Theology of Fleeing from Persecution
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.54231/ETSZEMLE.2022.2.5Keywords:
religious persecution of Christians, Egypt, Iraq, theology of fleeing, typology of fleeing, fleeing in the Bible, persecuted ChristiansAbstract
This article ponders the theological reasoning behind fleeing from religious persecution. It emerged as a reaction to questions raised about the legitimacy and purpose behind the fleeing of Christians from the Middle East. We compared the types of fleeing and their underlying reasons mentioned in the Bible with stories of persecuted Christians fleeing from Iraq and Egypt, and we identified four different theological approaches – the ”Salvation at stake” approach, the Altruistic/common sense approach, the “Hearing God’s voice” approach, and an Opportunistic approach. Our aim is to provide an opportunity for the persecuted as well as those ministering to them to navigate among the different reasoning options the persecuted take when considering fleeing.
Downloads
References
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
The author(s) reserve the copyright of their work.
The Church History Review does not restrict the rights of authors to place their manuscripts or manuscript versions on preprint servers or other hosting. This applies generally to the following formats.
- Submitted version
- Accepted version (manuscript accepted by the author)
- Published version (Version of Record)