June 24, 2026

Faith Watch

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Ahead of next week’s papal conclave, Friday’s edition of CBS Evening News was caught in a tough situation. On one hand, being the diversity-conscious liberal show that it is, Africa correspondent Debora Patta lamented Africans are not reflected in the Vatican’s halls of power despite Catholicism growing in the area. On the other, Patta warned that an African pope would not be the pro-LGBTQ reformer liberals would want him to be.

Talking over footage of African worshipers, Patta set the scene, “This is the face of the Catholic Church’s future. The African continent is its fastest growing region. Home to at least one-fifth of its followers. That’s more than 272 million people.”

“Igbo Women” - Grok3 - 25/04/25

By Paul Gordon Collier, Editor “Igbo Women” - Grok3 - 25/04/25

Originally published April 25, 2025 for our End-of-Month Issue of Mindful Intelligence Advisor.  Subscribe to get semi-monthly issues.

“My parents lost everything, all their savings, because we had to run from the Nigerian side to the Biafran side. We were Igbos.” –Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala

“I am hearing a more resounding voice in the spirit saying, God is changing the guard in the Nigerian church.” –Sunday Adelaja

INTRODUCTION

Nigeria happens to be the most populated country in Africa, with 237.5 million citizens, making it the 6th most populous country in the world. Nigeria is the home of an ethnic group called the Igbo, who collectively adopted Christianity. They have become both the greatest success story in Nigeria and the most persecuted people as well.

The Igbo are currently facing a growing threat from violent Islamists who seek to make Nigeria a Sharia country, a country controlled by Islamic law, which is decidedly intolerant of others’ beliefs, including many Muslims and certainly ALL Christians.

Our publisher, Bill Collier, is currently working on an exclusive report on the plight of the Igbos in the Plateau State that will include on-the-ground interviews and, hopefully, pictures.

This report will give you the background information on the targets of these Plateau State assaults, the Igbo. It will culminate with a Palm Sunday massacre that happened this April 2025.

The plight of the Igbo has long been ignored, even by American Christian media. We hope to give voice to our brothers and sisters in Christ and attention to the rest of the world about the plight the Igbo currently face.

A. BRIEF HISTORY OF THE IGBO

The Igbo people live primarily in southeastern Nigeria, especially in the states of Anambra, Abia, Imo, Ebonyi, and Enugu. It is estimated that the Igbo comprise about 15% of the Nigerian population, or 35 million people. 98% of the Igbo identify as Christian, though some suggest it’s near total.

They are one of the largest ethnic groups in all of Africa yet in the West, barely a whisper is spoken about them.

This writer suspects the reason they get so little coverage in the West is because of how they embraced Christianity, made it their own, and, through that, became the most professional and prosperous people of integrity in Nigeria, whose success ultimately led to their persecution.

Nigeria has two major religions showing the direct fruit of their beliefs side by side: Islam and Christianity. The Christians flourish and raise professional men and women of integrity, while the Muslims continue to raise killers, thugs, and men who think they’re entitled to murder the unbeliever. It’s black-on-black crime, so to speak, with the Muslims committing the lion’s share of that crime.

It’s a stunning rebuke of the way of Islam, a dear ally of the perverse left still infecting American institutions with its criminal insanity (something it shares in common with its Muslim allies, which explains, in part, their alliance).

  1. FROM THE BEGINNING TO PRE-COLONIAL – The Igbo people can trace their heritage back over 5,000 years, with archeological evidence showing they have lived in the southeastern region of Nigeria the whole time.

Their prehistory continues until their colonialization in the early-19th century. During this long period of time, the Igbo entered the bronze age at least by the 9th Century AD. Their culture, judging from the archeological findings, was highly sophisticated, though they lacked a written language.

The region was not dominated by kingdoms; rather, it seems to have been comprised of numerous decentralized village councils divided by age groups, with decisions being made through consensus, not voting. Women also held strong positions in their societies.

“The Igbo had no kings or chiefs in the traditional sense; their society was acephalous, with authority distributed among village assemblies.”Chinua Achebe, There Was a Country, 2012.

Their religion was polytheistic, with Chukwu being the supreme deity of their pantheon. The religious leaders had a major role in society, conducting rituals for safe being and oracle services, which included conflict resolution and governance.

The practices of the Igbo could warrant its own report, as so much of their customs and beliefs aligned very well with the Christian gospel (though not completely).

Their method of retaining humility and holiness among the people by requiring every person to submit to a designated person while also having a person that must submit to them fits very well with the servant-leader example Christ served us when he walked the earth. It certainly echoes with Christ’s teaching, “…the last will be first, and the first last.” (Mat.20:16 ESV)

When the white man arrived, the Igbo were well-ready to take advantage of what Western culture gave them, while holding on to their own pre-colonial identity, thanks largely to their Christian faith (though some, a very small minority regularly feted by the Western press, would disagree with this assessment).

Their customs, their ways, largely overlapped with the gospel.

  1. CHRISTIANIZATION AND BRITISH RULE – Before the British arrived, missionaries got there first, preaching the gospel and providing free education to the natives. One anecdotal story shared by an Igbo man with my brother, Bill Collier, tells of the Igbo first hearing about the God of the Bible, the triune God who gave his only son so that whosoever believes in him will have eternal life. He told Bill the people recognized God as the more complete version of their own god(s).

Their first reaction was that their own beliefs seemed to be shadows of the true gospel. By the time the British arrived in the 1850s, 60% of the Igbo were already identifying as Christians. Some attribute this remarkably rapid conversion to their recognition of the social advantage of adopting the white man’s religion (namely free education), though the people are now more fully Christian than they were under the white man’s thumb.

When the British moved in, one of the most disrupting things they did was assign warrant chiefs to the Igbo, which disrupted their centuries-old method of consensual governance through age-divided village councils. This led to the Aba Women’s riot in 1929, where Igbo women led protests against the governance-breaking imposition of warrant chiefs, as well as against British taxes.

It seems Christ has raised a people aware of their own innate value as children in the image of God, priests and kings in the new Kingdom.

On October 1, 1960, the Nigerians finally gained their independence from the British after two decades of “constitutional reforms” that, according to the Nigerians, still didn’t go far enough in both restoring self-rule and, for the Igbo, allowing them to practice their centuries-long governance traditions.

  1. THE BIAFRA WAR – This period of Igbo history (1967-1970) could also warrant its own report. It was set off by an Igbo-led coup, then followed up with anti-Igbo pogroms, which claimed the lives of up to 50,000 Igbo.

This round of violence ended with the creation of an Igbo-centered nation, Biafra. The 3-year war was the Empire striking back, as Biafra was re-absorbed into Nigeria proper, shackled to a partner that wants them dead for worshiping Christ; That same partner CANNOT afford to outright genocide them because they are a major part of the Nigerian economic engine.

Christian persecution was high during this time, but war and famine killed far more, with up to 3 million Igbo dying during the war.

  1. POST-WAR TO PRESENT – While the Igbo lost, their Christian identity was cemented during this time, an identity still just as strong today. The post-war reality is a world that sets quotas to ensure there are never too many Igbo in positions of power. They are derisively referred to as the Jews of Nigeria.

The one major difference between them and their neighbors is their commitment to teaching and living the gospel in their lives. They are a scripted people, a people raised in a shared book, the book of books, through which God promises us, “The unfolding of your words gives light, it imparts understanding to the simple.” (Psalm 119:130)

This means a scripted people, be they “advanced” or “simple” will soon follow the same pattern as the Igbo did as they became, more and more, a scripted people, a people of the book.

“Your hands have made and fashioned me; give me understanding that I may learn your commandments. Those who fear you shall see me and rejoice, because I have hoped in your word. I know, O Lord , that your rules are righteous, and that in faithfulness you have afflicted me.”Psalm 119:73-75 (ESV)

The Indigenization Decree of 1972 also effectively prevents the Igbo from accessing capital in the country, as their western and northern neighbors are given preferred status.

Starting in 2015, another ethnic group, the Muslim Fulani, began to slaughter Igbo Christians where they could, including the Ebonyi massacre that saw 100-plus Igbo killed.

“Igbo Nigerians have been tacitly targeted by the Fulani Muslims because of their ethnicity and Christian faith.”Mario Alexis Portella

B. THE CURRENT CONDITIONS

Since 2000, over 62,000 Christian Igbos have been killed by Islamists. Those attacks have only been increasing. Their trust in the federal government is near-zero, as they have been largely disenfranchised by it. Their inability to be their own nation limits their ability to defend themselves against armed militants, knowing full well the government will do little to find the killers and bring them to justice.

In addition to the Fulani, they must now also contend with the newly arrived Boko Haram.

  1. VIOLENCE AGAINST CHRISTIANS – At first, the Igbo only had to contend with the Islamist Fulani; then Boko Haram started kidnapping and killing their daughters. Now, the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) has joined in on the assaults.

They all have two things in common: they hate the Igbo and they hate Christianity (though this writer believes the hatred of the Igbo is DUE to their Christian heritage and continued beliefs).

The World Watch List by Open Doors has Nigeria at 6th for the world’s worst countries for Christian persecution, pointing out the fact that, according to Intersociety data in 2023, “Nigeria accounts for 89% of Christians martyred worldwide. The Intersociety report confirms that Nigeria has become one of the most dangerous places to live for Christians in Africa.”

The bulk of those deaths are the Igbo, the most persecuted Christians on the planet today.

  1. THE IGBO CONDITION – The Igbo people are estimated to be around 30 million today, though a 2006 Nigerian census lists them at 21 million. Some estimates go as high as 35 million, assuming they were initially under-counted and thus population growth proportionally could make that number higher.

They are at least 98% Christian, with Catholics and Protestants both having sizeable representations.

Despite the handicaps placed on them by the government, the Igbo are still a more prosperous people than their Muslim neighbors, excelling in entrepreneurship and achieving high levels of education. Their very existence as non-white Christians, in contrast to non-white Muslims, serves as a threat to race-baiting, Islam-promoting, anti-Christian demonizing narratives.

  1. GEOGRAPHIC TARGETS – Nigeria is divided into 36 states. 12 of the 36 states have implemented Sharia, Islamic Law, making it illegal for Christians to openly practice their faith in these states. The violence against Christians has largely been confined to those states until relatively recently, when the targets expanded to the region called the Middle Belt, which includes the Plateau State now currently under attack. You can read about these attacks in the next issue of MIA (May 16, 2025).

Recently, these attacks have pierced Igbo-dominated states like Enugu, Anambra, and Imo. Christians are kidnapped, churches are burned, and Christians are slaughtered, often at church.

  1. THE ATTACKERS – Rising “stars” in the evangelicalism-through-slaughter Islamist community, Boko Haram and ISWAP, have accounted for over 10,000 Christian deaths since 2009. These groups exclusively kill Christians.

The Fulani are Islamists, but some of their disputes are land-based, and date back to before Islam and Christianity arrived. Still, the Fulani use Islam as the primary justification for murdering Igbo Christians. The Fulani are herdsmen who have long battled the farmers, who are now largely Igbo.

“The anti-Christian butcheries in Nigeria have been investigated and found to be perpetrated mainly by Jihadist Fulani herdsmen and their mercenaries.”Emeka Umeagbalasi, Intersociety, May 4, 2022.

While the ultimate goal of the Fulani is simply to take land, their embrace of Islam has emboldened them to more aggressively assault the Igbo than they had in the past.

“Violence between herders and farming communities has spread from the central belt southwards, and there are other long-running disputes in the Niger Delta and the south-east.”House of Commons Library, February 1, 2024.

  1. GOVERNMENT RESPONSE – Section 38 of Nigeria’s constitution guarantees the freedom of religion, but that clause in the constitution is minimally enforced. A U.S. State Department report on religious freedom in Nigeria claims the government has taken some measures to check Boko Haram and ISWAP, but little to no effort has been made to check the Fulani.

In 2022, the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of Nigeria felt so insecure they made a statement about it:

“Escalating Insecurity in our Country and the sub-region Insecurity has remained a persisting problem in our country as insurgents, herdsmen militia, bandits, and the so-called unknown gunmen have continued to unleash terror in different parts of the country.”Catholic Bishops’ Conference of Nigeria, 2022 Statement on Insecurity

A 2023 USCIRF (United States Commission on International Religious Freedom) report puts Nigeria in the category of “Country of Particular Concern” due to its “systemic” religious freedom violations and the government’s inaction against those who persecute Christians.

“Despite several military operations, the government’s response to violence against Christians, including in the southeast, remains insufficient, leaving communities vulnerable.”USCIRF, 2023 Annual Report

C. THE PALM SUNDAY MASSACRE

On April 13, 2025, Christians in a small community in the Plateau State of Nigeria were preparing to celebrate Palm Sunday, a commemoration of the day Christ entered Jerusalem a week before his execution. He was celebrated as a King, only to be condemned as a heretic a week later. It sets off the most important time of the year for Christians, Passion Week.

On this holy day, Islamists entered their community and began their assault.

The Nigerian President, Bola Tinubu, said of the attacks, “I have instructed security agencies to thoroughly investigate this crisis and identify those responsible for orchestrating these violent acts,” similar words to those spoken in the past, none of which materialized in any significant way.

It is reported the killers were Fulani herders, targeting a Christian farming community. The Fulani are also accused of killing 1,336 people in the Plateau State between December 2023 and February 2024. Leading up to this slaughter, and including it, the Fulani have killed at least 126 people since March 27 of this same year.

Their target was the Zike community, an Igbo farming community. Armed men looted and destroyed homes, with over 300 homes reported destroyed and at least 56 people slaughtered. More than 3,000 people were displaced by the violence.

The ongoing assault on the Plateau State will be reported on by publisher Bill Collier in the May 16, 2025 edition of MIA.

SUMMARY

The Firearms Act of 1959 is the bedrock of gun control laws in Nigeria. It requires a person to get a license to own a gun which must be approved by the President or the Inspector General of the Police. Reasons for disapproval include “intemperate habits.”

If you follow the law, getting a gun in Nigeria is difficult, though not impossible. If you want to own a personal firearm, your choices are severely limited, assuming you get a license in the first place.

While Nigeria has some of the strictest gun control laws in Africa, they also account for 70% of the illegal gun trade in West Africa, meaning the illegally-minded can get guns a lot easier than the legally-minded can, the Igbo.

They are, essentially, unarmed by a government that refuses to protect them.

If they turn to the illegal gun trade, they invite a whole new war on their heads at a time when they have little to no defense against government invasion, should it come to that. They are unarmed for all practical purposes, unable to defend themselves against invaders who fear no law, for the government continues to look the other way.

If we could get 30 million Igbo Christians to America, our nation, and then the world, would be a better place for it. They have the spirit of liberty in Christ that makes them tailor-fit for an Americanist lifestyle, where individuals are assumed made in the image of God, held accountable ultimately by God, in the end, not men.

Short of that, this writer cannot help but hope the Igbo can find a way to defend themselves without inviting government invasion and a repeat of the horrors of the Biafra War, which still holds a pall and a hope over the people today.

“I was born in 1966, at the beginning of the Biafran-Nigerian Civil War, and the war ended after three years. And I was growing up in school, and the federal government didn’t want us taught about the history of the war, because they thought it probably would make us generate a new generation of rebels.”Chris Abani

FURTHER RESOURCES:

There was a Country: A Personal History of Biafra – Chinua Achebe

A History of Nigeria – Toyin Falola

Biafra, the Horrors of War, the Story of a Child Soldier – Okey Anueyiagu

Nigeria and Biafra, My Story – Philip Efiong

 

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Christians need not profess the Catholic faith in order to recognize the importance of the moment.

In short, someone must now teach the world to seek truth in something other than whims and fashion.

On Monday, 88-year-old Pope Francis died, bringing an end to a papacy that, in many ways, conservatives regarded as little more than an apostasy and setting the stage for a papal enclave that could result in the election of a conservative favorite, 79-year-old Cardinal Robert Sarah from the west African nation of Guinea.

Of course, the phrase “could result” must temper conservatives’ expectations.

In fact, on Monday The Guardian profiled Sarah as one of nine possible candidates to succeed Francis. So the African cardinal’s elevation to the papacy hardly qualifies as a foregone conclusion.

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Pope Francis will be laid to rest Saturday after lying in state for three days in St. Peter’s Basilica, where the faithful are expected to flock to pay their respects to history’s first Latin American pontiff.

The cardinals met Tuesday in the Vatican’s synod hall to chart the next steps before a conclave begins to choose Francis’ successor, as condolences poured in from around the world. According to current norms, the conclave must begin between May 5 and 10.

The cardinals set the funeral for Saturday at 10 a.m. in St. Peter’s Square, to be celebrated by the dean of the College of Cardinals, Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re. U.S. President Donald Trump said he and first lady Melania Trump plan to attend, and Argentine President Javier Milei is also expected.

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President Donald J. Trump has ordered all United States flags on government and military properties to be lowered to half-staff in memory of His Holiness Pope Francis on the morning after his passing.

The Vatican announced the pope’s passing early Monday morning in Rome after a fight against pneumonia, Breitbart News reported. He was 88.

Francis had recently left Rome’s Gemelli Hospital, where he was admitted on February 14, before briefly meeting with Vice President JD Vance on Easter Sunday.

Trump released a proclamation shortly after the news broke, calling for flags to be flown at half-mast until sunset out of “respect” for the Catholic leader:

As a mark of respect for the memory of His Holiness Pope Francis, by the authority vested in me as President of the United States by the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America, I hereby order that the flag of the United States shall be flown at half-staff at the White House and upon all public buildings and grounds, at all military posts and naval stations, and on all naval vessels of the Federal Government in the District of Columbia and throughout the United States and its Territories and possessions until sunset, on the day of interment.  I also direct that the flag shall be flown at half-staff for the same length of time at all United States embassies, legations, consular offices, and other facilities abroad, including all military facilities and naval vessels and stations.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this twenty-first day of April, in the year of our Lord two thousand twenty-five, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and forty-ninth.

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Pope Francis died of a cerebral stroke and irreversible heart failure, Vatican doctor Andrea Arcangeli has said in a death certificate.

The certificate released on Monday for the 88-year-old pontiff said the pope had fallen into a coma before his death earlier in the day.

Pope Francis had suffered various ailments during his 12-year papacy, with severe complications in recent weeks following a bout of double pneumonia for which he spent 38 days at Rome’s Gemelli Hospital.

The Vatican also released Pope Francis’s spiritual testament – a written statement of faith – in which he said he wished to be buried in Rome’s Basilica of Saint Mary Major and not at St Peter’s Basilica in the Vatican, unlike many of his predecessors.

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JD Vance had a “brief” meeting with the Pope amid tensions between the pontiff and the White House on migration policy and welfare cuts. The US Vice President, who converted to Catholicism in 2019, is understood to have been keen to meet his Holiness whilst in Rome with his family.

The leader of the Catholic church had been reticent to grant an official meeting, but a “brief” audience was held on Sunday morning in Casa Santa Marta where the 88-year-old lives. The meeting is understood to have “lasted a few minutes” according to the Vatican, allowing the two to exchange Easter greetings. The Pope has previously been critical of the US administration, condemning their policy on migration and pledge of mass deportations as “a disgrace”.

Mr Vance has at times attempted to clumsily use Catholic teachings to justify the White House’s approach to migration but has been slapped down by the Pope in open letters to Catholic Bishops in the US.

He was also outspoken on President Donald Trump, hours before his inauguration, telling Italian TV: “This won’t do! This is not the way to solve things. That’s not how things are resolved.”

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A day after meeting with Vice President JD Vance and making a public appearance delivering the benediction on Easter Sunday, Pope Francis passed away at the age of 88 on Monday, April 21, 2025, 7:35 AM. He had been hospitalized for five weeks with life-threatening pneumonia before being released four weeks ago to recover in his own residence.

An update to the candidates emerging in the race to replace Francis will follow here.

Pope Francis dies aged 88 after overseeing one of the Catholic Church’s most tumultuous periods – Australian Broadcasting Corporation
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The first Jesuit and Latin American pontiff Pope Francis — born Jorge Mario Bergoglio — has died, aged 88.

From the moment he stepped onto the Vatican balcony in his fresh white robes on March 13, 2013, Pope Francis established himself as a very different kind of pontiff.

“Good evening!” he bellowed to the crowd of 150,000 people packed into St Peter’s Square to witness this historic moment.

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Josh Sullivan, a U.S. pastor abducted at gunpoint while delivering a sermon in his church in South Africa Thursday evening has been rescued in a shootout that left three suspected dead, authorities say.

According to a statement issued by the “Hawks” — a specialized police unit that investigates serious crimes — Sullivan, 45, was abducted at the Fellowship Baptist Church in Motherwell Township outside the coastal city of Gqeberha and was being held in a safehouse in that city.

The Hawks say numerous police agencies acting on tips went to the house Tuesday and saw a vehicle. Suspects in the vehicle tried to flee, opening fire on the officers as they did and “the officers responded with tactical precision, leading to a high-intensity shootout” in which the three suspects were killed.

Sullivan was found in the vehicle “miraculously unharmed,” the statement says, adding that he was “immediately assessed by medical personnel and is currently in an excellent condition.

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At least 40 people were killed in a brutal attack on a Christian farming community in north-central Nigeria late Sunday night, according to President Bola Tinubu. The attackers, who were reported as being Muslim gunmen, struck on Palm Sunday in the Zike community, located in Bassa, Plateau State.

Open Doors reports this latest attack brings the death toll to around 113 people who have been killed in an ongoing spate of attacks in Plateau State since the end of March. The watchdog group reports Muslim Fulani militants have attacked at least eight communities, destroying more than 300 homes and displacing 3,000 people.

In the last few weeks, the militants killed 3 Christians who were in the middle of farming their land, 11 Christians who had gathered for a funeral – including a pregnant woman and a ten-year-old girl – and at least five Christian women who had gathered for fellowship.

In the Palm Sunday attack, Andy Yakubu, a resident of Zike, said homes were looted and set ablaze during the onslaught, and the death toll could exceed 50. At the last count, an Open Doors contact reported, “43 people were killed, several houses were burnt down with people inside.”

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The State Department will cooperate with a government-wide task force to collect information “involving anti-religious bias during the last presidential administration.”

The Trump administration has directed State Department employees to report incidents of alleged “anti-Christian bias” among their colleagues, as part of a broader initiative to support Christian employees across the federal government.

According to an internal cable obtained by Politico, the State Department will cooperate with a government-wide task force to collect information “involving anti-religious bias during the last presidential administration” and will document examples of anti-Christian bias via anonymous employee reports.

The cable was sent to embassies worldwide under Secretary of State Marco Rubio’s name. A department-wide notice was also sent out detailing the instructions.

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President Donald Trump will mark Holy Week with a series of events aimed at honoring Easter “with the observance it deserves,” a move the White House is framing as a contrast to the Biden administration’s controversial decision to proclaim Easter Sunday 2024 as Transgender Day of Visibility.

The White House Faith Office, newly established under Trump’s administration, has organized what it calls an “extraordinary” weeklong celebration leading up to Easter Sunday.

“The newly created White House Faith Office is grateful to share that President Trump will honor and celebrate Holy Week and Easter with the observance it deserves,” Jennifer Korn, faith director of the White House Faith Office, told Fox News Digital.

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On May 1, foreigners in China can expect greater scrutiny on whatever religious expression they choose. This follows the passage of legislation by the CCP that has the goal of assuring all religious practices align with Communist values. The bill states foreigners are banned from practicing any religious belief the determines is done “to damage China’s national interests, social public interests, and citizens’ legitimate rights and interests, and must not violate China’s public order and customs”

Communist China tightens grip on religion with sweeping new laws– www.lifesitenews.com
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New legislation from the Chinese Communist Party will take effect next month, ushering in fresh restrictions on the practice of religion in the country.

Under laws set to take effect May 1, foreigners in China will be subject to increased control on the exercise of their religion. In 38 Articles, the new laws further promote the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) goal of sinicization, namely the practice of enforcing all religions to adhere to communist beliefs and practice.

Foreigners are banned from using religion “to damage China’s national interests, social public interests, and citizens’ legitimate rights and interests, and must not violate China’s public order and customs” – a decree which seems perhaps benign until one realizes that this entails only worshipping at CCP-approved locations, and in a CCP-approved manner. (Article 5)

The CCP’s aim, as already highlighted by numerous China experts, is to promote communism through all means possible, including religion.

Certainly, any attempt to contact or worship with, for example, the Underground Church in China is now de facto banned by virtue of the new laws.

Police arrest U.K. parents for criticizing school leaders in private social media group – Standing for Freedom Center– www.standingforfreedom.com
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The increasingly authoritarian nature of the British government is back in the spotlight this week after news broke that police arrested, interrogated, and jailed parents in Hertfordshire, England, for complaining about school policy and criticizing school leaders in a private group chat.

All this comes as the town’s new constable is set to release a report on the incident.

It all started in May 2024, when Maxie Allen, whose daughter Sascha, 9, was attending Cowley Hill Primary School, contacted the chair of governors of the school to question the hiring process of its new head teacher. Allen noted that despite the former head teacher having retired six months earlier, the school had not publicly posted the job and had instead given it to the former deputy head teacher.

Allen says that the chair’s response was “evasive,” so he sent a letter to all the school governors asking about the decision not to open recruitment to other candidates.

Allen posted the letter in a private WhatsApp parents’ group.

The next month, Jackie Spriggs, who is the chair of governors, wrote a letter to parents claiming that parents were using WhatsApp “to make inflammatory and defamatory comments about senior leaders in the school.”

Majority of US Catholics now support same-sex ‘marriage’ and abortion, Pew research finds– www.lifesitenews.com
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The Pew Religious Landscape Study (RLS) for Catholics from 2007, 2014, and 2023-24 offers a sobering glimpse into this crisis for traditional Catholics rooted in the Magisterium’s truths: for every 100 Catholics entering, 800 Catholics leave, prayer is declining, belief in God is plummeting, and a super majority supports issues deemed morally evil by the Church – demographically propped up by immigrants yet spiritually adrift.

While the sharp declines from 2007 to 2014 have slowed by 2023-24, the downward trend persists, demanding urgent reflection.

President Trump Invites Faith Leaders From Across America To White House For Prayer– wltreport.com
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President Donald Trump has been seen by many Americans as a respite from the supposedly devout Joe Biden’s apparent assault on the faith community.

This week, a group of faith leaders from across the nation gathered at the White House to participate in a prayer on behalf of the Trump administration.

As the Washington Examiner reported:

The White House invited multiple faith leaders from across the nation to visit the Oval Office on Wednesday, where they were given the chance to pray for President Donald Trump and his leadership.

The Trump administration uploaded a photo on X of the leaders visiting the president, gathered around Trump as he sat at his desk. William Wolfe, the executive director of the Center for Baptist Leadership, was among the attendees who prayed for the president.

Half Of US Churches Experiencing Post-Pandemic Attendance Growth – Religion Unplugged
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Half of U.S. Protestant pastors say their churches are growing but some warning signs remain about their congregational future.

U.S. Protestant churches are almost evenly split between those that have grown within the past two years and those that are plateaued or declining, according to an Exponential study by Lifeway Research.

Around half of the congregations (52%) increased their worship service attendance by at least 4% in the past two years. The other 48% of churches have either remained within plus or minus 4% since 2022 (33%) or declined by at least 4% (15%).

“Clearly, the last two years of attendance growth was aided by people returning to regular attendance after being away since the start of the pandemic,” said Scott McConnell, executive director of Lifeway Research. “Most pastors wish they had returned earlier, but their attendance is a source of optimism, though future growth will need to come from brand new contacts.”

Trump Urged to Designate Nigeria as a ‘Concern’ for Christian Persecution – Decision Magazine
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he House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Africa passed a resolution urging President Donald Trump to designate Nigeria as a Country of Particular Concern (CPC).

U.S. Rep. Chris Smith of New Jersey, chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Africa, presented House Resolution 220, which expresses “the need to designate Nigeria a Country of Particular Concern,” during a committee hearing on the matter March 12. A CPC is a country designated on a special watch list of countries where citizens face “systematic, ongoing, egregious violations of religious freedom.”

In the hearing, Smith explained the history of Nigeria’s inclusion and removal in the CPC.

“In December 2020, President Trump designated Nigeria a Country of Particular Concern only to be reversed without justification by Secretary Blinken in November of 2021,” Smith said. “Religious leaders in Nigeria were outraged by Secretary Blinken’s decision.” He referred to Bishop Stephen Dami Mamza, who challenged Nigeria’s removal and stated that Christian persecution is “more intense than ever.”

Nina Shea, senior fellow and director of the Center for Religious Freedom at the Hudson Institute, described the terror group responsible for most of the persecution in Nigeria.