Pray God that it may become true!!!
Taken from Christianity Today:
http://www.christianitytoday.com/gleanings/2017/january/us-missionary-may-get-russia-evangelism-law-overturned.html
US Missionary May Get Russia’s Anti-Evangelism Law Overturned
After 32 cases, lawmakers review Yarovaya restrictions on religion. Top courts could follow.
[ posted 1/24/2017 09:23AM ]
One Sunday morning in August, three policemen came to
Don Ossewaarde’s home in Russia, where the Baptist missionary from
Illinois was holding his weekly Bible study.
“Afterwards, they took me to the police station and
charged me with conducting missionary activities in violation of a new
law that took effect on July 20, 2016,” Ossewaarde wrote. “At a court hearing, I was found guilty and sentenced to pay a fine of 40,000 rubles, which is over $600.”
Ossewaarde was snagged by Russia’s new anti-terrorism
law that President Vladimir Putin approved last summer. The “Yarovaya
law” calls for tighter restrictions on missionaries and evangelism, and has resulted in at least 32 prosecutions since it went into effect in July.
But now that law might be getting a second look.
Ossewaarde appealed his case three times, and has worked
his way up to Russia’s Supreme Court, where his attorneys hope the case
will be heard in the next few months. He also plans to appeal to the
Constitutional Court; if judges accept the case, the consequences could
be immense.
“This makes Ossewaarde's case the first under the
‘anti-missionary’ amendment to reach this level in the Russian courts,
and the first to issue a challenge to the legislation itself,” Forum 18 reported.
“The Constitutional Court, if it accepts the appeal, will examine
whether the amendment contravenes the provisions of the Russian
Constitution.”
It wouldn’t be the only review. Last week, a working
group created by the Duma, Russia’s legislative assembly, began to
review the Yarovaya law, reported the Religious Liberty Prayer Bulletin. Putin conceded in September during elections that the unpopular law may need to be “adjusted to not put people in a difficult position.”
Those difficult positions include:
- being charged for not using a church’s full name on phone bills.
- allowing children onto a playground within hearing distance of sermons.
- handing out New Testaments on a train.
All are accusations that have been made against
Protestants under the new law, reported Forum 18 in its analysis of all
cases thus far.
Officially, the Yarovaya law requires missionaries to
have permits, makes house churches illegal, and limits religious
activity to registered church buildings, among other restrictions.
Individuals who disobey can be fined up to $780, while organizations can
be fined more than $15,000.
The law has drawn protests from the Protestant Churches of Russia, as well as the European Evangelical Alliance and USCIRF (the US Commission on International Religious Freedom).
But the application of the law has been seen as “a very
huge question mark,” as Slavic Gospel Association communications manager
Joel Griffith told Mission Network News after the law’s passage last summer.
Months later, there is still no clear answer.
Missionaries can only operate as formal representatives
of state-recognized religious associations. But not having written proof
of that has been evidence of both innocence and guilt, according to
Forum 18.
“Whether such cases end in conviction or acquittal
appears to rest on, firstly, the ability of police or prosecutors to
link the defendant with a particular association, and secondly, whether
the judge decides to uphold an individual's constitutional right to
share beliefs as a private citizen,” Victoria Arnold reported for Forum
18.
The Yarovaya law also does not clearly define religious
activity—whether that be individual interaction, or open concerts, or
Bible studies in a home.
Of the 32 people that have been charged so far, 5 had their cases dropped before making it to trial, Forum 18 reported. Five more were acquitted, leaving 18 convicted in the 23 trials that have taken place so far.
Many were Protestants, including five Pentecostals, two Baptists, two Seventh-day Adventists, and four other Protestants.
Though several Protestant charges were dropped for legal
or technical reasons (including the charges against a man believed to
be sharing on behalf of the Gideons),
only one has been overturned. Pentecostal pastor Andrei Matyuzhov
successfully argued that he had authorization from a group called New
Generation, and that the religious service in his home was for friends
and family.
The religious aspects of the law are widely seen as a gesture of solidarity from the Kremlin to the Russian Orthodox Church.
“The Russian Orthodox Church is part of a bulwark of
Russian nationalism stirred up by Vladimir Putin,” David Aikman, history
professor and foreign affairs expert, told CT in July. “Everything that
undermines that action is a real threat, whether that’s evangelical
Protestant missionaries or anything else.”
However, earlier this month the Orthodox church’s top
Moscow lawyer did state that a court’s decision to fine the Salvation
Army and destroy its improperly marked publications—including 40 Bibles
and hundreds of songbooks and hymnals—was a “great overreach.”
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Sunday, January 22, 2017
Yarovaya law is only the old Czarist persecution of Evangelical Baptism
http://spirithismouth.blogspot.it/2017/01/yarovaya-law-is-only-old-czarist.html
Yarovaya law is only the old Czarist persecution of Evangelical Baptism
http://spirithismouth.blogspot.it/2017/01/yarovaya-law-is-only-old-czarist.html
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