Evangelicals Resent Abandonment

International mission organizations are in a Catch-22 as they try to minister from a distance to Serbians suffering from the results of NATO bombing.

The need for humanitarian resources in Yugoslavia is growing as unemployment rises and government pensions and wages go unpaid. Adding to the problem are the 650,000 refugees remaining from previous conflicts in Croatia and Bosnia.

Requested to withdraw from the Belgrade area by NATO, organizations such as Campus Crusade for Christ and World Vision are drawing fire from Serbian evangelicals who feel unsupported in their time of need.

“If they ever return, after all this is over, I am afraid they will be without the spiritual authority which is needed for ministry,” Dragoljub Jovanovic, an evangelical Serbian, told the Keston News Service.

Funneling mission re sources to local Serbians for distribution has proved difficult, according to Serge Duss, a World Vision administrator. “We have aided Serbs in the past, and we are looking for indigenous organizations to partner with,” he says. “The trouble is finding them.”

Even the Serbian national branches of Campus Crusade in Belgrade have been affected. The Serb-staffed New Life program was asked to leave its offices at a local church because of its U.S. affiliation, and the Serbian Army published a book branding Campus Crusade as a paramilitary group.

Copyright © 1999 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

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In Brief: July 12, 1999

New Song, Familiar Tune

Lauren F. Winner

New & Noteworthy: Biography

Karon’s Agenda

Lauren F. Winner. Quotations are drawn from an article in The Living Church, a magazine of Episcopal life.

Writing the Trinity

Christian Coalition Loses Exepmt Status

John W. Kennedy.

Praying for Movers and Shakers

Wiccans Practice on U.S Bases

Mark A. Kellner.

Voucher Plan Draws Mixed Reviews

Kenneth D. MacHarg in Miami.

God Speaks to Commuters

Jody Veenker.

Classic & Contemporary Excerpts from July 12, 1999

Religious Liberty Bill's Passage Uncertain

Bountiful Believers in the Bayou

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Fidelity Urged to Fight AIDS

Odhiambo Okite.

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Anglicans Recognize Papacy as 'Gift'

Slave Girls Find Redemption

Christians Held As Hostages

John Maust.

The Triumph of the Praise Songs

Michael S. Hamilton

Letters

Pain Relief

Gayle White in Atlanta.

Truth-Telling on Trial

Odhiambo Okite.

The Ministry of Safe Play

Clem Boyd in Columbus.

Indianapolis: Graham Touts Muscular Christianity

Jody Veenker in Indianapolis.

Southern Baptists: City-Focused Evangelism Launched

Eric Reed in Atlanta.

The Biotech Temptation

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There Is Room in the Inn

Balkanized by Music

The Profits of Praise

Steve Rabey.

We Are What We Sing

Mark A. Noll

One Church, Two Faiths

Art Moore in Seattle

Integrating Mars and Venus

Rebecca Merrill Groothius and Douglas Groothius

Coming to a Neighborhood Near You

Peri Stone

Stuck on the Road to Emmaus

Escape from Fantasy Island

A Cracked Code

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