I'm an Iraqi Christian and I can't return to my homeland anymore
If I returned to my homeland today, more than 40 years after I left as a refugee, I would be arrested and subject to execution or life imprisonment.
The Christian Post
Skip to main contentIf I returned to my homeland today, more than 40 years after I left as a refugee, I would be arrested and subject to execution or life imprisonment.
If Christians cannot stand firm on biblical principles, how can we expect to counter the mob of protesters chanting "Free Gaza"?
The Iranian people are crying out. The church in the West must not be silent.
Extremists, accompanied by Sudanese Armed Forces and police officers, destroyed a Pentecostal Church complex in Khartoum this week, according to a watchdog group.
The bombing at the Mar Elias Church in Damascus, Syria, last month that killed over two dozen people is an indication that Syria's Islamist-led authorities under President Ahmad al‑Sharaa are enabling radicalism that threatens the existence of Syria's Christian community, experts warn.
In one of the most difficult places on earth to openly practice the Christian faith, there are glimpses of hope.
Tonight, in apartments across Tehran, small groups gather in whispered worship, their soft songs rising through the darkness like prayers for freedom.