|
30 March 2010:
Adrienne S. Gaines News - An Oklahoma-based
ministry that advocates for persecuted Christians
worldwide refutes an online connection with a militia
group accused of plotting an attack against law
enforcement officers.
The Voice of the Martyrs (VOM) said its staff did not
know the Hutaree militia group existed or that there was
a link to VOM on its Web site before several Hutaree
members were arrested Sunday in a three-state raid.
"We have not had any connection with this organization,"
VOM spokesman Todd Nettleton told Mission Network News.
"We do not have any contact with any member of this
organization. This is simply a situation where they put
a link to us on their Web site."
Federal investigators claim the Michigan-based Hutaree—which
says its name means "warriors of God"—planned to kill a
Michigan law enforcement officer then ambush the
officer's colleagues at the funeral, ABC News reported.
The Hutaree Web site says the group was "preparing for
the end time battles to keep the testimony of Jesus
Christ alive."
Nine of its members have been indicted in the alleged
murder plot. Eight were arrested Sunday, including
leader David Stone. The last, 21-year-old Joshua Stone,
surrendered Monday after a standoff with authorities.
VOM said it allows any individual or group to link to
its Web site in order to broaden awareness about the
persecution of Christians. But the group said e.
"While we understand that all are innocent until proven
guilty and wait for results of the legal process, we
want to clearly state that violence is not an acceptable
response to religious differences," VOM said in a
statement. "Our Christian brothers and sisters who have
suffered persecution in Jos, [Nigeria], and other places
do not advocate a violent response; they are not calling
us to take up arms or to provide them with weapons.
Instead they offer love and forgiveness to those who
attack them, in the hopes of representing Christ's love
and living out the gospel message."
Some are using the arrests to suggest that many
Christians are terrorists or extreme, which Nettleton
sees as an opportunity for believers.
"This is definitely an opportunity for the true
followers of Christ to step forward and say we do not
believe in violence, we do not believe in attacking
those who oppose us," he told Charisma. "So it's an
opporutnity for us to step up as Christians and live out
the example of Christ, which is also the example of our
persecuted brothers and sisters around the world."
VOM was founded in 1967 by Richard Wurmbrand, who spent
14 years in communist prisons in Romania for preaching
the gospel. The ministry said it seeks to serve the
persecuted church through practical and spiritual
assistance, while encouraging Christians in free nations
to support them through prayer and advocacy.
|