Leading Rights Activist Faith McDonell Advocacy Director At GKI Global Amid Massive Persecution (Worthy News Focus) 


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By Stefan J. Bos, Chief International Correspondent Worthy News

(Worthy News) – Leading Christian rights activist, broadcaster, and author Faith McDonnell, has become director of advocacy at the U.S.-based Katartismos Global (KGI Global) charity. The group says it “exists to equip the Church for mission and ministry” by supporting persecuted Christians and other believers in need.

McDonnell confirmed Monday to Worthy News that she left the Institute on Religion and Democracy (IRD), the Christian conservative think tank in Washington D.C. “Yes, after 27 years, I have left IRD and am now very excited to be working with [KGI Global founder and president] Bishop Julian Dobbs and his wife Brenda with their nonprofit ministry.”

Among her new tasks will be informing and motivating U.S. church members about the global persecution of Christians. “In 2020, more than 340 million Christians worldwide experienced high levels of persecution. Global persecution watchdog organization Open Doors’ annual World Watch List, released in January, ranks the top 50 countries notorious for persecution of Christians,” she noted.

Last year’s World Watch List reported 260 million Christians experiencing high levels of persecution. “This year’s increase to 340 million means that 1 in 8 of all Christians worldwide is now being severely persecuted,” McDonell stressed. “High-level persecution includes kidnappings, beatings, forced conversions and marriages, false imprisonment, loss of property, murder, and genocide.”

She said that that the 2020 worldwide coronavirus pandemic has increased the suffering of persecuted Christians. The advocacy official said several “Islamist regimes and other anti-Christian governments had used the virus as an excuse for further oppression.”

McDonell explained that “Not only have Christians suffered from deprivation of employment, protective equipment, and relief aid. In some cases, such as China, Pakistan, and India, Christians have often been scapegoated for the pandemic.”

CHURCH GROUPS

As KGI Global’s advocacy director, McDonell will speak to church groups, conferences, and educational and advocacy forums about Christians’ suffering for their faith. “It will be really interesting to see what God is doing in the world this year,” she explained to Worthy News. Amid the difficulties, “I am convinced that God is preparing His Church, the Body of Christ around the world, for a great revival,” she added.

KGI Global says her activities are part of its mission to provide Christians in need with practical and faith-based support. The group’s name is based on Apostle Paul’s reference in the Bible to “katartismos,” the Greek word for complete furnishing — perfecting. He used it when calling believers to use gifts to equip and build up the Church and ministry and become united in the Christian faith’s knowledge, according to Biblical accounts.

McDonnell brings to KGI Global decades of national and global experience. As international religious liberty program director of IRD, she raised awareness of persecuted Christians by organizing rallies and protests at the White House, State Department, various embassies, and the United Nations. She also helped create the globally-observed International Day of Prayer for the Persecuted Church in the 1990s.

McDonnell was part of coalitions to draft and pass U.S. legislation supporting persecuted Christians and other vulnerable groups. They include the International Religious Freedom Act 1998, Trafficking Victims Protection Act 2000, Sudan Peace Act 2002, and North Korea Human Rights Act 2004.

She says she defends persecuted Christians and other persecuted believers globally, including in North Korea, throughout the Middle East, Nigeria, China, Pakistan, Sudan, and South Sudan. McDonnell was also involved in several books on persecution. Along with former Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) abductee Grace Akallo Faith, she wrote: “Girl Soldier: A Story of Hope for Northern Uganda’s Children” (2007, Chosen Books). And she penned a chapter in the book “Sorrow & Blood: Christian Mission in Contexts of Suffering, Persecution, and Martyrdom (2012).”

CONSERVATIVE PUBLICATIONS

McDonell also contributes to several conservative and Christian publications, including outlets The Stream, World, American Spectator, FrontPage Magazine, Breitbart, PJ Media, Philos Project, Providence Journal, Juicy Ecumenism, and Patheos. And she has been a guest on leading U.S. radio shows “The Eric Metaxas Show” and “Janet Parshall’s In The Marketplace, ” as well as on U.S. networks CBN, Fox News, and the Armstrong Williams television show. She also spoke on global Christian persecution at the U.S. conservative conference gathering CPAC.

While GKI Global will now take much of McDonell’s time, she remains a board member of several other Christian advocacy groups. Those organizations include Jubilee Campaign USA and the Good Shepherd Foundation in Juba, South Sudan. She is also the co-leader of the Anglican Persecuted Church Network (New Wineskins Missionary Network) and the GAFCON Suffering Church Network. And McDonell is a founding member of the Sudan Coalition, the Nigeria Task Force, Act for Sudan, the North Korea Freedom Coalition, and Save The Persecuted Christians Coalition.

Now an Anglican and member of Church of the Apostles, Fairfax, Virginia since 1980, McDonnell grew up in The Salvation Army denomination and charity with Salvation Army officer parents. “Yep, I’m an officers’ kid, and both my sisters are retired Salvation Army officers,” she told Worthy News. “My grandparents on my mother’s side were Salvation Army officers after they came to America from Northern Ireland in the early 1900s. And my uncle on my dad’s side was an officer and the national secretary for business administration for the whole Army in the U.S.,” McDonell said.

That experience impacted her decision to serve Christians after graduating from Eastern Nazarene College and receiving her master’s degree in English at the University of Maryland. McDonell was supported in her efforts by husband Francis John McDonnell until he died in 2014. As a window, McDonell says she adores her daughter Fiona who spent much of her childhood demonstrating at the Sudanese and Chinese Embassies. As a child, her daughter was already meeting bishops and archbishops from around the world. She had dinner with North Korean defectors and other persecuted Christians.

McDonell has a passion for supporting spreading the Gospel and Bible knowledge wherever she can. That’s why she participates in the Anglican Church in North America’s “Every Tribe and Nation” group. “I’ve never seen so much fervent prayer and people hungering for the move of God.”

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