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OPINION

BP Ledger, March 19 edition

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
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EDITOR'S NOTE: BP Ledger carries items for reader information each week from various Southern Baptist-related entities, and news releases of interest from other sources. The items are published as received.
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Today's BP Ledger includes items from:

Compass Direct News

Hardin-Simmons University

Crackdown in Iran Hits Official Churches

By Damaris Kremida

ISTANBUL (Compass Direct News)--In a rare crackdown on a concentrated area, Iranian authorities have arrested Christians living in the country's third largest city in what is seen as a tactic to discourage Muslims and converts to Christianity from attending official churches.

Since last month officials have arrested about 12 Christian converts in Isfahan, 340 kilometers (211 miles) south of Tehran. Authorities have arrested leaders and members of churches meeting in buildings, as well as some from underground churches, according to Mohabat News.

The targeted arrests started on Feb. 22, when intelligence officers arrested approximately seven Christians at their homes between 6 a.m. and 7 a.m., Mohabat reported. Authorities raided their homes and confiscated valuables, including Bibles, computers, identification and other documents, and in one case even pictures decorating walls.

The Christian Iranian news service identified those detained on Feb. 22 as Hekmat Salimi, pastor of St. Paul Anglican Church, a convert of 30 years and author of theological books; Giti Hakimpour, 78, a female pastor at St. Luke's Anglican Church; Shahram Ghaedi, an actor; Maryam Del-Aram, 54; Shahnaz Zarifi, a mother of two; and Enayat Jafari.

Another Christian, Majid Enayat, was arrested on the same day at his workplace. He is a member of a house church, and Mohabat reported that prior to his arrest, authorities arrested other members of his group. Some of these Christians warned him that authorities intended to arrest him.

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Of those arrested, Mohabat reported that authorities released Hakimpour on Feb. 25. Authorities have denied proper medical treatment to Del-Aram, who is under medical supervision. When her daughter tried to bring her medication to her at the prison, they refused it, according to Mohabat.

On March 2, authorities arrested another convert in Isfahan, Fariborz Parsi-Nejad.

Authorities have allegedly arrested more Christians in Isfahan, but sources have not been able to confirm the arrests and details. None of those arrested in Isfahan last month has been officially charged.

Though religious freedom monitors in Iran said it was not clear what triggered authorities to target Christians in Isfahan, one Iranian Christian outside the country said it may be yet another tactic to stop converts from attending Farsi-speaking meetings in official church buildings.

"I now have 12 names of Christians arrested in Isfahan," said the Iranian Christian, who requested anonymity. "Isfahan is a very Islamic city. We have two or three church buildings there. The government is very sensitive in Isfahan, which is the only city apart from Tehran with official church buildings. Now the government is focusing on the church buildings to scare the people so they don't go."

There are also a number of church buildings in various cities in Iran that are attended by ethnic Armenian Christians. The services are held in Armenian, and members have relatively more freedom to meet.

Earlier in February, authorities in Tehran ordered Emmanuel Protestant Church and St. Peter's Evangelical Church to discontinue their Farsi-language services. These were the last two official churches in the capital offering Farsi-language services on Fridays.

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On Feb. 12, Noorallah Qabitizade was transferred to Dastgerd Prison in Isfahan. He was originally arrested in Dezful on Dec. 24, 2010, and this is the third time authorities have transferred him to a different prison because he is outspoken about his faith while incarcerated. His conditions in Isfahan were expected to be harsher, according to Mohabat.

Previous Arrests

Since the beginning of this year, authorities have arrested Christian converts in Tehran, Ahwaz, Shiraz, Isfahan and Kermanshah.

In Tehran, authorities on Feb. 8 arrested the pastor of Narmak Assemblies of God Church. He was released on bail on Feb. 16. Sources reported that his arrest was part of a government targeting of government-sanctioned, evangelical denominations.

In Kermanshah, authorities raided a house church on Feb. 21, arresting 13 Christians who had gathered to worship. Authorities verbally and physically abused them during the arrest, according to Mohabat. Of those arrested, most were released the next day, and now only three remain in prison.

But the Revolutionary Court of Kermanshah last month sentenced Masoud Delijani, a convert to Christianity arrested last year, to three years in prison on charges of being a Christian, holding illegal house church gatherings, evangelizing Muslims and action "against national security," according to Mohabat.

Arrested on March 17, 2011, Delijani suffered great mental and physical pressure while in prison, according to Mohabat. In July 2011 he was released on bail amounting to about US$100,000 and rearrested two weeks later. Authorities did not give him due legal process, denying him legal defense, according to Mohabat.

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In January 2010, officials had ordered the Pentecostal Church of Assyrians in Kermanshah to close on charges of spreading Christianity among Muslims.

Christians in Iran, most belonging to networks of house churches meeting in small groups in secret, are routinely arrested and interrogated. Iranian authorities view Christianity as a deviant anti-government movement and Christians as pawns of the West.

Iran is the fifth worst persecutor of Christians in the world, according to the most recent World Watch List by Christian support group Open Doors.

c. 2012 Compass Direct News (www.compassdirect.org). Used with permission.

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Big Sound, Small Organ: Dedication of New Digital Instrument to Replicate Sound of Pipe-Organ

ABILENE, Texas (Hardin-Simmons University)--Hardin-Simmons University will premiere a new symphonic organ during an organ dedication concert, Tuesday, March 6, 2012, in Behrens Auditorium.

The 50-member HSU Orchestra will be on hand to accompany the new instrument that can handily replicate the sounds of a room-filling pipe organ.

The new organ is a fully digital instrument designed to meet the varying needs of multiple performing groups in the Behrens complex. Dr. Bob Brooks, dean of the HSU School of Music and Fine Arts, explains, "A digital instrument was chosen for the space in order to replicate the sound of a pipe organ and still meet the space constraints of the Behrens' organ chamber. As a result, the instrument can produce the sound of a large pipe organ as it weds with acoustics of the auditorium."

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The new organ is designed as a symphonic instrument, allowing it to be used with the HSU Orchestra, as well as other ensembles. The organ joins two large pipe organs already housed on the campus in the School of Music and Fine Arts' Woodward-Dellis Recital Hall and in the chapel of Logsdon Seminary and the Logsdon School of Theology.

The four-manual organ's console was originally installed in the sanctuary of First Baptist Church of Abilene. When the church acquired a new instrument several years ago, the organ's builder saved and refurbished the beautiful wooden console for this new digital instrument.

The organ's builder, Thomas Cotner, owner of Cotner-Pipe Organs, was trained in organ building by James C. Williams of New Orleans, Louisiana. A number of Aeolian-Skinner pipe organs, including the pipe organ in the Church of the Heavenly Rest in Abilene, were installed throughout Texas under the aegis of Cotner-Pipe Organs of Martha, Oklahoma.

One of the unusual and interesting features of the new instrument is that the choir division of the organ is housed in a separate, movable speaker chamber. The result of this ingenious idea is that not only can this division of the instrument be located on stage for choral programs and other special concerts, but can also travel with the console to be used in the Van Ellis Theatre.

In recent years, Cotner ventured into real-time digital tone generation and is responsible for instruments built in this manner installed in churches across Texas and California. Some of these digital instruments include those installed in the First Baptist Churches of El Paso and Keller, Texas; St. Alban's Episcopal Church, Harlingen, Texas; Mt. Carmel Lutheran Church in San Luis Obispo, California; and Mims Auditorium at Howard Payne University in Brownwood, Texas.

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For the past 10 years, Cotner also has been restoring and rebuilding the pipe organ in the Cathedral of San Ildefonso in Merida, Yucatan, Mexico, the oldest cathedral in the western hemisphere, and the only pipe organ on the Yucatan Peninsula.

Cotner also designed and built the Patterson Memorial Organ in Hardin-Simmons University Woodward-Dellis Recital Hall, given by Dr. Burton Patterson in memory and honor of his parents, Frank and Pauline Patterson.

The organ was donated to HSU by Dr. Burton H. Patterson and his wife Ginger. The Pattersons live in the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex where he spends his time writing, substituting as church organist, and frequently teaching the Chapel Class at Broadway Baptist Church. His central hobby is helping churches and Christian schools acquire excellent musical instruments, mainly organs, to further the worship of God.

Patterson earned a B.A. from Oklahoma Baptist University, an M.A. in education from Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Fort Worth, a Ph.D. from Trinity Theological Seminary, and a J.D. degree from Northwestern University School of Law in Chicago. Additionally, Hardin-Simmons University conferred him with an honorary Doctor of Music degree in 2010. Oklahoma Baptist University has also conferred an honorary doctorate on Patterson.

The organ dedication ceremony will feature university organist and assistant professor of organ Hye-Jean Choi, along with the HSU orchestra, directed by associate professor of music, Dr. Peter Isaacson.

Choi earned the B.M. and the M.M. in organ performance from Ewha Womans University, Seoul, South Korea; the Master of Sacred Music in organ and choral conducting (Perkins School of Theology), and the M.M. in harpsichord performance (Meadows School of Arts) from Southern Methodist University. She has completed a doctoral residency in organ performance at the University of North Texas.

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The concert is March 6, 2012, 7:30 p.m. in Behrens Auditorium on the Hardin-Simmons University campus. The concert and organ dedication is free and open to the community. A reception will follow in the foyer of Behrens.

Copyright (c) 2012 Southern Baptist Convention, Baptist Press www.BPNews.net

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