The 2025 World Watch List from OpenDoors released this week. It’s the most authoritative report you can get on locations around the world where Christians face persecution and discrimination because of their faith. OpenDoors conducts on-the-ground research in 150 countries around the world, then shares the top 50 most dangerous countries each year. The organization has a presence in 70 nations where Christians face heavy persecution, lending substantial aid and standing alongside those suffering for their faith in Jesus.
You can download a copy of this year’s World Watch List by clicking here (you can also order print copies for your church, if you want). I encourage you to take some time to thoughtfully read through the reports on each country, the requests from our brethren who live there, and the individual stories bravely shared. Then, if you can, visit the Arise Africa page and add your name to the petition that Open Doors will present to the African Union, the United Nations, other groups as part of a four-year campaign to aid God’s people in sub-Saharan Africa.
One thing that struck me deeply is that when asked how other people can help, persecuted Christians ask for prayer. “Pray for my child,” asks a man who escaped North Korea (p. 9). “Pray that God will give me strength,” asks a woman secretly ministering in Yemen (p. 11). Manga from Nigeria, who was nearly killed for refusing to deny Jesus, asks us to pray “for strength to remain firm” and “that fire for Jesus” would keep burning in their hearts (p. 15). Pastor Soré from Burkina Faso requests prayers that Christians there “stay firm in their faith” (p. 29). A man from Mexico requests prayers for hope, strong hearts, and growth of the church (p. 41). A believer in China shares, “Thank you for praying. I feel that I am not by myself. Through your prayers, I can feel that God has been looking after me to make me feel secure” (p. 23). It’s just like what the early church did–facing persecutions, encouraging each other to stand steadfast in the faith, and praying for one another.
Finally, pray for us, brothers and sisters, that the Lord’s message may spread quickly and be honored as in fact it was among you, and that we may be delivered from perverse and evil people. For not all have faith. But the Lord is faithful, and he will strengthen you and protect you from the evil one. And we are confident about you in the Lord that you are both doing—and will do—what we are commanding. Now may the Lord direct your hearts toward the love of God and the endurance of Christ.
2 Thessalonians 3:1-5, NET
As I mentioned in my 2024 blog recap, we have readers coming to LikeAnAnchor from all around the world. That includes thousands of people in Nigeria and India, as well as hundreds more from many other countries that appear in the World Watch List. I’m very grateful to have you here reading and, as the Apostle Paul frequently said, I remember you and make “mention of you in my prayers.” I don’t know most of you personally, but you are in my thoughts.
My friends, we might feel discouraged or powerless when we think about the opposition that we and/or our brethren in the world are facing, but we must remember the power of the God we serve. Praying to Him isn’t just something we do because we can’t do something more; prayer is one of the most powerful things that we can do to help others. Let’s never forget to pray for our brothers and sisters around the world.
A quick note on next week’s post: if you read my newsletter, you’ll know that I’d planned on sharing a study this week on the connection between waiting and hoping in the Hebrew language. I needed more time for that study, and when I read the World Watch List report this week, I felt moved to share this instead. We’ll be back to our regular Bible study posts next week.


