July 6, 2025
Victory Christian Center in North Carolina led 700 inmates in worship and baptism at a prison outreach on July 5, 2025. The event, held at Alexander Correctional Institution, offered spiritual renewal, with volunteers providing Bibles and counseling.
A Kenyan Christian teacher in Nairobi launched a free literacy program for slum children on July 3, 2025. Her church-funded initiative teaches 50 kids to read using Bible stories, fostering hope and education.
In Poland, a youth group restored a 200-year-old chapel in Krakow on July 4, 2025. The volunteers, inspired by their faith, raised funds and worked weekends to preserve the historic site, drawing community praise.
A Filipino Christian fisherman in Cebu survived a typhoon on July 2, 2025, after praying during a storm. He credited his Bible, clutched during the ordeal, for guiding him to safety, inspiring his village to hold a thanksgiving mass.
In Pakistan, a Christian sanitation worker was beaten to death by Muslim colleagues in Lahore on July 3, 2025. The attack, followed his refusal to work beyond his shift, highlighting ongoing discrimination against Christian minorities in low-wage jobs.
Egyptian authorities arrested 15 Coptic Christians in Minya on July 4, 2025, for protesting the demolition of an unlicensed church. The arrests, amid clashes with security forces, reflect tensions over Christian worship sites, with no charges.
In India, Hindu nationalists attacked a Christian prayer meeting in Uttar Pradesh on July 2, 2025, injuring five. The mob accused attendees of forced conversions, a claim police are investigating. The incident follows rising anti-Christian violence.
China’s government shut down a house church in Shandong on July 5, 2025, confiscating Bibles and detaining three leaders. The raid targeted unregistered Christian gatherings, part of a broader crackdown on religious activities.
A Christian school in Brazil faced vandalism in São Paulo on July 3, 2025, with anti-Christian graffiti and broken windows. Local police are investigating, suspecting a hate crime, amid growing secular pushback against evangelical institutions.
In Iraq, a Chaldean Christian family was forcibly displaced from their Mosul home on July 4, 2025, by militias. The incident, underscores ongoing threats to Christian minorities in Nineveh Plains, despite government pledges to protect them.
In Somalia, al-Shabaab militants executed three Christian converts in Mogadishu on July 3, 2025. The public killings, reported by International Christian Concern, followed the group’s discovery of their secret Bible study, highlighting the extreme risks faced by underground Christian communities in the region.
A Christian orphanage in Haiti was looted by gangs in Port-au-Prince on July 4, 2025. The facility, housing 30 children, lost food and medical supplies. Missionaries are seeking international aid to relocate the children.
In Vietnam, police detained a Hmong Christian pastor in Dak Lak province on July 2, 2025, for holding unauthorized prayer meetings. His church was demolished, and 10 congregants were fined, reflecting ongoing restrictions on ethnic minority Christians.
A Christian charity in Lebanon opened a shelter for displaced Christian families in Beirut on July 5, 2025. The facility, supported by local churches, provides food and medical care amid escalating regional conflict.
In Nigeria, Boko Haram kidnapped 12 Christian women from a farming community in Borno State on July 3, 2025. Security forces are searching, but no rescues have been reported, underscoring persistent threats to Christians.
The UK’s Methodist Church adopted a pro-life stance on July 1, 2025, urging members to advocate against abortion law liberalization. The decision, made at its annual conference, aims to protect unborn life.