The Church In Iran - Persecution And Growth!
Since the Islamic Revolution of 1979,
the mullahs of Iran have maintained a stranglehold on the country at every
level, and the past decade has seen an increasingly strict crackdown on
religious freedom in the theocratic nation. The biggest threat to the absolute
rule of Islam in Iran? Christianity.
A few churches have been registered and
monitored while others were forced to shut down. Bibles are routinely
confiscated, and their owners fined or jailed. Public practice of Christianity,
including weddings, has been met with arrests and violence. But despite the
desperate attempts of the Islamic regime in Tehran to stamp out it out, Iran
now leads the world in the growth of Christianity.
In 2017, Operation World reported that the number of Christians in Iran
saw a 19.6% rise in 2016 alone. Elam Ministries, whose goal is to expand the
Church throughout Iran and beyond, reports that in the late 90s, there may have
been as few as 2,000 to 5,000 Christians, but that number has risen to an
estimated 300,000 to 1 million now. There is significant uncertainty
around that exact figure because as the Islamic government of Iran has
persecuted Christians and shut down churches, the growth has come from
so-called "house churches".
Thousands upon thousands of smaller worship services in homes across
Iran have fueled an incredible groundswell of Christian faith unlike few other
places in the world. So why is Christianity growing in Iran, a country that
notoriously ranks 8th for persecution of Christians? One factor is the
corruption and failure of the Iranian government. The Mullahs hold power and
administer the country according to the principles of Islam. Thus, when the
economy falters, when corruption is exposed time and time again, when poverty
persists, when crime rises and when Iran lags behind the region in development,
Iranians associate these failures to the rule of Islam.
If Islam as a political, judicial and social system is followed
completely and society suffers, it is only logical to conclude that Islam is
not perfect. This doubt has opened the door to the Gospel and allowed Muslims
in Iran to open their hearts to Jesus. Apostasy by Iranian Muslims can carry
the death penalty, as can the vague crime of "insulting the Prophet".
The Islamic regime has declared house churches to be illegal gatherings,
actively searches for former-Muslims to imprison and has begun widely to
interpret the practice of other faiths as "insulting the
Prophet".
Despite this tightened grip on the population, the Church still grows,
as contrasted with Iraq, where the Christian population has dwindled from 1.3
million just 15 years ago to under 300,000 today. Iran's Christian population
is projected by CCM Ministries to grow to as many as 7 million by the year
2020. CCM Ministries has been at the epicenter of the house church movement in
Iran and its founder Mani Erfan calls the resurgence of Christianity an
"awakening". "It's an astronomical increase, and it's been
predominantly young people. The youth have been restless and have looked toward
an alternative to the regime and Islam. It's become a counter-revolution to the
Iranian Revolution."
To the youth of Iran, Western culture and Christianity represent a
powerful attraction away from the culture of repression and deprivation of the
Islamic Mullahs. Millions may now accept Christianity, a religion of faith and
of hope, as salvation from Islam. Though the numbers of converts may be
difficult to pinpoint precisely, there is no doubt that the tremendous growth
of Christianity in the Islamic Republic of Iran has the potential dramatically
to reshape the geopolitics not only of Iran but of the entire Middle East
region.
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