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Earlier this year on Good Friday, a man entered Mar Girgis Church in Alexandria, Egypt, and stabbed one worshipper to death and wounded two others. He then went to another church and stabbed three other Christians.

The events in Alexandria were a reminder of the, at best, tenuous status of Christians in the Islamic world.

The Egyptian government immediately dismissed the possibility that animus toward Christians played a role in the attacks. Egypt's Interior Ministry said that the attacker suffered from "psychological disturbances." How convenient.

Egyptian Christians, known as Copts, did not buy it, and for good reason: Police officials had a different version, announcing that "three men had been arrested in four simultaneous church assaults." According to the police, these assaults had killed one and injured another seventeen.

That sure sounds like a coordinated attack to me. The rest of the article is at www.breakpoint.org.

2006-08-24 19:48:14 · 10 answers · asked by danhowell_diana 2 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

CBS News put it this way: The Egyptian government has a history of "[playing] down incidents that can be perceived as sectarian in nature." By "sectarian," it means violence against Christians.

This isn't the only manifestation of the Copts' second-class status. Copts, who constitute at least 10 percent of Egypt's population, are discriminated against in employment, especially in government. And to add insult to injury, they face "severe restrictions" when it comes to building or repairing their churches.

The Copts aren't the only besieged ancient Christian community in the Islamic world. Iraq's Christian community, often called Assyrians or Chaldeans, dates back to at least the second century. If any group has an historical claim to their part of Iraq, they do.

Yet sadly, an increasing number of Iraqi Christians have concluded that "there is no future" for them in Iraq.

2006-08-24 19:48:57 · update #1

According to Lawrence Kaplan of the New Republic, "Sunni, Shia, and Kurd may agree on little else, but all have made sport of brutalizing their Christian neighbors." Christians "routinely disappear from the sidewalks of Baghdad;" others are kidnapped and held for ransom. They are, as Kaplan puts it, "today's victims of choice."

Since, as one Christian put it, "we have no militia to defend us," and neither Iraqi nor Americans officials are willing to protect them, Christians are leaving their ancestral home.

Christians in other Islamic countries are treated even worse. In countries like Saudi Arabia, Christians must practice their faith in secret. While being a Christian, in and of itself, isn't illegal, saying or doing something that lets others know it is. And, as we witnessed with Abdul Rahman in Afghanistan, conversion from Islam to Christianity is a crime punishable by death, as it is in many parts of the Islamic world.

2006-08-24 19:49:48 · update #2

The Islamic world's treatment of its Christian minority raises crucial questions for our effort to export democracy as a way to combat terrorisman effort I support. But if democracy means anything, it means the protection of fundamental human rights like freedom of religion. So long as Christians remain targets of religious persecution in the Islamic world, not only will there be no future for Christians; there will be no future for true democracy, either. Our government and Christians must keep up the pressure.

2006-08-24 19:50:24 · update #3

10 answers

True Christianity is not easy. Many people who claim to be Christians contradict it by leading sinful, godless lives, for example, smoking, drinking etc. Those false ''Christians'' are the ones who cause all this trouble, not the true ones!

2006-08-24 19:51:07 · answer #1 · answered by Echo Forest 6 · 2 2

Christianity is NOT SUPPOSED TO BE easy. It's a test of your faith everyday. Come on, don't you think you should EARN your way into heaven where there is eternal love and peace. Christians will always be persecuted for their beliefs. And tragic things will happen but when you have true faith, you know it is all for a reason.

2006-08-24 19:55:39 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

Well said, I thought my life was hard before but since giving my life to Christ it has become even harder it seems I fit in no where and i would do it again God bless and Praise the Lord www.godsarmyonearth.com

2006-08-24 19:59:41 · answer #3 · answered by working4jc1 2 · 1 1

There is Bad in all Religions
Bad in all Races
Bad all over the World

2006-08-24 19:58:16 · answer #4 · answered by snuggels102 6 · 2 0

Who said it was easy? It could cost you your life.

Ask Martin Luther King...

2006-08-24 20:00:09 · answer #5 · answered by Tish-a-licious 3 · 1 0

Too much preaching, too little question. No one should use this place as a pulpit, not the religious or those compaigning AGAINST religion.

2006-08-24 19:52:37 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 3

its easy to become a christian
http://www.maxpages.com/faithfinder

but it is not an easy life

2006-08-24 19:53:25 · answer #7 · answered by aguyinthewoods 4 · 1 1

sounds like you're confused.
the attack is coming from within your mind.
how can you escape that?

IF YOU LIKE WE CAN GO TO LAS VEGAS AND HANG OUT.
EVERYONE ALLOWED

2006-08-24 20:01:06 · answer #8 · answered by getit 4 · 1 2

I'm with GETIT! Let's roll!

2006-08-24 20:17:12 · answer #9 · answered by Spookshow Baby 5 · 0 1

I'm so glad I'm not a Christian.

Life is so much better.

2006-08-24 19:51:04 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 4

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