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World

Jan 22 2026

Pastor Son’s Trial and the Crisis in South Korea

A few thousand worshippers at last week’s Sunday service at Segero Church in the city of Busan, South Korea, sang loudly, “All my life, you have been faithful. All my life you have been so, so good …. I will sing of the goodness of God.” The song is appropriate for a congregation that has grown so dramatically from about 20 members a few decades ago to a 23-acre campus buzzing with life and activity. After the service, dozens of church members prepared free lunch for everyone who wished to stay, as they do every week.

This practice, an elder told me, makes it possible for the church to also offer meals for the wedding celebrations that take place at Segero Church nearly every weekend, at no charge to the marrying couples. It is an essential way for the church to address the crisis of the nation’s declining marriage and fertility rates, among the lowest in the world, though you would not know it from the hundreds of young people gathered at the stage to sing each service. Last year, the church also started a Christian school.

And yet, since August, the lead pastor of Segero Church has been in prison, accused by the government of election interference. I visited Pastor Son, hoping to encourage him. Instead, he encouraged me, and I mean that in the most literal sense of the word. He gave me courage, like he has for his three children, who advocate on his behalf; the elders and pastors of the church, some of whom are also being targeted by the state; and his wife, who spends most nights sleeping and praying at the church. Meanwhile, during the time he has been imprisoned, Pastor Son has written a book and is sharing the Gospel with his fellow inmates.

It may be that Pastor Son, in his zeal to speak out against the current administration’s progressive, socialist, and pro-LGBTQ platform, violated the letter of South Korean law. At best, that might merit a fine. Instead, he has been arrested, threatened with 16 charges, held in jail pending his trial, and faces significant prison time. The intent of the government is clear. Like the state of Colorado did for Jack Phillips, the process is the punishment. It is meant to elicit fear and silence dissent.

I asked if the government’s attempts at intimidation was working, or if other pastors and Christians were speaking out. Many had spoken out, I was told. But many others had not. They, like many Americans, believe that Christians should avoid politics altogether.

Of course, Christians just across the border in communist North Korea have no luxury of even having an opinion. There, I learned from a tour guide, a Bible will earn you a lifetime sentence in a hard labor camp. There is no freedom, religious or otherwise. There’s also not enough food.

South Korea, on the other hand, is an economic miracle. Industry, infrastructure, and innovation abound. Seventy-five years after the communist North invaded the free South, the results are in, and it’s not even close. South Koreans have every reason to sing of the goodness of God. And that is why they also have every reason to be concerned by the outrageous treatment of Pastor Son, as well as the many other ways the current party in power is compromising religious freedom.

Years ago, Chuck Colson warned of alarming language being used by certain American political leaders. Instead of “religious freedom,” they referred to “freedom of worship.” There’s an essential difference, said Colson, between the freedom to order one’s public life around their deeply held convictions and merely allowing someone to believe what they want in their own heads, hearts, homes, and houses of worship. Thankfully, in the years since, American courts have consistently upheld true religious freedom, but not because progressive lawmakers, politicians, and judges haven’t tried their best to chip away at it.

This seems to be what is currently happening in South Korea. If it does happen, it will be because of both progressive lawmakers who hope to sideline any religious resistance to their agenda and because of Christians who were willing to have their convictions sidelined. And it would be a tragedy.

Please pray for Pastor Son, his wife, and his children. Please pray for the leaders and members of Segero Church, that they would remain faithful and courageous during this time. Please pray for his trial and sentencing, which is scheduled for the end of this month. And please consider signing the petition launched by the Christian Broadcasting Network, asking our government to speak out on behalf of Pastor Son.

Written by John Stonestreet · Categorized: Religious Freedom · Tagged: culture, government, World

Jul 15 2025

Two Catholics Acquitted of Blasphemy Charges in Pakistan

Last week, two young Catholics in Pakistan were acquitted of false blasphemy charges in a case that has been ongoing for the past two years.

On July 8, a magistrate in Lahore exonerated 20-year-old Adil Babar and 16-year-old Simon Nadeem of their charges under Pakistan’s harsh blasphemy laws – specifically Section 295-A, which punishes “deliberate and malicious acts intended to outrage religious feeling” with up to 10 years in prison.

Naseeb Anjum, Pakistan’s Supreme Court Advocate, stated:

The court finally admitted our argument that it could not take cognizance of the offense under Section 295-A without the approval of the federal or provincial governments.

The case was originally filed by Zahid Sohail on May 18, 2023 when the boys were engaged in “light-hearted banter” outside Babar’s home. Sohail passed by and later claimed he overheard the boys laughing and “disrespecting” Muhammad.

According to Babar’s father:

Sohail started beating Simon, and when Adil tried to save him, Sohail attacked him too.

Both boys flatly denied Sohail’s allegation and said they had said nothing that involved a mention of the Muslim prophet. 

When local elders of the neighborhood asked Sohail to substantiate his accusation, he failed to satisfy them and left.

Later that evening, officers from Race Course police station arrested both Babar and Nadeem due to Sohail’s blasphemy accusations. Babar’s father stated:

We were shocked to learn the contents of the First Information Report (FIR) in which Sohail alleged that Simon had called a puppy “Muhammad Ali,” and both boys then joked about it.

No one in our street has dogs, and neither was there a puppy in the street when this incident took place.

Sohail cooked up a false accusation against our children after failing to convince the locals about his earlier allegation.

Naseeb Anjum further commented on the case, stating:

The false accusation of blasphemy against the two boys caused religious tension in the Qurban Lines neighborhood, and their families were forced to relocate to other areas due to security fears.

There’s a dire need to make procedural reforms in cases involving blasphemy to protect the victims, a majority of whom are declared innocent after years of court proceedings and imprisonment.

Accusations and rumors of blasphemy in Pakistan have the potential to provoke riots and killings by Muslim mobs. In 2024 alone, a rights watchdog tallied 344 new blasphemy cases in Pakistan – a record high.

In their annual Human Rights Observer 2025 report, the Center for Social Justice stated:

The blatant weaponization of blasphemy laws continued to enable persecution, religious intolerance and widespread human rights violations.

According to the report, at least 2,793 people have been accused of blasphemy in Pakistan between 1987 and 2024. It also recorded the killings of at least 104 people due to blasphemy allegations from 1994 to 2024.

As of 2025, Pakistan is ranked the eighth most difficult place to be a Christian on Open Doors International’s World Watch List.

While we may rejoice that two young Christians, Babar and Naseem, were acquitted of their charges, let us pray for others who are continually persecuted for their faith around the world.

Related Articles and Resources

Don’t Forget to Pray for Persecuted Christians Around the World

Focus on the Family: Global Ministries

A Christian Outreach in a Muslim Land – Ministry Highlight

The Simple Thing You Can Do Today to Address and Fight Back Against Christian Genocide

Written by Meredith Godwin · Categorized: Culture · Tagged: Random, World

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