byFaith | 10.21.15
By Alan Dowd
A year
before America entered World War II, President Franklin Roosevelt shared his
vision of “a world founded upon four essential human freedoms”: freedom of
speech, freedom from fear, freedom from want and “freedom of every person to
worship God in his own way—everywhere in the world.” FDR asserted these
Four Freedoms in the context of a speech about “the democratic way of
life…being directly assailed in every part of the world” by a “new order of
tyranny.”
Today, it seems the civilized world is under assault from a disorder of tyranny
and terror. The enemies of religious freedom abound. But as a recent
State Department report reveals, some regimes are set
apart when it comes to government repression of religious freedom: North Korea,
China, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Sudan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Pakistan,
Burma, Russia and Bahrain. In addition, a Pew studyof government restrictions on religious freedom consigns
Egypt, Afghanistan and Syria to the worst-of-the-worst category.Here’s just a tiny sampling of how these regimes
smother religious freedom:
·
According to the U.S. Commission on International
Religious Freedom (USCIRF), the Iranian
government is guilty of “ongoing
and egregious violations of religious freedom, including prolonged detention,
torture and executions.” Iranian Christians are literally scourged for drinking
communion wine—80 lashes was the common punishment in 2013. Iranian authorities
“raid church services, harass and threaten church members, and arrest, convict
and imprison worshippers and church leaders.” According to the State
Department, the Iranian government “deems conversion from Islam to be apostasy”
(punishable by death);bars non-Muslims from engaging in public
religious expression; bans the Bahai faith from public pensions; and imprisons
Christian pastors for spreading “anti-regime propaganda.”
·
Shiite
theocrats and Sunni autocrats may have different interpretations of the Koran,
but the results are the largely same. Saudi Arabia is a place where “not a
single church or other non-Muslim house of worship exists,” where promoting
“unbelief” is a crime, where even private religious practice is illegal,
according to USCIRF. Saudi textbooks “teach hatred toward members of other
religions,” promote violence “against apostates” and label Jews and Christians
“enemies.”
·
China
ranks in the very worst level on USCIRF’s review. According to USCIRF, “Independent
Catholics and Protestants face arrests, fines and the shuttering of their
places of worship.” Tibetan Buddhists, Uighur Muslims, folk religionists and
Protestant house-church attenders are subjected to “jail terms, forced renunciations
of faith and torture in detention” as well as property destruction. According
to the State Department, Beijing fines individuals “for studying the Koran in
unauthorized sessions” and positions PRC flags on mosque walls “in the
direction of Mecca so prayers would be directed toward them.” Freedom House
reports that “hundreds of thousands” of religious adherents—many of them guilty
of “simply possessing spiritual texts in the privacy of their homes”—are
sentenced to forced labor.
·
Likewise, “Thousands of religious believers and their families are
imprisoned in penal labor camps” in North Korea, according to USCIRF, which adds,
“Individuals engaged in clandestine religious activity are arrested, tortured,
imprisoned and sometimes executed.”A
UN panel finds in North Korea a
“complete denial of the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion.”
·
The State Department reports Assad’s Syria carries out policies of
“killing, imprisonment, detention and the intentional destruction of property
on the basis of religion”; “restricts proselytizing and conversion”; and “does
not recognize the religious status of Muslims who convert to other religions.”
·
Sudan prohibits conversion from Islam, denies permits for churches
and demolishes houses of worship.
·
Tajikistan bars Muslim women from attending mosques and prohibits people
under 18 from public worship. Turkmenistan has carried out a systematic
campaign of “beatings and torture of persons detained for religious reasons.” In Uzbekistan, the government raids gatherings of religious
organizations and confiscates religious literature.
·
Burma tolerates violence against Christians and prohibits Muslim
land ownership.
·
Bahrain discriminates against Shiite Muslims in employment and government
services.
·
According
to USCIRF, religious freedom in Pakistan has “hit an all-time low due to
chronic sectarian violence” targeting Shiites, Christians, Ahmadis and
Hindus—actions for which the Pakistani government is not necessarily
responsible—and due to the fact that “the Pakistani government failed to
intervene effectively” to protect these groups—inaction for which the
government is very much responsible.
·
In Russia, blasphemy laws curtail “the freedoms of
religion, belief and expression,” according to USCIRF, which adds that Moscow
prosecutes Muslims without evidence, issues baseless fines against Protestant
churches, and denies legal status and permitting for Mormon, Armenian Catholic
and Muslim houses of worship.
Enemies
This litany
of abuse should matter to anyone who believes in freedom, human rights and the
dignity of man, which means it should matter to followers of Christ.
But this
assault on religious liberty isn’t just about values and ideals. It’s also about
national interests and international stability. After all, an annual index of failed
and failing states places 14 of the aforementioned 15 countries in its at-risk
or high-risk categories. Failed and failing states generate most of the world’s
worries—and trigger most of the world’s wars nowadays. For instance, the United
States has engaged in military operations in 9 of the bottom 13 failed states
over the past 20 years. (These countries are not failed states because the U.S.
intervened. Rather, the U.S. intervened because these failed states were
neglecting their people and/or destabilizing their neighbors.)Moreover, North Korea is technically still at war with the United
Nations (the 1953 agreement that stopped the Korean War was only an armistice).
Iran has been waging a proxy war against the U.S. since 1979 (from Beirut in 1983
to the Khobar Towers in 1996 to Iraq in the 2000s, well over 700 American
deaths can be traced to Iran’s agents). Russia
has attacked and annexed a sovereign neighbor without cause, setting Europe on
edge. China has claimed vast stretches of the South China Sea without legal
justification, setting Asia on edge. Sudan made common cause with al Qaeda in the 1990s.
Osama bin Laden was
found in Pakistan—hiding in plain sight.
That
serves as a reminder that some of today’s gravest threats to religious liberty
are not atheist nation-states like China and North Korea, but rather theocratic
non-state groups like al Qaeda, ISIS and the Taliban—groups that take
literally Muhammad’s injunction “to fight all men until they say, ‘There is no
god but Allah.’”
Consider what the Taliban did while in
power—and continues to do while trying to reclaim power: banishing girls from school and launching
poison-gas attacks against girls’ schools to terrify Afghan families back into
the darkness; ordering Hindus to wear
identity labels; beheading people for dancing; turning soccer stadiums into
execution chambers; burning people alive; imprisoning Christian missionaries;
allowing bin Laden to turn Afghanistan into a spawning ground for his global jihad.
ISIS (whose adherents are Sunni Muslim) has summarily
executed hundreds of Shiite Muslims; subjected
Yazidi and Christian women to mass-rape and sex slavery; orchestrated
mass-beheadings of Egyptian Christians; razed ancient Christian churches; and
targeted Assyrian Christians for abduction.
Limits
These movements
and regimes may be the real “axis of evil.” Religious liberty is the proverbial
canary in the coalmine of a society’s health. It doesn’t tell us everything
about a government or group, but it tells us enough.
University of Texas professor
William Inboden notes that “Every major war the United States has fought
over the past 70 years has been against an enemy that also severely
violated religious freedom.” He sees
a clear “correlation between religious persecution and national-security
threats.”
This isn’t to
suggest that America should go to war against every enemy of religious liberty.
But perhaps we shouldn’t cut deals with Tehran, take Putin at his word, draw
a line of moral
equivalence between Israel and Hamas, or avert our gaze
from the latter-day gulags in North Korea and China.Instead, policymakers should draw
attention—relentlessly and repeatedly—to assaults on religious liberty. “The
most essential element of our defense of freedom is our insistence on speaking
out for the cause of religious liberty,” President Ronald Reagan said, echoing
FDR. The purpose here is
not to shame the enemies of religious liberty—for the shameless cannot be
shamed—but rather to isolate them and offer a platform to their victims.
Nor is
this to suggest that religious freedom will cure all the world’s ills. It
won’t. After all, America and Taiwan and Brazil and South Africa respect
religious liberty yet still have problems. (As a matter of fact, even a bastion
of religious liberty like the U.S. sometimes veers off trackwhen it comes to balancing church and state.) Even so, a government that respects
religious liberty is healthier than a government that mandates or proscribes
religious activity. Such a government recognizes that there is something within
each person beyond the reach of the state. In other words, governments that
respect religious liberty recognize that there’s a limit to their power.
Regimes that have no
respect for religion, on the other hand, see no limits on their power. Since
they believe nothing is above the state, they can rationalize everything they
do in the name of the state or the fatherland or the revolution. Consider
Hitler, Stalin, Mao and the Kim dynasty. Regimes and groups at the opposite end
of the spectrum—those that see themselves as instruments of their god—end up at
the very same destination. Since they believe they are acting on behalf of
their god, they can rationalize everything they do in the name of their god.
Consider Imperial Japan, Iran, ISIS and al Qaeda.
Disciples
This subject of religious freedom is near to God’s heart. We
sometimes forget that Moses’ interaction with Pharaoh was primarily
about religious freedom. Speaking through Moses, the Lord declared, “Let my people go so that they
may hold a festival to me in the desert.”
Jesus interacted
with pagans and polytheists, politicians and priests. He talked—and listened—to
Roman generals and governors, rich men and tax collectors, beggars and lepers,
Jews and gentiles, Greeks and Samaritans, Sanhedrin officials and Syrophoenicians.
He had the power to make all of them bow to Him, but He never did. Instead, He
commended the centurion; listened to Pilate ramble on about truth and
authority; allowed the rich young ruler to walk away; healed a foreigner’s daughter, a pagan’s servant, a synagogue
leader’s child.
Jesus
lived among religious zealots and self-appointed holy men willing to kill to prove their piety. He could
have joined them or led them, but He never did. Instead, He practiced religious tolerance and modeled
religious liberty. Look at Luke 9. A Samaritan village refused to let Jesus stay there “because He was
heading for Jerusalem.” As one commentary explains, “Samaritans were
particularly hostile to Jews who were on their way to religious festivals in
Jerusalem” and often “refused overnight shelter for the pilgrims.” But Jesus
didn’t make them accept Him. In fact, when James and John asked “to call fire
down from heaven to destroy” those who dared not open their doors to Him,Jesus
rebuked His disciples and “went to another village.”
Jesus
offers not an ultimatum, but an invitation. He leaves it up to us to accept the
invitation. Importantly, disciple
means “one who accepts”—not one who submits. As Philip Yancey observes, “Our
respect in the world declines in proportion to how vigorously we attempt to
force others to adopt our point of view.”
For
evidence of this, look no further than the enemies of religious freedom: The
jihadists are fighting for a world where there is no faith but theirs, the
petty despots for a world where all faiths are supine and subordinate to the
state, the atheist autocrats for a world where there is no faith at all.
Today, as yesterday, God’s response to the tyrants and the terrorists is “Let
my people go.”