President Barack Obama has affirmed his faith and spoken out on the
peril of those enduring religious persecution in his speech at the
annual National Prayer Breakfast in Washington DC.
He called for the release of two prisoners who are currently
imprisoned for their beliefs, urging North Korea to release American
Christian missionary Kenneth Bae and Iranian-American Pastor Saeed
Abedini.
Bae was motivated to show compassion to the people of North Korea by
contributing to their economy in the form of tourism, and guided at
least 15 tour groups, mostly made up of Americans and Canadians, into
North Korea.
He was arrested in November 2012, accused of hostile acts against the state, and sentenced to 15 years of hard labour.
President Obama also urged Iran to release Christian Pastor Saeed
Abedini, an Iranian-American Christian pastor who is now in one of
Iran's most dangerous prisons.
Abedini is a former Muslim who converted
to Christianity in 2000.
In Iran, Muslim converts to Christianity suffer
discrimination in the hands of Christian authorities, and are not
allowed to worship together with other Iranian Christians.
Abedini and wife Naghmeh together became prominent in the Iranian
house church movement, in which Christians meet in unofficial
gatherings.
With the election of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in 2005, the government
began to crack down on this movement, and the Abedinis moved to the
United States.
On a previous visit to Iran, Abedini had been detained by the Iranian
authorities and released only after signing a statement saying he
agreed to stop church house activities in the country.
However, on a visit in 2012 he was formally arrested on charges of
undermining national security and sentenced to eight years in prison.
Obama said the US would continue to stand for the rights of all
people around the world to practise their faith "in peace and freedom".
"As we build the future we seek, let us never forget those who are persecuted today, among them Americans of faith," he said.
"We pray for Kenneth Bae, a Christian missionary who's been held in
North Korea for 15 months, sentenced to 15 years of hard labor. His
family wants him home. And the United States will continue to do
everything in our power to secure his release because Kenneth Bae
deserves to be free.
"We pray for Pastor Saeed Abedini. He's been held in Iran for more
than 18 months, sentenced to eight years in prison on charges relating
to his Christian beliefs. And as we continue to work for his freedom,
today, again, we call on the Iranian government to release Pastor
Abedini so he can return to the loving arms of his wife and children in
Idaho."
The President's statement comes just days after Reverend Patrick J
Mahoney of the Christian Defense Coalition spoke with White House Press
Secretary Jay Carney about Abedini's plight.
The American authorities have been criticised in the past for failing
to press the release of the prisoners, and many were encouraged by
Obama's words.
Reverend Rob Schenck, of the Evangelical Church Alliance said, "This
is the breakthrough so many have hoped for, prayed for, and worked for,
for so long. This call by the President needed to happen. We are
enormously relieved to hear it and thank the President for taking a risk
in saying it publicly."
First Lady Michelle Obama and Vice-President Joe Biden also attended
the annual gathering along with foreign dignitaries, including President
Michel Martelly from Haiti and President Bujar Nishani from Albania.
Representative Janice Hahn and Representative Louie Gohmert co-chaired
this year's breakfast.
Open Doors USA President and chief executive Dr David Curry was also encouraged by President Obama's speech.
"With the number of martyred Christians almost doubling last year
from 1,201 to 2,123, according to Open Doors researchers, it is past due
for a new focus in the State Department and our entire government to
support the value of religious freedom worldwide and in our own
country," he said.
Curry adds that Open Doors USA has been encouraging President Obama
to quickly name a qualified person to fill the important position of
Ambassador of International Religious Freedom at the State Department.
Obama said during the event that he would make that appointment a
priority.
In his speech, the President also affirmed his Christian faith and the difference it has made to his life.
He said: "So here we put aside labels of party and ideology, and
recall what we are first: all children of a loving God; brothers and
sisters called to make His work our own. But in this work, as Lincoln
said, our concern should not be whether God is on our side, but whether
we are on God's side.
"And here we give thanks for His guidance in our own individual faith
journeys. In my life, He directed my path to Chicago and my work with
churches who were intent on breaking the cycle of poverty in hard-hit
communities there.
"And I'm grateful not only because I was broke and the church fed me,
but because it led to everything else. It led me to embrace Jesus
Christ as my Lord and Savior."