Le responsable de l’alliance évangélique nouvellement créée évoque la situation de son pays, sa fuite de Khartoum et la pression exercée sur lui pour qu’il choisisse un camp.
From Istanbul to Marrakesh, disaster relief can help Muslim-background believers legitimize their faith. But first, say Turks, the church must be united.
Aunque su fe no es reconocida por el gobierno, los creyentes locales sirven a los desplazados que buscan descubrir la voluntad de Dios y encontrar refugio.
Les croyants de ce pays où la foi chrétienne autochtone n’est pas officiellement reconnue servent leurs compatriotes déplacés à la recherche d’un refuge et de la volonté de Dieu.
Le pays a connu des conflits et des coups d’État à maintes reprises, mais cette fois-ci, selon l’historien Christopher Tounsel, les croyants se trouvent en plein milieu.
The African country has seen conflict and coup over and over, but this time, says historian Christopher Tounsel, believers are right in the middle of it.
“Already but not yet” takes on new meaning as violence scatters believers from Khartoum to corners of Sudan where biblical application has long been lived.
When the military closed Khartoum’s airport and disrupted their discipleship training, a generational odd couple from YFC Lebanon improvised and preached to hundreds of students.
With believers unable to communicate, international advocates weigh in on how the Sudanese church—buoyed by recent religious freedom gains—considers the military seizure of power.
With a Christian activist in jail and a grandmother humiliated, religious freedom advocates weigh the value of progress in church legalization and public rhetoric.