Red, White, and Green Martyrdom: Protestant Edition

Since the early days of the church, Christians have had a tradition of three colors of martyrdom. Jerome wrote about it. Gregory wrote about it. It’s recorded in the Cambrai Homily.

And few Protestants have ever heard about it.

That’s unfortunate, because the tradition has deep biblical roots. Jesus tells us that anyone who would follow him must take up their cross daily. We Protestants have a habit of trivializing that call, equating taking up our cross with a variety of first world problems.

But taking up our cross means dying a death daily as we minister the suffering love of Christ to his enemies. We voluntarily die to our dreams, desires, plans, and hopes.

That means something more than self-denial, however. With Christ we are to say, “Yet not My will, but Yours be done.” It is no longer we who live but Christ who lives through us. Notice: A will is being done, and a life is being lived. It’s just no longer constrained by us. It is truly a life without limits.

It is also a very real form of martyrdom: a death that brings new life through witnessing to Christ. You may think it is a lesser form of martyrdom than the more well-known kind (i.e., violent death in an instant), but which is truly harder: To die in an instant, or to die daily? Each is its own challenge.

And there is yet a third form of death in witness to Christ; namely, death to the world. We give up our place in it: our identity, our rights, our possessions. We live only to him. Jean Valjean’s soliloquy in Les Miserables comes to mind:

I am reaching, but I fall
And the night is closing in
As I stare into the void
To the whirlpool of my sin
I’ll escape now from the world
From the world of Jean Valjean
Jean Valjean is nothing now
Another story must begin!

So, why three colors for martyrdom? Because there are three distinct martyrdoms. Each is represented by a different color:

  • Red represents Christians who are martyred in an instant, in a violent death while showing love for God and their enemies.
  • Green represents Christians who obey Jesus’ command to take up their crosses daily, demonstrating the love of God through lives of self-denial.
  • White represents Christians who “die to the world” through temporary or long-term periods of spiritual retreat. Today’s discipleship bases, prayer mountains, and retreat centers give us an experience of white martyrdom.

All Christians are called to be martyrs from the moment we are called to be Christians; the identity is simultaneous. All who follow Christ must be ready to be green, white, or even red, as Christ himself permits.

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Eliminated Purely And Simply Because We Are Christians – State of Nigerian Church

Pastor Daniel 3Pastor Daniel Awayi will speak at the VOM Korea office on Monday night, April 4th at 7:30pm about remaining faithful to God in the midst of persecution and death – all are welcome. He is a Nigerian pastor that works in Northern Nigeria amidst Boko Haram. Here is an excerpt about him from the book The Caliphate or the Casket . . .

Pastor Awayi is a man on a mission. In 2012, as Boko Haram’s violence against Christians was reaching a pitch, he felt God calling him to leave Jos and return to his native district in northern Nigeria. A gentle smile plays over his face as he describes what his life was like before the violence. “I was just like Nehemiah, leading a comfortable life in the king’s palaces.” Awayi has had an impressive career progression as a preacher, from northern village pastor to Bible college lecturer and coordinator of theology training in the provincial capital, Jos. “But my people in the north were perishing!” he adds. This began to gnaw away at him. When the feeling persisted, Awayi had to conclude that God was telling him something. He felt that the divine call was to go back to his last congregation in Potiskum. His family history is closely bound up with this city.

When Awayi told his wife he was planning to return to Potiskum, she let him go, albeit with mixed feelings. They agreed that she would stay behind in Jos with their four children. Herself a preacher’s daughter, she had seen her father murdered in his pulpit in Potiskum by a rampaging mob in the early Nineties. In that same attack, Awayi had been wounded by a stone slung at his head. He shows me the dent it left in his skull. To this day, he has sharp shooting pains from time to time just above his left ear. “But,” he continues, “these experiences molded me and tempered me for the task ahead.”

Returning to Yobe State, Awayi found his church deeply lacerated. “The devil was walking around as a roaring lion. Many churches had been burnt by hate-filled Muslims. 85 per cent of the four hundred churches in the state had been destroyed or shut down. Their worshipers had been murdered or hounded out of the region. Yobe had become a hell on earth. Jihadists followed Christians to their homes and killed them there in cold blood. That was the strategy they followed.” Awayi goes on: “Boko Haram is doing its utmost to wipe Christians out in northern Nigeria. Wherever they succeed, they take over their land and houses. While Islamic communities enjoy freedom of worship in the overwhelmingly Christian south of Nigeria, we Christians in the north do not even have basic freedom of movement. Worse yet, we are being completely eliminated, purely and simply because we are Christians.”

In Potiskum, Awayi was not even at liberty to wear a white clerical collar. The risk was too great, because Boko Haram makes preachers its number one target. “When I was newly returned in 2012, much of my time was taken up just with conducting funerals. Since many brother ministers had been murdered, other congregations were calling on me to take services, too.”

He describes the effect this had on him: “I wondered what the cause could be of such harsh persecution. What I discovered was that the Christians who remained had lost much of their earlier knowledge of God’s Word. Although I didn’t say it out loud, I found this no wonder. Our churches were lacking a clear aim. And that is the moment for the enemy to strike. But I also saw the positive effects of persecution. Those that we still had in our congregations learned anew how to pray. The Bible was opened more often. Social ties became closer. The terrible conditions made Christians more involved in the lives of their fellow churchgoers.”

Posted in Announcements, Christian genocide, Muslim, nigeria, persecution | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

What’s Wrong With A Joint NK/SK Christian Easter Prayer? About 30,000 Things

Last week South’s Korea’s National Council of Churches in Korea (NCCK) and North Korea’s Korean Christian Federation (KCF) issued a joint Easter prayer. It says in part:

God,

We yearn that compatriots of the North and South unlock the latch of separation and mightly soar on two wings.

For this hope to be fulfilled, the churches in the North and South will
build a bridge of forgiveness and reconciliation
where there is hate and division,
let rivers of dialogue flow
where there is distrust and confrontation,
plant trees and create forests where there is violence and destruction.

One latch that is not mentioned in the prayer, however, is the one that currently locks an estimated 30,000 Christians into concentration camps in North Korea simply because they are Christian. This joint prayer, like all previous joint prayers, statements, and meetings between the NCCK and the KCF, avoids mention of those 30,000 altogether.

Clearly it is not a reality that the NK state-directed KCF is willing or perhaps able to acknowledge. I imagine the conversations may go something like this:

NCCK: Do you think we can say something in this year’s joint prayer about release for the captives who are imprisoned because of their faith in Christ, both in Korea and around the world?
KCF: No one in North Korea is imprisoned because of their faith in Christ.
NCCK: Great, thanks. Glad we could clear that up. So how about “plant trees where there is violence and destruction”?
KCF: Trees and forests.
NCCK: Trees and forests–right! We’ve got to get down on our knees for those forests.

But the detainment of Christians in North Korea is a well-attested and well-documented reality that cannot be ignored. It is as well-documented as the reality that the KCF is a North Korean government agency designed to draw aid and sympathy from Christians in South Korean and the rest of the world, rather than a functioning, faithful Christian body.

But what is the harm, one may ask, in doing such joint statements? Doesn’t it make sense to at least try to pray together about the things about which we can agree?

Here we address the reality that North Korea’s statements always have both an external and an internal purpose. The external purpose is to draw aid and sympathy from Christians around the world.

But the internal purpose of statements like this is equally important to the North Korean government. That purpose is to portray to North Korean citizens that North Korea is taken seriously by those around the world as a legitimate, stable, and trustworthy government and dialogue partner–even by Christians. That message is not lost on underground Christians in North Korea. It says:

The rest of the world has forgotten you and denies any connection to you–even your own flesh and blood in South Korea.

Voice of the Martyrs founder, the Rev. Richard Wurmbrand, frequently expressed his deepest concern about this phenomenon, lamenting that even top Christian leaders in the West failed to recognize or accept the degree to which their visits to and joint statements with repressive regimes were used to crush the smoldering hope of imprisoned Christians:

Billy Graham was invited to Moscow by the Soviet government through its agents in the Orthodox Patriarchy and the official Baptist church. Solzhenitsyn knows Russia well. He calls the official church leaders of the Soviet Union “ecclesiastical ambassadors of the Prince of darkness.” They would never dare to invite anybody without precise order from their Atheist bosses.

Whosoever invited, Billy Graham’s duty was to go. I would have gone, too. We must go anywhere to preach the Gospel and to denounce sin, the enemy which crucified the Lord.

John the Baptist went when invited by Herod to his palace, but also told Herod his sin to his face. Jesus accepted invitations of Pharisees to share meals with them and, passing over the rules of courtesy for invited guests, spoke out there and then against the sin of Pharisaism.

Billy Graham should have gone to Moscow and should have spoken at the Peace conference of the fact that the Soviets have killed 66 million innocents (the figure is given by Solzhenitsyn). He should have said there how the Soviets disturbed the peace of the world by stealing the Baltic countries, Eastern Europe, Afghanistan. He should have taken the defense of the many imprisoned Christians.

Billy Graham is a Christian. He should have sought Christ in Moscow. Christ gives his Moscovite address in Matthew 25: “I was in jail”. Why did he not visit the imprisoned brethren?

When I went to South Africa I knew that Communists are in jail there. Rumours circulated that they were badly treated. I immediately went to visit them. I asked to be allowed to speak to them without the presence of wardens, I was allowed. I asked them how they are treated. They denied the rumours about mistreatment.

How can an evangelist go to a country known for the number of im­prisoned believers and not even try to see the prisoners?

Here is the Easter prayer that could have and should have been released by South’s Korea’s National Council of Churches in Korea (NCCK):

Lord, to Saul who persecuted the Christians you did not talk about trees and forests, nor did you seek to find points of commonality with him. Instead you said, “Saul, Saul, why do you persecute me?”

Lord, forgive us for not remembering our brothers and sisters who are in prison in North Korea as if we were in prison with them. For this we deserve to be put on your left when in the final judgment you separate the sheep from the goats and you say, “When I was in prison you did not visit me.” Not only did we not try to visit you, we even failed to acknowledge your existence.

Lord, you tell us that on that day many will say to you, “Lord, Lord, we did miracles in your name. We built hospitals in North Korea. We did joint prayers with North Korea’s government-appointed Christians. We preached peace, peace even where there was no peace, in hopes that we could make peace through our words.” And you will say to us, “Depart from me, for you never once mentioned me.” And we will say, “Lord, when did we fail to mention your name?” And you will say to us, “When you failed to mention the 30,000 Christians in the  North Korean concentration camps, you failed to mention me.”

Forgive us, Lord. And give us the courage to never fail to mention you any more.

Posted in North Korea, persecution, Ransoming the Captive, religious freedom, Rev. Richard Wurmbrand, Uncategorized, Visiting and Remembering | Tagged , , , , , , , | 2 Comments