Nepal: Miracles drive one of the world s fastest-growing churches
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Nepal: Miracles drive one of the world s fastest-growing churches
Nepal: Miracles drive one of the world s fastest-growing churches | Monday, February 15, 2021
Nepalese Christians | Reuters/Shruti Shrestha
In 1999, doctors diagnosed Nepali Christian Gita Shakya with a painful, paralyzing spinal growth. Doctors told Gita and her Christian son, Suroj, that her best option for healing was a risky, potentially lethal surgery, Suroj said in a written testimony shared with The Christian Post.
Surgery was also expensive, and Gita’s husband, Babukaji, a Buddhist priest, refused to pay his Christian wife’s expenses. Doctors in Singapore gave 19-year-old Suroj two days to decide whether to let his mother live in terrible pain or risk her death.
Nepal: Miracles drive one of the world s fastest-growing churches
JavaScript in your web browser. Please Go
Nepal: Miracles drive one of the world s fastest-growing churches
Nepal: Miracles drive one of the world s fastest-growing churches | Monday, February 15, 2021
Nepalese Christians | Reuters/Shruti Shrestha
In 1999, doctors diagnosed Nepali Christian Gita Shakya with a painful, paralyzing spinal growth. Doctors told Gita and her Christian son, Suroj, that her best option for healing was a risky, potentially lethal surgery, Suroj said in a written testimony shared with The Christian Post.
Surgery was also expensive, and Gita’s husband, Babukaji, a Buddhist priest, refused to pay his Christian wife’s expenses. Doctors in Singapore gave 19-year-old Suroj two days to decide whether to let his mother live in terrible pain or risk her death.
Destroyed houses are seen in the recently attacked village of Aldeia da Paz outside Macomia in the Cabo Delgado province of Mozambique on Aug. 24, 2019. On Aug. 1, 2019, the inhabitants of Aldeia da Paz joined the long list of victims of a faceless Islamist group that has been sowing death and terror for nearly two years in the north of the country. | AFP via Getty Images/MARCO LONGARI
Violent extremist attacks that have led to the displacement of over half-a-million people and more than 1,300 civilian deaths in northern Mozambique in recent years decreased in January as government forces try to expel Islamic rebels from the Cabo Delgado province.
By Patrick Goodenough | February 11, 2021 | 4:34am EST
Refugees in a displaced persons camp in Goma, Democratic Republic of Congo. (Photo by Thomas Lohnes/Getty Images)
(CNSNews.com) – The Trump administration’s refugee policies led to an increased proportion of Christians among those resettled in the United States – but because overall refugee numbers were reduced so significantly, far fewer followers of the world’s most persecuted religious faith were resettled during the Trump years than previously, advocates told the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom on Wednesday.
Between fiscal year 2016 and fiscal year 2020, the number of refugees admitted to the U.S. from the 50 countries on the Open Doors USA annual list of the world’s worst persecutors of Christians dropped by 83 percent – from 16,714 to 2,811 – Jenny Yang, senior vice president of advocacy and policy at World Relief, told a USCIRF hearing on “Refugees
Christian Persecution: 2021 World Watch List vcyamerica.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from vcyamerica.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.