Church Life

Quake Opens Door to Gospel

How Christians are trying to ease tensions in the Islamic Republic.

Christian ministries are walking through a door thrown open by the deadly December 26 earthquake. They are working on improving relationships with Iranians, and taking advantage of opportunities to demonstrate the Christian faith to them.

The December 26 temblor in Bam, 630 miles southeast of the Iranian capital Tehran, killed an estimated 34,000 people and injured 30,000 others. The Iranian government waived visa restrictions, allowing aid from Christian agencies and elsewhere.

John Schenk, communications manager for World Vision, says working side by side with Iranians in the relief effort will ease tensions between Muslims and Christians.

“Ideologies and politics have not been part of the discussions,” Schenk said. “It’s been about the shock they’ve suffered and what motivates us to help.”

Clive Calver, president of World Relief, said the opening is unprecedented. “The church has something to offer that is more valuable than food or blankets,” Calver said from Bam. “We can pray in the name of Jesus.”

Still, Ken Isaacs, director of projects for Samaritan’s Purse, said opportunities for evangelism must wait. “The heart of our ministry is sharing the mandates of Christ,” Isaacs said. “But this is an Islamic society. We’re not preaching.”

Evangelical Protestants in Iran number around 30,000, a majority of them Muslim converts. Muslims who convert can face intimidation, jailing, and even death. Iranian Christians International in Colorado Springs reported that there are around 200,000 ethnic Armenian or Assyrian Christians. They include communities of Presbyterians, Anglicans, Orthodox, Catholics, and Pentecostals.

Calver said Iranian evangelicals across the country have been at the forefront of the relief effort, because there has been no organized church in Bam.

Evangelicals “moved out of their safety zones” after the earthquakes, Calver said. “With people of this spiritual caliber, nothing will stand in the way of their being faithful to the Lord Jesus.”

An Iranian pastor in exile who has regular contact with Christians in the country said 28 recent converts lived in Bam, but 25 died in the quake; the other three suffered injuries. Most became Christians as a result of radio ministry. They had been meeting in a home.

A minister in Tehran told Christianity Today that Iranians are very open to the gospel. Iranian Christians International guesses as many as 100,000 people have become Christians as a result of radio, satellite television, or Internet evangelism. Yet those commitments sometimes fade.

Only 3,000 evangelicals lived in the country in 1979. Missionaries were expelled after the Islamic revolution, and as many as 90 percent of the churches were closed. The exiled pastor told CT that weekly church services now are held in fewer than 20 church buildings in the country. While there are an estimated 150 house churches in Iran, security concerns often curtail gatherings. Several Christian leaders have disappeared or been murdered, including four Assemblies of God pastors in the 1990s.

Copyright © 2004 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Related Elsewhere:

More about World Vision’s work in Bam is available on its web site.

More on Samaritan’s Purse’s work in Bam is available on its web site.

Iranian Christians International has more information on its web site.

Other CT articles on Iran include:

On The Run from Police, Iranian Christian Survives Church Attack | Fleeing persecution with no passport, refugee witnesses last week’s grenade murders in Pakistan. (March 26, 2002)

Hiding from Religion Police | What you can do to help persecuted Christians in Iran. (March 20, 2002)

Books & Culture Corner: Keeping the Dust on Your Boots | Remembering the Afghan refugees—and the church in Iran. (Jan. 14, 2002)

Church Officials Optimistic that Iran Is Changing Its Views of Christians | Vatican official, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei talk about improving Muslim-Christian relations. (March 08, 2001)

Other CT articles on disaster relief include:

Rebuilding Afghanistan U | How Christian scholars are using their heads to change people’s hearts at universities worldwide-including the one Osama bin Laden used to roam. (Dec. 12, 2003)

Attacks on ‘Soft Targets’ in Iraq Hampering Humanitarian Groups | The Oct. 27 suicide bombing that targeted the International Committee of the Red Cross struck a blow to all humanitarian organizations in Iraq. (Dec. 02, 2003)

Churches Respond After the California Fires | The disaster provides ministry opportunities that would have been otherwise impossible. (Nov. 18, 2003)

Iraq’s Good Samaritans | This past summer, pundits predicted that Iraqis would resent Franklin Graham’s ministry. What really happened when the workers showed up? (Oct. 24, 2003)

Bringing Order from Chaos | Churches help with refugees, hunger, and the lasting trauma brought on by war. (Oct. 15, 2003)

Also in this issue

The Passion of Mel Gibson: Why Evangelicals are Cheering a 'Catholic' Film

Cover Story

The Passion of Mel Gibson

Network for the Alienated

Border Crackdown

Cry, the Beloved Continent

Discarding Our Masks

Editorial

Forget Your Bliss

Incarnate Forever

Inside <em>CT</em>: Coming Attractions

Islamic Board Gets Green Light

Misfires in the Tolerance Wars

Black Theology Revisited

News

Quotation Marks

Jesus' Cross

Relationships, Not Programs

The Good News of God's Wrath

Vacation Bible School Wars

Worship Style Matters

A Home for Nomads

News

Multi(per)plexed

News

Go Figure

News

Passages

The Fountain Fill'd wth Blood

A Law that Shouldn't be Cloned

Hindu Extremes

Q & A: Franklin Graham

Discarding Our Masks

News

Challenging Canyon Orthodoxy

The Passion of Mel Gibson

The Passion and Prejudice

How the Late Carl Henry Helped Invent Evangelicalism

Burma's Almost Forgotten

A Politics of Gratitude

Editorial

A Question of Faith

America's Pastor

An Unusual Church of Christ

View issue

Our Latest

What Porn Does to Us

Christine Emba talks with Russell Moore about how psychological research supports biblical injunctions.

News

Amid ICE Raids, Korean American Churches Stay Quiet

Christians in the community are divided on how to respond, yet more churches want to prepare their congregants.

The Russell Moore Show

Listener Question: How Can I Make Time for Writing?

Russell takes a listener’s question about making time to be a better writer.

News

How Abortion Pills Change the Fight for Life

Texas pregnancy centers adjust their services as women increasingly access mifepristone by mail.

‘The Chosen Adventures’ Educates Our Smallest Bible Scholars

The animated spinoff on the adult show is a heady attempt to disciple kids on the life of Jesus.

Review

Suffering Comes in Many Forms. So Does Theodicy.

Scripture attests to God’s distinct plans to wipe individual tears from individual eyes.

The Bulletin

Hamas Crackdown, Rural Hospitals, and Why Brides Wear White

Hamas punishes political enemies, the importance of rural hospitals, and how purity culture influences modern weddings.

Apple PodcastsDown ArrowDown ArrowDown Arrowarrow_left_altLeft ArrowLeft ArrowRight ArrowRight ArrowRight Arrowarrow_up_altUp ArrowUp ArrowAvailable at Amazoncaret-downCloseCloseEmailEmailExpandExpandExternalExternalFacebookfacebook-squareGiftGiftGooglegoogleGoogle KeephamburgerInstagraminstagram-squareLinkLinklinkedin-squareListenListenListenChristianity TodayCT Creative Studio Logologo_orgMegaphoneMenuMenupausePinterestPlayPlayPocketPodcastRSSRSSSaveSaveSaveSearchSearchsearchSpotifyStitcherTelegramTable of ContentsTable of Contentstwitter-squareWhatsAppXYouTubeYouTube