North Korea has been the most dangerous place to follow Jesus since 2002. But itâs certainly not the only country where Christians face extreme persecution. In many countries â including Eritrea, Iran, Afghanistan and Somalia â secret believers know that they could be imprisoned, tortured or even killed if their faith is discovered.
âIf youâre arrested as a believer â in most cases, your life is over,â says Brother Simon, who has supported North Korean Christians through networks in China for many years. Like everyone involved in this work, it wouldnât be safe to use his real name. âYou will be sent to a detention centre and interrogated and tortured for a few months. If you survive that prison and arenât executed, they will usually take you to a labour camp for political prisoners. Nobody is ever released from these camps.â
And itâs not just you. Every member of your family would be found guilty âby associationâ, and face the same punishment.
When you think about being a Christian from countries like North Korea, Eritrea or Iran, it seems almost impossible. And persecution is increasing. But, miraculously, so is the church. And you can be part of what God is doing to bring hope and life to believers who are following Jesus no matter the cost.
Across the river from North Korea, in China, Open Doors field workers run secret safe houses for North Korean Christians who have managed to escape. Through secret networks in China, theyâre also able to provide vital food and spiritual support to more than 90,000 North Korean believers. Thatâs thanks to you, and the ongoing gifts and prayers of Open Doors supporters like you. Without your help, many more believers would die.
Peter and Matthew â again, not their real names â are among the extremely courageous Open Doors workers who work with North Korean believers. Their roles are very dangerous, but knowing they are supported by you gives them encouragement and strength.
âMy work is to meet North Koreans whoâve already heard of Jesus,â says Peter. âTo help them survive the North Korean system if they go back, I provide them with spiritual and physical help. This helps the underground church to preserve her faith from within North Korea.â
Matthew is very aware that he and Peter are putting their lives on the line. He hears many stories about Christian workers who are killed â even outside North Korea. In China, North Korean secret agents often track down and murder Christian missionaries. Can you imagine that feeling â of never being quite safe?
âOnly some of these incidents are reported on the news,â Matthew says. âWhen I hear these things, Iâm terrified. Iâm sure the missionaries who were killed thought, âIâll be fine.â But they were killed. And it can happen to me. Those fears surround me from time to time.
âWithout your prayers, I cannot carry out this mission. Through your prayers, God pours out His grace.â
âEven as they go through tribulations and pain, North Korean Christians still look to God and pray to God,â says Peter. âWe need to remember our brothers and sisters there. We must continue this work until North Korea is restored and overflows with holy worship and praise!â
Matthew agrees: âMy true hope is â if God allows â that we, as a global church, are able to connect with North Korean believers. I believe we can help them. They can also share their testimonies with us. Thatâs what being âone body of Christâ is all about.â
Brother Simon has supported North Korean believers for many years. Here, he explains what life is like for Christians in the most dangerous country in the world.
Q: How are North Korean Christians surviving during Covid?
Most North Korean Christians are already poor. There are often food shortages and, during the pandemic, food prices have quadrupled. A kilo of rice costs multiple monthsâ salary. North Koreans call Covid-19 the âghost diseaseâ. They are usually malnourished already, and many die quickly. Some just fall dead on the ground.
On top of this, Christians need to hide their faith. We even know stories of couples who were both secret Christians, but only found out years into their marriage.
Q: Is it easy to escape to China?
Itâs much more dangerous nowadays than in the 1990s. People used to swim across the river separating North Korea from China, or even walk across in winter. Now the border is much more heavily guarded on both sides. You need to spend thousands of dollars on bribes, and even then you donât have a guarantee. Often, the soldiers have a quota: they need to arrest a certain number of border-crossers.
Once youâre in China, youâre illegal and can be arrested. Many women are trafficked into marriages with Chinese men. Thatâs an awful fate, but still better than staying in North Korea, many say. Christians come to China so they can receive biblical teaching and fellowship, as well as food. Amazingly, many believers choose to return home to North Korea.
Q: What is your vision for the North Korean church?
Four words: survive, strengthen, equip, go.
If youâre desperately hungry, you canât do ministry. The first concern of the persecuted church is survival. It doesnât stop there, however. Even though their circumstances are difficult, they want to be Godâs witnesses and reach their own people with the gospel.
God has miraculously opened the door for Christians to reach us in China. Your support means they receive food, medicines and other essentials. We strengthen and equip them with training in our safe houses, and broadcast radio programmes. We hope to double our reach in the coming years.
To Open Doors supporters, I say â thank you so much for your dedication. I have seen the church change because of your support. One North Korean believer said to me, about foreign brothers and sisters: âYou have never seen our faces and you donât know our names, but you love us.â
Please join with this prayer, written by a secret believer. Amazingly, she managed to smuggle it out of North Korea.
Lord! We give thanks to you that we have become the seed of the gospel. Thanks to You, we are the hope in the dry land that is North Korea. We thank You that we can sow seeds with tears in our eyes, while at the same time, we dream about the green pastures that Christ will lead us to.Â
Whether we live or die, we do it with our faithful fellow workers who walk faithfully on the same road as us. Thank you for these fellow workers, who have such a strong faith, a faith that is continuously refined by fire.Â
Please use us. We are Christâs Army and want to bring the gospel to the end of the world. We want to be Your witnesses and spread Your blessings. Let me be Your worker for the Glory! Hold my hands until I meet You! Let me be obedient wherever You lead me! Let me be Your joy, and a good Christian.
Lord! Donât you know everything about us? Donât you see everything thatâs in us? Lord! We love you! Lord! Thank you! I will follow you until I die! Amen.
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We support people who are beaten, tortured,
imprisoned, falsely accused, and hated simply for following Jesus.