By Stefan J. Bos, Special Correspondent Worthy News
(Worthy News) - Indonesia's hardline Islamic Defenders Front (FPI) group broke up a house church meeting in the country's West Java province, prompting an angry response from the governor. Video footage obtained by Worthy News showed two men bursting into a home Sunday in Cikarang, 48 kilometers (30 miles) southwest of Jakarta, the nation's capital.
Among the attackers was the area's senior FPI party official identified as Ustad Muliana, several sources confirmed. The video purportedly showed him and another person threatening worshippers. One of them physically attacked Christians with a piece of wood. No serious injuries were reported.
But the raid interrupted the Sunday service of a house church linked to the largest Protestant denomination in Indonesia, known as Huria Kristen Batak Protestant (HKBP), or 'Batak Christian Protestant Church.' St.J.Sihombing and Br. Sianturi, a couple leading the meeting, said the violence began when 10 Christians gathered in their home for worship. Separately Christians told Worthy News that the couple organized the gathering according to "government recommendations in the new coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic."
West Java's Governor Ridwan Kamil condemned the attack in a direct social media message to church supporters. "I will check tonight with the local authorities," he said in the online remarks shown to BosNewsLife. "Regrettably, this should not have happened. Because worship is the right of every citizen," he added.
The governor also confirmed that the house church had not violated rules. "It is even recommended not to do it [religous services] in public spaces during the co-pandemic," he wrote. Sunday's incident followed a series of attacks or threats against churches involving Islamic parties or their supporters, Christians said.
Church leaders link the violence to anger among Islamic hardliners about the spread of Christianity in the world's largest Muslim-majority nation. At least hundreds of thousands of Muslims are becoming Christians in Indonesia annually, according to several church sources speaking to Worthy News. Commentators say that while Indonesia is officially secular, there has been a rise in politicians demanding a more significant role for Islam. Some groups, such as FPI, want to turn Indonesia in a full-blown Islamic state.
Indonesian President Joko Widodo, a moderate, has publicly played down worries about rising Islamic intolerance. But church leaders believe he fears that the growing influence of Islamism by political adversaries could limit him in implementing economic reforms.