As promised from my last post, I will discuss in some detail the world affairs that have attracted my attention over the past month or so. But first a quick side step into some personal stuff worth sharing with everyone.
I have just started my final semester of the Postgraduate Diploma of the Master of Teaching (Secondary), and will be teaching at Vermont Secondary College. I will again be teaching German, as it is very difficult to obtain ESL places in most schools. Much as I would have loved to do a TESOL placement, I relish any chance to practice my German.
The other exciting bit of news is that
And so on to the main section now. I will begin with the situation in Syria. This has developed into a crisis which will have far-reaching implications for the world, not just the immediate Middle Eastern region. This will be the case regardless of who emerges "victorious".
In the best-case scenario, all parties would emerge out of this crisis as winners rather than losers. But until Jesus Christ returns to establish His kingdom, our fallen human nature dictates that we will never see fair rule, true equality or absolute justice in our lifetimes. That shouldn't stop us from striving for it though, as the Bible instructs Christians to pray in the Lord's Prayer:
Your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven (Matthew 6:10 ESV)If the way the Lord Jesus Christ described things in Matthew is anything to go by, we are getting very close to the Last Days before Judgement:
While famine has again struck Africa, this time in the western partAnd you will hear of wars and rumors of wars. See that you are not alarmed, for this must take place, but the end is not yet. For nation will rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom, and there will be famines and earthquakes in various places. All these are but the beginning of the birth pains. (Matthew 24:6-8 ESV)
Anyway, back to the Syria crisis. I won't waste your time going into all the details of what has happened in Syria, as it will take up too much space. However, the Huffington Post has published every week a digest of the crisis, where you can get a summary of what has been going on.
It is a sad fact that innocent civilians have lost their lives as they get caught in the civil war crossfire between government forces and rebels, but my focus is on how the crisis has been reported in the Western media. They have framed the Al-Assad government as the guilty party, and they're probably right.
| The St. Elias Maronite Church in Aleppo. Taken from Wikimedia Commons |
Although Russia and China have outraged many in the West for vetoing proposed United Nations (UN) sanctions, it is important that we don't condemn without understanding their attitudes. Again, I don't have time or space to go into all this, but it is worth looking through in your own time. Just google something like "Russia stance on Syria" or "China stance on Syria".
Something worth noting about Aleppo is that it has a significant Christian minority. Wikipedia says the Christian population there is around 12 per cent, but a Syrian-American called Ehsani from the Syria Comment blog has calculated it to be less than 4 per cent! Regardless of the number, please remember them in your prayers!
Now to talk about Egypt. My primary concern with that country, in light of last year's Arab Spring, has been the rise of the Muslim Brotherhood. Egypt is nominally a secular country; its official title is the Arab Republic of Egypt (as opposed to Islamic Republic) and official population figures put the Muslim population at approximately 90 per cent.
In case you didn't know, Egypt has not always been a Muslim country. From about the 4th century AD until the Islamic conquest of Egypt in 640, Egypt was actually a Christian country, at least in name. Today, Christians in Egypt make up 5 to 10 per cent of the population, and most of them belong to the Coptic Orthodox denomination. Over the centuries, and especially since Gamal Abdel Nasser's coup d'état in 1952, the Copts and other Christians in Egypt have faced increased persecution, mostly from militant Islamists.
However, most Muslims haven't had it easy either. During the regimes of Nasser and Mubarak, the Muslim Brotherhood were severely restricted in their activities until Mubarak's downfall last year. The recent election of Mohammad Morsi in Egypt's first democratic elections has concerned Christians and secularists alike, even though Morsi has said that he will be "a president for all Egyptians".
| President Morsi (centre) with Field Marshal General Tantawi (left) at a medal ceremony at a military base (AP Photo/Mohammed Abd El Moaty, Egyptian Presidency) |
However, Egypt's military elite retain much political influence, and from what I last heard about the situation in Egypt, Morsi and his comrades are locked in a struggle to reconvene parliament after it was dissolved by the Supreme Constitutional Court in June.
One of the keys to resolve the conflict will be the establishment of a new constitution which both parties can hopefully negotiate sooner rather than later. Then they need to attend to more important matters, such as providing jobs for Egypt's millions of young people.
I have already mentioned that we need to remember the Christians of Aleppo in your prayers. In the same way we need to remember to pray for our Christian brothers and sister in Egypt, and indeed throughout the Middle East. I thank God that He has preserved His people in Egypt for the last 1400-odd years, and can preserve them for another 1400 years, if He wants to.
I don't think I have room left to talk about Greece or Spain. I guess that will have to be for another post.
Cheers, and enjoy the Olympics!
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