Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Persecution Of Christians: Will It Get Worse?
Persecution Of Christians: Will It Get Worse?
May 10, 2025 5:32 PM

2014 was a terrible year for persecution of Christians. In Syria, North Korea and Somalia, Christians are routinely imprisoned and killed. In Iraq, 2014 saw the passage of a law requiring Christians to convert or pay an exorbitant tax. The other choice for Iraqi Christians is to flee.

Open Doors has been tracking persecution of Christians around the world for 60 years. They have just released their latest report, and it makes a grim prediction: 2015 may very well be the worst year for Christians since Open Doors began its work. David Curry, president and CEO of Open Doors, explains:

Even Christian-majority states are experiencing unprecedented levels of exclusion, discrimination and violence. The 2015 World Watch List reveals that a staggering number of Christians are ing victims of intolerance and violence because of their faith. They are being forced to be more secretive about their faith.

Curry says the work of Open Doors brings attention to areas of persecution and attempt to alleviate it, but also lets those being persecuted know they are not forgotten.

The report cites the Middle East as one of the most dangerous regions:

Violence against Christians by the Islamic State and other Islamic terrorist groups increased in countries like Iraq and Syria. More than 70 percent of Christians have fled Iraq since 2003, and more than 700,000 Christians have left Syria since the civil war began in 2011. Afghanistan and Pakistan have both increased in persecution.

Kenya, which had been ranked at 43 on the list of 50 worst countries, jumped to 19 in the latest report. Nigeria moved into the top 10 for the first time. India remains a place of grave danger for Christians, who face persecution from both extremist Islamic and Hindu forces.

North Korea has ranked first in Christian persecution for 13 consecutive years. It is estimated that more than half a million Christians reside in prison labor camps, and arbitrary executions mon.

You can view the World Watch List from Open Doors here.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Finding Sin and Grace On the Road to Character
“New York Times writer David Brooks’ new book, On the Road to Character, examines what it takes to create a virtuous life,” says Elise Hilton in this week’s Acton Commentary. “The author’s central question: Does a person of character focus solely on building on one’s strengths or does he confront and improve his weaknesses?” It is an interesting topic for a man who makes his living writing pithy, sometimes political, columns in a very secular newspaper. While Brooks is Jewish,...
Michigan Lawmakers Approve Legislation Allowing Adoption Refusals on Religious Grounds
Every year about 400,000 children spend time in our nation’s foster care system, with roughly 100,000 eligible for adoption. Yet despite this urgent need for parents, note Sarah Torre and Ryan T. Anderson, “various states have adopted policies that would require faith-based providers to place children with same-sex couples, in violation of some agencies’ deeply held beliefs that children deserve a mom and a dad—effectively forcing these agencies out of adoption and foster care service.” In a refreshing change from...
Corporate God-Flies Fail Miserably on 2015 Proxy Resolutions
The Manhattan Institute’s latest Proxy Monitor hit laptops this week, revealing the nature and source of the 2015 proxy resolutions. It seems the corporate “God-flies” at religious shareholder organizations such as As You Sow and the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility account for 29 percent of all shareholder resolutions submitted to the nation’s top 250 publically panies. This percentage is second only to the corporate gadflies – identified by the report’s author, James R. Copland, as “individuals and their family...
Underpopulation and the Value of Children
For the past hundred years, mon worry about population was that we’d soon have more people than the Earth could sustain. Today, we have the opposite concern: In the near future, there may not be enough people to support an increasingly aging population. To simply maintain its current population, a country needs the average number of children born to women in their country (over her lifetime) to be 2.1. Few industrialized e close to that replacement rate: Ireland (2.0), Australia...
Explainer: What You Should Know About the OPM Hack
What is the “OPM hack”? The “OPM hack” refers to a massive data breach in which hackers, believed to be based in China, acquired personnel records of federal employees from the Office of Personnel Management (OPM). What is the OPM? The OPM (Office of Personnel Management) serves as the human resource department for the federal government. Among other duties the agency conducts background investigations for prospective employees, issues security clearances, piles records of all federal government employees. How many records...
Isolation and Self-Sufficiency: The Logical Ends of Protectionism
When es to free trade, critics insistthat it hurts the American worker — kicking them while they’re down andslowly eroding munal fabric of mom-and-pops, longstanding trades, and factory towns. Whether es from a politician, labor union, or corporate crony, the messaging is alwaysthe same: Ignore thelong-term positive effects, and focus ontheCapitalist’s conquest of the Other. Trouble is, the basic logic of such thoughtleads straight back to the Self. I recently made this point as it pertains to immigration, arguing thatsuch...
New Wave Of Unaccompanied Minors Into U.S.?
The summer of 2014 saw an overwhelming amount of children making their way, illegally, across the southern U.S. border. Thousands of children and adolescents overwhelmed the Border Patrol and social service agencies. Are we gearing up to see the same type of event this summer? It’s beginning to look that way. We are not nearly at the numbers we were last year, but it looks like we are in the opening stages. We had two groups equal a little over...
#BringBackOurBoys Too
Boko Haram, the militant Islamist group in Nigeria, is infamous for kidnapping girls. Last year, everyone from Wall Street to Hollywood got in on the [ineffective] #BringBackOurGirls social media campaign after Boko Haram kidnapped dozens of Christian school girls. But what about the boys? Boko Haram has a pseudo-military arm. Which means they need soldiers. And they can’t recruit legitimately. That means they kidnap boys. Many are themselves victims of terror: child soldiers, abducted from their families and forced to...
The ‘Deeper Magic’ of Sphere Sovereignty
I was reading through Abraham Kuyper’s inaugural speech at the founding of the Free University in Amsterdam, in which he lays out his vision of “sphere sovereignty,” and this passage struck me as particularly noteworthy. It is reminiscent of the appeal that Aslan makes to the “Deeper Magic” wrought at the dawn of creation in Narnia (and by which, incidentally, he es the tyrannical claims to absolute sovereignty made by the White Witch): Sphere sovereignty defending itself against State sovereignty:...
Why Family Is Central To A Healthy Society
In this short video, Allan Carlson of the Howard Center for Family, Religion & Society describes the importance and centrality of the family to a health society. Families that work together in some endeavor tend to be healthier, are able to care for themselves and thus e the foundation of a sound economy and society. ...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved