In Jesus’ Name 
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“This is my command: Love each other.”

Jesus Christ

 

A Voice for God’s Suffering and Persecuted Church

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In Jesus Name Ministries

PO Box 1059

Bristol, VA  24203

 Phone — 276-644-1089

Email—court@inJesusname.org

Information on this web site is gathered from our contacts, or from our visits “Behind the Gates of Hell.”  If news gathering agencies are used they will be sourced.

Indian Christians - The Outcasts Of India

The Dalits (untouchables), lepers, widows, orphans, and handicapped.

 

Every year when we visit India, I am blessed to visit our Christian brethren in over 20 city and village meetings.  These believers most often meet in someone’s apartment, a home, a thatched roof structure, and occasionally in a small functional concrete building where the pastor and his family also live.

 

In an area that we would consider the size of most American’s living rooms up to 100 people will crowd in and sit on the floor.  Often the meetings are held outside to accommodate more people.

 

These are some of the most tender and beautiful saints I have ever been with.  I am often reminded of Psalm 16 when I am so fortunate to be with these humble, prayerful, and godly believers.

 

“As for the saints who are in the land,

they are the glorious ones in whom is all my delight.”

 

Yet almost all these “glorious ones” of the Lord (over 95%), including their pastors, are considered by Indian society to be “untouchables” or “Dalits.”

 

In the words of India Christian leader, Z. Devasagayaraj, from Tamil Nadu:

 

“Most Dalits continue to live in extreme poverty, without land or opportunities for better employment or education.  With the exception of a minority who have benefited from India’s policy of quotas in education and government jobs.  Dalits are relegated to the most menial of tasks, as manual scavengers, removers of human waste and dead animals, leather workers, street sweepers, and cobblers.  Dalit children make up the majority of those sold into bondage to pay off debts to upper-caste creditors.  Dalit men, women, and children numbering in the tens of millions work as agricultural laborers for a few kilograms of rice or 15 to 35 rupees a day (this is not even $1 US ).

 

Even in these modern times, all over India the Dalits are still treated as Untouchables in the eyes of the elite and even of the ordinary people.  Having undergone three thousand years of slavery and discrimination, the Dalits find it nearly impossible to get out of this terrible trauma.  The general situation of Untouchables is miserable but it is all the more wretched in the case of those Untouchables who have become Christians because they now suffer severe discrimination in two ways - in society and in the Church.  We identify them as the Dalit Christians. They bear the stigma of untouchablity, a nightmare in every-day life.”

 

 

In every church in India you will find the overwhelming majority of the brethren to be from the “untouchables” and “low castes.”  

 

Gathering with these dear, dear saints, worshiping the Lord with them, are another forsaken people of India – the lepers, the handicapped, the widows, woman forsaken by their husbands, and the orphans.

 

THE DISABLED, LOW CASTE, THE LEPERS, AND UNTOUCHABLES.

 

Because of the historic and prevailing belief of Hinduism which affirms that a person’s station and circumstance of life is rooted in their past lives (their Karma), there is little or no help from society or government for these suffering people.  Karma teaches that if you are born disabled, or in a low caste, or are considered untouchable, or suffer some other misfortune this is the consequence of wicked behavior in your past lives. With few exceptions in India, only the Body of Christ offers the broken hearted, and the crushed of this world, comfort, hope, forgiveness, and help.

 

India has the highest number of lepers in the world.  Often in the churches you meet Christians, or those seeking the Lord, who evidence the devastating effects of leprosy.  It is also one of the last countries to stop the prevention of polio.  Throughout India, in the cities and towns you will see people literally walking on their hands, or pulling themselves along, or if they are fortunate, riding a hand peddled tricycle on the street.  These dear people are finding their way to Jesus Christ, and He is reaching out to them.

 

ORPHANS

Each church also has orphans needing care.  Many of these have one or both parents living, but the parents are too poor to care for them and they ask the pastors and Christian orphanages to provide care and an education for their children.

 

WIDOWS

Every church has widows. There is historic and ingrained discrimination against women in Hinduism, and particularly against a woman who is “low caste.”  And a woman who is widowed, even at a young age, or a woman whose husband deserts or divorces her, is considered ineligible for re-marriage.  She often has small children, and little or no formal education.  She is left to survive on her own. This I s a consequence of the teaching of Hinduism.  Before the influence of the gospel, if a woman’s husband died, they were often burned alive at their husband’s funeral. Sometimes they were thrown on the fire, and sometimes they would throw themselves into the flames of the funeral pier out of dread of living the rest of their life alone, and fear of being abused by other men.  This practice was called Sati.  William Carey, the great missionary to India in the 1800’s finally succeeded in having the then British government outlaw this practice.  Yet there remains today in India, great prejudice against a widow remarrying, and their lives are tragic.

 

THE CHRISTIANS OF INDIA HAVE OPENED THEIR ARMS.

 

The persecuted Christians of India, embracing the forgiveness and hope of Jesus Christ, accept and welcome these fellow “outcasts” offering them the gospel of Jesus Christ as Savior and Lord; offering their love, and as much assistance as they can muster from their own meager resources. Christ, through His church, has welcomed, the “outcasts of India.”

 

How tragic that the affluent Western church has ignored the abundant New Covenant teaching for us to reach out to, embrace, and help our struggling brethren; to “lay down our lives for our brethren.” 1 John 3:16-19.  If we were truly Biblical in our giving, we would be taking regular collections in our churches to help our brethren (see 2 Corinthians chapters 8 and 9).  This was the mission strategy of our Lord. He clearly told us in John’s gospel:

 

“By this all men will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another.”

 

If we ever hope to effectively reach the Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist, and Communist peoples, we must begin to not only “love the lost” but to also “love one another.” The lost of our world need to see us embracing and helping our brethren who are struggling, and have embraced Jesus Christ at great risk to themselves.  Then they will “know us by our love.”

 

Our brethren, the “outcasts of India,” need our love, encouragement, and help.  How important this must be to our Lord! It certainly is important to our brethren!!! We only need to read His and the Apostles repeated New Covenant emphasis on “loving one another,” “laying down our lives for our brethren,” and “bearing one another’s burdens.” John 15:17; 1 John 3:16; Galatians 6:2. an article on New Testament Giving

 

When you help one of the pastors listed with In Jesus’ Name Ministries we ask that the pastor use at least half of your gift for food, clothing, shelter, or medical care to help the poorest in their fellowship. (The only exception to this would be your sending a designated gift for a specific purpose such as a bicycle, a motorcycle, medical care, church construction, widows, orphans etc.  Then your gift would go entirely to the designated purpose)

 

Giving in the New Testament is not intended to be just for leadership and ministry, it is primarily meant to be for those in the Body of Christ, in the greatest need, of food, clothing, shelter, and medical care.

 

Please pray about helping the pastors and bible women of India. When you help you greatly encourage and help the Lord’s shepherds, evangelists, and pastors.  This is the most effective evangelism. India is a field ripe for harvest. Literally millions are coming to faith in Jesus Christ.  And you are helping the poorest of the poor - “the least of these, the Lord’s brethren.”

 

“…..I tell you the truth, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers of mine,

you did for me.'

 

"When you give a luncheon or dinner, do not invite your friends, your brothers or relatives, or your rich neighbors; if you do, they may invite you back and so you will be repaid.  But when you give a banquet, invite the poor, the crippled, the lame, the blind, and you will be blessed.  Although they cannot repay you, you will be repaid at the resurrection of the righteous."

 

The Lord Jesus Christ