safety," he said, describing the horrors
of the basement jail cell where Son Jong Nam has been held, beaten and
tortured since his most recent arrest.


    Reply to author    Forward  
You must Sign in before you can post messages.
To post a message you must first join this group.
Please update your nickname on the subscription settings page before posting.
You do not have the permission required to post.
End of messages
« Back to Discussions « Newer topic     Older topic »

Create a group - Google Groups - Google Home - Terms of Service - Privacy Policy
©2008 Google