Iran (MNN) – Protests which began on December 28 have since subsided in Iran. These protests, the largest the country has experienced in decades, began as a shout against economic struggles and a call for the government to care more about the people inside the country than out of it.
Iran’s Call for Help
The protests popped up across Iran in 80 cities. The results? More than 1,000 people have been arrested and 22 people are dead. NBC News reports that the leaders of the protests who are in custody could face reprimands as extreme as capital punishment.
But, it seems the time for reining in unrest through forceful means may have ended. The social climate surrounding the protests has been building for a while and doesn’t seem like it’s about to go away.
SAT-7’s Vice President for ministry Partnerships Dennis Wiens shares, “There’s been years of frustration. There’s been poor economic opportunity. People are growing more and more frustrated.
“And, you know, regardless of where you are around the world– you want meaning, you want purpose, you want significance in life. And I think we’re seeing a symptom today of a lack of that opportunity. And people search for hope and when you live in a hopeless situation economically and stuff, you become frustrated.”
Caught in the Middle
Despite being non-political, SAT-7—a satellite television ministry to the Middle East and North Africa—has been caught in the crosshairs of the recent Iranian protests. In trying to contain the protests, the Iranian government also blocked multiple ways that SAT-7 PARS communicates with viewers.
“They’re blocking some of the internet access,” Wiens explains. “They’re blocking some of the apps like Telegram App, and that’s very important to SAT-7 PARS broadcast because we use the Telegram App for distribution of content and for follow up and for encouragement and to distribute some of our programming.”
While the government has blocked access to the internet and social media sites in order to cut people off from planning larger organized protests, it’s also cut off Iranian Christians from communicating with Sat-7. And in times of unrest, young believers are sure to have questions needing answers.
However, it is currently impossible to block satellite television, which means SAT-7 can still air broadcasts and the Gospel message into homes across Iran.
“Sat-7’s vision is to see a growing church and not only a growing church, but a church that’s contributing to its culture and its society,” Wiens shares. “And so as everybody in the country is given economic opportunity, it impacts the religious groups.”
How to Help
So please, pray for the Iranian Church and church leaders as they confront the realities of the present time. Pray for this app blockade to end and for the public and international pressures to keep these apps from being blocked in the future. And finally, pray for the Gospel’s work in Iran.
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*Iran is currently ranked #10 on Open Doors USA’s 2018 World Watch List (WWL). The WWL is a ranking of the top 50 countries where Christian persecution is most severe.