Friday, October 31, 2025

Christians Butchered in Mozambique.

20 Christians killed as jihadist violence intensifies in Mozambique.

Mozambique (Photo: Getty/iStock)

A new wave of jihadist attacks in northern Mozambique has left at least 20 Christians dead and thousands displaced, as militants linked to the Islamic State continue to target Christian communities, churches and homes.

The coordinated strikes, attributed to Ahlu Sunnah wa Jama’ah (known locally as al-Shabaab), devastated the Christian-majority community of Napala village in Chiúre District, part of the conflict-ridden Cabo Delgado Province.

The violence, which erupted earlier this month, left 1,300 homes and two churches burned to the ground, forcing around 2,000 people to flee.

Local residents say the onslaught intensified after Mozambique’s Defence and Security Forces (FDS) retreated from the area, leaving communities exposed.

A local pastor told Open Doors: “Everything got worse when the FDS tried to intervene without success. When they fled, they left everything worse for those people.”

Similarly, a community leader shared to Open Doors: “Since the military were already in confrontation with terrorists, after they retreated, al-Shabaab continued with great fury and attacks which caused all houses to be destroyed.”

Among those killed were four elderly Christian women who were tied up and set on fire inside a house, according to witnesses.

This is the latest episode in a eight-year insurgency that has ravaged northern Mozambique since 2017.

The conflict, driven by Islamist militants affiliated with the Islamic State Mozambique Province (ISMP), has already claimed more than 6,000 lives and displaced over one million people, according to conflict monitors.

The attacks came as the so-called Islamic State (IS) operatives issued a chilling statement targeting Christians in Africa.

In its weekly online publication, the group warned that believers must convert to Islam, “pay the jizya [a tax],” or face “death and expulsion.”

The article praised the violent acts of the “jihad” in Mozambique and the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), urging European followers to “exact a divine verdict” against Christians in their respective areas.

Analysts fear such rhetoric could trigger further violence across sub-Saharan Africa, where Islamist groups have intensified their campaigns.

Despite the scale of the crisis, a local source shared with Open Doors that the Mozambican government continues to restrict information about the conflict.

Security officials reportedly ban photography and limit media access to affected regions, leaving many attacks largely ignored and not followed up by authorities.

The source said to Open Doors: “It is heartbreaking to witness how the government of Mozambique is managing this ongoing conflict, and even more painful to see the current posture of the church in the face of these deep afflictions of Christ’s body.

“There is no doubt that the church remains the central target of these attacks. Hundreds of churches have been burned, countless Christians have been assaulted.”

According to Open Doors, at least 56 Christians have been killed for their faith in Mozambique this year.

More than 100 churches came under assault or were shut down, and 13 believers kidnapped because of their faith.

Mozambique ranks 37th on the 2025 Open Doors World Watch List of the most dangerous countries to be a Christian.

In addition to concerns over extremists, Christian advocacy groups recently warned that the country's proposed “Religious Regulation Law” could worsen persecution.

The draft law would, they said, impose strict government oversight on religious groups, requiring churches to collect thousands of signatures for registration — rules that do not apply to Islamic institutions.

Organisations including Open Doors, the World Evangelical Alliance, and Evangelical Association of Mozambique appealed to the government to withdraw the proposal.

“The Church in Mozambique is enduring deep trauma,” a local Open Doors contact said. “Many believers and leaders live with fear, intimidation and emotional exhaustion. Although there remains a genuine desire to serve Christ, fear continues to weaken the church’s public witness in many areas. But God’s working in these hotspot areas, in ways that are hard to explain.”

The ongoing violence underscores the urgency of Open Doors’ Arise Africa campaign, which calls on Christians worldwide to pray, advocate, and act for those persecuted across the continent.

Churches are also preparing for the International Day of Prayer for the Persecuted Church on November 15, with a 12-hour vigil planned in the UK and worldwide. CT.

Good To See.

 https://www.christianpost.com/news/pro-life-group-can-protest-near-abortion-clinic-ny-judge.html

Would You Care To Dance?


 

God Our Saviour.


 

Alfred The Great.

 https://www.christiantoday.com/news/who-was-alfred-the-great-and-why-is-he-commemorated-in-some-church-traditions

Fairy Tales?

Joe Rogan doesn't buy the 'Christianity is a fairy tale' argument.

Joe RoganJoe Rogan has a huge following.

Podcaster Joe Rogan noted earlier this week that he enjoys going to church and pushed back against "self-professed intelligent people" who dismiss the Bible as myth.

During the Wednesday episode of "The Joe Rogan Experience" with guest Konstantin Kisin, a Russian-British political commentator who said he "loves" going to church, Rogan said he feels the same and finds it encouraging when he is with Christians who are working to better understand the Bible.


"It's a bunch of people that are going to try to make their lives better, trying to be a better person," he said of church. "I mean, for me — at least the place that I go to — they read and analyze passages in the Bible. I'm really interested in what these people were trying to say, because I don't think it's nothing."

Rogan suggested "atheists and secular people" who dismiss the Bible as fiction are not as intelligent as they believe themselves to be.

"I hear that among self-professed intelligent people, like it's a fairy tale," he said. "I don't know that's true. I think I think there's more to it. I think it's history, but I think it's a confusing history. It's a confusing history because it was a long time ago, and it's people telling things in an oral tradition and writing things down in a language that you don't understand, in the context of a culture that you don't understand."

Explaining that he believes "there's something to it," Rogan went on to say that Christianity is "the most fascinating" of the world's religions because it centers on the person of Jesus Christ.

"Christianity in particular is the most fascinating to me, because there's this one person that everybody agrees existed, that somehow or another had the best plan for how human beings should interact with each other and behave," he said.

Rogan suggested that he is fascinated by the fact that Christ suffered and died, despite being "the best example" of how human beings should behave.

"[He] didn't even protest," he said. "Died on the cross, supposedly for our sins. It's a fascinating story. What does it represent, though? That's the real thing. What was that? What happened? Who was Jesus Christ, if it was a human being. What was that? That's wild."

When Kisin noted that the story of Jesus could be seen as a metaphor for "voluntary self-sacrifice" intended to inspire a better society, Rogan observed that the historical reality of Jesus as a human being is unavoidable.

"It's a historically documented human being, that's where it gets weird," he said. "Because there's a universal depiction of what this human being was like. That doesn't seem to vary that much between all the people that knew Him. That gets weird."

Rogan has increasingly mentioned Christianity on his podcast within the past year. In January, he hosted Christian apologist Wes Huff for an extensive conversation about faith, Jesus and the supernatural claims of the Bible.

In May, Huff revealed that Rogan had begun attending church regularly, and that the two have remained in contact since the spoke on the podcast.

"That has been a consistent thing," Huff said of Rogan's church attendance.

That same month, Rogan expressed skepticism about the Big Bang theory's explanation of the universe's origin, noting that he finds the idea of the Resurrection more plausible.


"It's funny, because people will be incredulous about the Resurrection of Jesus Christ, but yet, they're convinced that the entire universe was smaller than a head of a pin and that for no reason that anyone has adequately explained to me, instantaneously became everything? OK," he said.

"I'm sticking with Jesus on that one," he later added. "Jesus makes more sense. People have come back to life."

© The Christian Post

Pastors Under Pressure - IDOP.

Be part of IDOP this November!

Pastors under Pressure


This Sunday sees the annual International Day of Prayer for the Persecuted ChurchWill your church be marking it this year?


Our theme this year is Pastors under Pressure. We have produced a short video film, focusing on pastors in Sri Lanka. We would love you to use it in your church this Sunday, or any Sunday during November.

It is available on YouTube or, if you need to download it in advance, on Vimeo.

Thursday, October 30, 2025

The Syrian Church.

 https://www.christianpost.com/voices/after-massacre-we-are-still-here-the-church-in-syria-will-live.html

1 John 4:8.


 

Not My Normal Sort of Friend.




 

Quelle Surprise!

Miliband admits wind power less reliable than expected.

Energy Secretary would have to pay higher subsidies, making it harder to reach clean power targets.

Ed Miliband in front of wind turbine
Ed Miliband has committed to 95pc clean power by 2030 Credit: Zara Farrar/Downing Street
The Government has slashed forecasts for the amount of electricity it expects wind farms to generate in a blow to Ed Miliband’s net zero plans... DT.

Chagos Islanders Steamrollered By Sickening Labour Give-Away?

Labour made ‘unlawful decisions’ over Chagos deal.

Sir Keir Starmer to be challenged for allegedly not consulting islanders about the right to live on the archipelago

28 October 2025 7:04pm.
Chagossians protesting
Three Chagossians are seeking to challenge Sir Keir Starmer’s government agreement to hand over sovereignty of the Chagos Islands to Mauritius Credit: Mark Thomas

Labour made “unlawful decisions” over its controversial Chagos surrender, the High Court has been told.

Three Chagossians are seeking to challenge Sir Keir Starmer’s Government over alleged failings, including not consulting the islanders about a “right to abode” on the archipelago.

The Prime Minister provoked a backlash after announcing plans to hand over sovereignty of the Chagos Islands to Mauritius, in a deal that would involve leasing back a crucial military base on Diego Garcia for 99 years.

The agreement was signed after a last-minute High Court challenge by one of the Chagossians, Bertrice Pompe, was dismissed. It had delayed the signing by several hours. The agreement has not yet been ratified as it requires approval by Parliament.

At a hearing on Tuesday, lawyers for the three Chagossians, Ms Pompe, Misley Mandarin and Michel Mandarin, asked a judge for the green light to proceed with a legal challenge against the Government for failures to “adequately and lawfully consult with the Chagossian people” about their interests, including the right to live on the archipelago. 

The Government is opposing the bid, with its lawyers claiming that the challenge is a “collateral attack on an international agreement”.

DT.

Coming To Terms With Dying Is One Thing But The Destination of The Soul Is Much More Important.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-15231301/what-happens-body-dying.html

Wednesday, October 29, 2025

I Do Hope That Those Who Allowed This Illegal To Become Part of Our Nation Can Sleep At Night!

Dog walker killed in Uxbridge stabbing named and pictured for first time.

A neighbour in Uxbridge said the man who died was a bin man

By Alice Scarsi, World News Editor

Wayne Broadhurst

Wayne Broadhurst died in the attack (Image: FACEBOOK)

A dogwalker who was stabbed to death on Monday afternoon has been named and pictured for the first time. Wayne Broadhurst, 49, died during the attack in Uxbridge, northwest London, on October 27. Two others were injured in what police called a “senseless act of violence”.

An Afghan national, who entered the country in a lorry in 2020, has allegedly been arrested over the fatal stabbing. The man was granted asylum in 2022. Officials also confirmed that he is not resident in an asylum hotel or any other Home Office accommodation, despite claims on social media. 

Illogical, Kemi.

Kemi Badenoch says Josef Fritzl case made her lose faith in God.

Kemi BadenochKemi Badenoch (Photo: Parliament)

Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch has opened up about how she lost her faith in God after reading about the notorious case of Josef Fritzl. 

The Austrian's abuse of his daughter, Elisabeth Fritzl, shocked the world when it emerged he had locked her up in his basement for 24 years and fathered seven children with her, including one that had died at birth.

Elisabeth Fritzl and six surviving children were freed in April 2008 after one of them fell sick and was taken to hospital, where doctors grew suspicious. 

Badenoch said that reading about the case "blew out a candle" on her faith. 

Speaking to the BBC, she said that she still held to a "cultural Christianity" but that the story of Elisabeth Fritzl had "killed" her faith. 

Badenoch is the granddaughter of a clergyman and grew up a committed Christian. 

She explained that she could not understand why her prayers for trivial matters were being answered and not Elisabeth Fritzl's prayers for something as serious as being freed from imprisonment and abuse. 

“I thought, I was praying for all sorts of stupid things and I was getting my prayers answered," she said. 

“I was praying to have good grades. My hair should grow longer, and I would pray for the bus to come on time so I wouldn’t miss something.

"It’s like, why were those prayers answered and not this woman’s prayers? And it just, it was like someone blew out a candle.”

She said that Josef Fritzl's abuse of his daughter had raised in her "a level of disgust and abhorrence that I’d never experienced". 

Although she has rejected God, she says she has not rejected Christianity and that she values the role it has played in shaping British society. 

“I rejected God, not Christianity. So I would still define myself as a cultural Christian," she said.  CT.

God Loves Us.


Birdie.


 

The National Trust Has Lost My Support.

  https://www.christianpost.com/news/christian-documentarian-banned-from-filming-at-historic-site.html