New Report Warns of ‘Intensifying Intolerance Towards Christians In the West’

Kurt Mahlburg - 12 February 2024

All 168 incidents of intolerance towards Christians in the report were perpetrated by the governments of once-Christian, and supposedly still free, nations.

“It is shocking to see Western countries — the same ones we think of as free and open societies — take authoritarian measures against Christians simply trying to live out their faith.”

So says Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council, whose Center for Religious Liberty has just published its 2024 report on the state of religious freedom in the West.

Titled “Free to Believe?: The Intensifying Intolerance Towards Christians in the West”, the report — which the authors note is “far from exhaustive” — documents 168 incidents across 16 countries, all of which have taken place since the start of 2020.

“In the United Kingdom, Christians are being arrested for silently praying in their own heads outside of abortion facilities. In Germany, we see crackdowns on alternative faith-based forms of education. In the United States, Christian teachers and coaches are being fired for their beliefs about human sexuality, and Christians can no longer assume that their place of worship will not be targeted with violent action,” Perkins summarises.

“This report is a warning call.”

Alarmingly, the focus of the report was “government officials and entities targeting Christian churches, organizations, and individuals for prosecution or punishment based on their religious beliefs”. In other words, all 168 documented incidents were perpetrated by the governments of once-Christian, and supposedly still free, nations.

The report provides a shorthand summary of each incident, grouped by the country in which it occurred. Researchers compiled their data by analysing open-source documents, reports and media outlets.

Out of the four years examined by researchers (2020 to 2023), 2020 had the greatest number of incidents, in part due to Covid-19 restrictions that created new tensions between public health diktats and Christian leaders compelled by Scripture and conscience to continue meeting.

All three incidents relating to Australia fit this description, the most detailed of which concerned a Victorian pastor:

Pastor Paul Furlong of Christian Revival Church in Narre Warren, Victoria, was arrested and fined over 1,500 AUD for holding a worship service in violation of COVID-19 restrictions. Later, in May 2021, Furlong was arrested for violating his bail by announcing he would hold a church gathering despite continued COVID-19 restrictions. During his month-long imprisonment, Furlong was denied bail, and his Bible was confiscated for a week. Although he has since been released, Furlong is banned from social media.

A prayer meeting in Auckland, New Zealand, was likewise shut down by police for exceeding a 10-person gathering limit.

In Canada, where 38 incidents were documented, Covid-19 restrictions were the pretext for the majority of the crackdown, along with state support for transgender ideology that saw religious leaders and laypeople variously arrested and fired for protesting the sexualisation of children.

Among the latter was Canadian pastor Derek Reimer, who was “arrested for breaking orders following his previous arrest, which forbade him from being within 200 meters of any LGBTQ event”.

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