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Andrew van der Bijl
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Andrew "Anne" van der Bijl (Dutch: [ˈɑnə vɑn dər ˈbɛil]; 11 May 1928 – 27 September 2022), known in English-speaking countries as Brother Andrew, was a Dutch Christian missionary and founder of the Christian organization Open Doors. He was known for smuggling Bibles and other Christian literature into communist countries during the Cold War and, because of his activities, he was nicknamed "God's Smuggler".
Key Information
Early life
[edit]Van der Bijl was born in Sint Pancras,[1][2] the Netherlands, on 11 May 1928,[3] the fourth of six children of a poor blacksmith and an invalid mother.[4] In the 1940s he enlisted in the colonial army of the Dutch East Indies during the Indonesian National Revolution. After being involved in a massacre of Indonesian villagers while he was serving as a soldier,[4] he endured a period of severe emotional stress, and later was wounded in the ankle during the fighting. During his rehabilitation, he began reading a Bible given to him by his mother. When he returned to the Netherlands he started attending church and committed himself to Christianity.[4] In 1953, Van der Bijl studied at the WEC Missionary Training College in Glasgow, Scotland.[5]
Ministry
[edit]In July 1955, van der Bijl visited Communist Poland to attend the 5th World Festival of Youth and Students in Warsaw, where he met a Christian bookstore owner who told him about a lack of Bibles in the Soviet Union.[6][7] He signed up on a government-controlled Communist tour to Czechoslovakia, the only legal way to be in the country, during which he left the tour to meet with local Christian groups. Later that year, van der Bijl founded Open Doors, a non-denominational mission supporting persecuted Christians.[6] Open Doors was involved in smuggling Bibles and Christian literature, offering training for Christian leaders, and providing financial and other support for persecuted Christians.[4][6]
In 1957, van der Bijl travelled to the Soviet Union's capital, Moscow, in a Volkswagen Beetle, which later became the symbol of Open Doors.[5] An older couple, the Whetstras, had given him their new car because they had prayed about it and believed that van der Bijl would need the car. A man who lived in Amersfoort, Karl de Graaf, claimed that God told him to teach van der Bijl to drive. Later, when van der Bijl was in a refugee camp in West Germany, Philip Whetstra called van der Bijl to come to the Whetstras' new house in Amsterdam.
Although van der Bijl was violating the laws of all of the countries that he visited by bringing religious literature, he often placed the material in view when he was stopped at police checkpoints, as a gesture of his trust in what he believed to be God's protection.[8]
Van der Bijl visited China in the 1960s, after the Cultural Revolution had created a hostile policy towards Christianity and other religions, during the era of the so-called Bamboo Curtain. He went to Czechoslovakia when the suppression by Soviet troops of the Prague Spring had put an end to relative religious freedom there. He visited with Czech Christians and gave Bibles to the Russian occupying forces. During that decade, he also made his first visits to Cuba, which was relatively easy for him to visit because the country did not require visas from Dutch citizens, to bring Bibles after the Cuban Revolution.[9][10]
At that time, several Christian organizations, such as the American Bible Society and the Southern Baptist Convention's Foreign Mission Board, did not support the practice of Bible smuggling, calling it dangerous and ineffective, and noting that Bibles were "freely on sale" in many Iron Curtain countries.[6] KGB informers ultimately infiltrated Open Doors, and the KGB tracked van der Bijl's activities.[6]
God's Smuggler
[edit]In 1967, van der Bijl published the first edition of God's Smuggler, written with John and Elizabeth Sherrill.[11] An autobiography, God's Smuggler tells the story of his early childhood, conversion to Christianity, and adventures as a Bible-smuggler behind the Iron Curtain. Due to the press exposure following the book, van der Bijl stopped personally smuggling Bibles and Christian literature to other countries, and shifted to evangelism and fundraising campaigns in North America and Europe to support Open Doors.[9][4] By 2022, it had sold over 10 million copies and was published in thirty-five languages.[12] A comic book adaptation of God's Smuggler was published in 1972 by Spire Christian Comics.[13]
Later life
[edit]After the fall of Communism in Europe, van der Bijl shifted his focus to the Middle East and worked to strengthen the church in the Muslim world, having visited Lebanon several times in the 1970s. In the 1990s, van der Bijl again travelled several times more to the Middle East. In his book Light Force, he tells of Arab and Lebanese churches in Lebanon, Israel and Israeli-occupied areas expressing great delight at the mere visit of a fellow Christian from abroad since they felt that the church in the Western world at large was mostly ignoring them. In similar fashion, van der Bijl and a companion, Al Janssen, visited Hamas and PLO leaders, including Ahmed Yassin and Yasser Arafat.[12][14] Arafat granted van de Bijl permission to open a Christian book store in the Gaza Strip. During the trip, van der Bijl also spoke about Christianity at the Islamic University of Gaza.[12] Later visits also included trips to Pakistan in the 2010s, where van der Bijl attempted to meet with members of the Taliban.[12] Van der Bijl criticized the US invasion of Afghanistan in 2001 and the 2003 invasion of Iraq, stating that American evangelical Christians were too supportive of these wars.[4] He also criticized the killing of Osama bin Laden, having previously prayed for him, and called the operation "murder".[12]
Van der Bijl's tenth book, Secret Believers: What Happens When Muslims Believe in Christ, was released in 2007.[15]
Van der Bijl died at age 94 on 27 September 2022;[9][16] he had been married for 59 years to his wife, Corry (who lived 1931–2018).[17][18] They had continued to live in Holland and were survived by five children and 11 grandchildren.[19] At the time of his death, Open Doors was active in over 60 countries. The ministry distributes 300,000 Bibles and 1.5 million Christian books and materials annually. The group is active in providing relief, aid, community development, and trauma counseling, while advocating for persecuted Christians around the globe.[4]
Books
[edit]- Brother Andrew; Sherrill, John; Sherrill, Elizabeth (2001). God's Smuggler. Chosen Books. ISBN 0-8007-9301-3.
- Brother Andrew (1974). The Ethics of Smuggling. Tyndale House. ISBN 978-0-84230730-7.
- Brother Andrew; Conn, Charles Paul (1977). Battle for Africa. Fleming H. Revell. ISBN 978-0-80070876-4.
- Brother Andrew (1981). Building in a Broken World. Tyndale House. ISBN 0-86065-170-3.
- Brother Andrew; Jackson, Dave; Jackson, Neta (1988). A Time for Heroes. Servant Books. ISBN 0-89283-395-5.
- Brother Andrew; DeVore Williams, Susan (1990). And God Changed His Mind. Chosen Books. ISBN 0-8007-9272-6.
- Brother Andrew; Sherrill, John; Sherrill, Elizabeth; featuring Jars of Clay (2001). The Narrow Road: Stories of Those Who Walk This Road Together. Baker. ISBN 0-8007-5793-9.
- Brother Andrew; Becker, Verne (2002). The Calling. Fleming H. Revell. ISBN 0-8007-5838-2.
- Brother Andrew; Janssen, Al (2004). Light Force. Fleming H. Revell. ISBN 0-8007-1872-0.
- Brother Andrew; Janssen, Al (2007). Secret Believers: What Happens When Muslims Believe in Christ. Fleming H. Revell. ISBN 978-0-8007-3264-6.
References
[edit]- ^ https://www.thetimes.com/uk/article/brother-andrew-obituary-cgch66dhm
- ^ https://www.opendoors.org/en-US/home-brother-andrew/biography/
- ^ "World news in brief". Church Times. 30 September 2022. Archived from the original on 1 October 2022. Retrieved 1 October 2022.
Brother Andrew, 'God's smuggler', dies, aged 94 The Dutch preacher and founder of the Christian charity Open Doors, Anne Van Der Bijl, known as Brother Andrew, who crossed the Iron Curtain to minister to churches in Warsaw, has died, aged 94. He founded Open Doors on 15 July 1955 (News, 17 July 2020), when he began smuggling Bibles into the country and offering support to persecuted Christians. His book God's Smuggler (1964) sold more than ten million copies in 35 languages. The chief executive of Open Doors, Henrietta Blyth, said: "He leaves behind a remarkable legacy." Brother Andrew was born on 11 May 1928 in Alkmaar, in the Netherlands. He joined the colonial army of the Dutch East Indies, and converted to Christianity during a period of convalescence during which he spent much of his time reading the Bible.
- ^ a b c d e f g Silliman, Daniel (27 September 2022). "Died: Brother Andrew, Who Smuggled Bibles into Communist Countries". Christianity Today. Archived from the original on 1 October 2022. Retrieved 30 September 2022.
- ^ a b J. Lee Grady, "Secret Agent Man", Charisma magazine, USA, 28 February 2005
- ^ a b c d e Raska, Francis D (9 May 2015). "BIBLES FOR COMMUNIST EUROPE – A COLD WAR STORY – PART I". Hungarian Review. VI (3). Archived from the original on 3 March 2022. Retrieved 30 September 2022.
- ^ F.P. (3 October 2012). "Portes ouvertes, une histoire dans l'Histoire [Open doors, a story in history]". La Voix du Nord (in French).
- ^ Brother Andrew, with John and Elizabeth Sherrill. God's Smuggler (1967), pp. 174, 198.
- ^ a b c "Brother Andrew, missionary who fearlessly crossed borders to smuggle Christian literature into Communist lands – obituary". The Telegraph. 29 September 2022. Archived from the original on 1 October 2022. Retrieved 1 October 2022.
- ^ "Brother Andrew obituary". The Times. 29 September 2022. Archived from the original on 1 October 2022. Retrieved 1 October 2022.
- ^ Morgan, Timothy C. (18 March 2013). "Brother Andrew's Prophetic Plea: Stop Murdering Terrorists". Christianity Today. Archived from the original on 13 November 2018. Retrieved 12 November 2018.
- ^ a b c d e Casper, Jayson (29 September 2022). "The Light Force of God's Smuggler: Arab Christians Mourn Brother Andrew". Christianity Today. Archived from the original on 1 October 2022. Retrieved 1 October 2022.
- ^ Thom, Mike (28 September 2022). "Brother Andrew, famous for smuggling Bibles into Soviet Union, dies at 94". CHVN Radio. Archived from the original on 1 October 2022. Retrieved 1 October 2022.
- ^ Andrew, Brother (2004). Light Force. London: Hodder & Stoughton. pp. 204/ Chapter 25. ISBN 9780340862711.
- ^ Andrew, Brother; Janssen, Al (1 July 2007). Secret Believers: What Happens When Muslims Believe in Christ. Baker Books. ISBN 978-1-4412-3891-7. Archived from the original on 3 May 2024. Retrieved 1 October 2022.
- ^ Bruins, Gerald (27 September 2022). "Open Doors-oprichter Anne van der Bijl overleden: hij gaf de vervolgde kerk een gezicht" [Open Doors founder Anne van der Bijl dead: he gave the persecuted church a face]. www.nd.nl (in Dutch). Archived from the original on 27 September 2022. Retrieved 27 September 2022.
- ^ "Cornelia van der Bijl Passes Away at 86". missionsbox.org. 3 February 2018. Archived from the original on 17 November 2018. Retrieved 17 November 2018.
- ^ "'God's Smuggler' Brother Andrew's Wife Corry Dies". www.charismanews.com. Archived from the original on 10 June 2022. Retrieved 1 October 2022.
- ^ "Brother Andrew, founder of Open Doors, passes away". Eternity News. 28 September 2022. Archived from the original on 1 October 2022. Retrieved 1 October 2022.
External links
[edit]Andrew van der Bijl
View on GrokipediaEarly Life
Childhood and Family Background
Anne van der Bijl was born on May 11, 1928, in the village of Sint Pancras in northern Netherlands, as the fourth of six children in a working-class family.[4] His father worked as a blacksmith, laboring long hours to support the household in modest circumstances, while his mother was semi-invalid and managed the home despite health limitations.[2] [5] The family resided in the smallest house in their village, reflecting the economic constraints common among such artisan households in rural North Holland during the interwar period.[5] The van der Bijl family endured significant hardships during the German occupation of the Netherlands from 1940 to 1945, when Anne was aged 12 to 17. This period disrupted daily life, including the abrupt end to his formal schooling after the sixth grade as resources were diverted to the war effort and families prioritized survival amid rationing, forced labor, and bombings.[4] [6] Such experiences instilled an early awareness of resilience and skepticism toward authority, shaping a pragmatic worldview in a context of scarcity and uncertainty. Raised in a Protestant household aligned with the Dutch Reformed tradition, the family maintained nominal Christian practices, such as attending church services, but without evident deep doctrinal engagement or personal piety.[2] In adolescence, van der Bijl exhibited rebellion against this cultural religiosity, displaying disinterest in faith and engaging in minor acts of defiance typical of youthful nonconformity in post-occupation rural society.[7] These formative influences—economic modesty, wartime adversity, and superficial religious exposure—fostered an independent, questioning outlook uncommitted to institutional norms.Military Service and Injury
In 1946, at the age of 18, Andrew van der Bijl enlisted in the Dutch army shortly after World War II and was deployed to the Dutch East Indies (present-day Indonesia) as part of colonial forces seeking to quell the Indonesian National Revolution, a protracted guerrilla conflict that erupted following Japan's surrender in 1945.[4][8] The war pitted Dutch troops against Indonesian nationalists employing hit-and-run tactics, ambushes, and sabotage, resulting in widespread civilian casualties and retaliatory actions that underscored the ethical ambiguities of maintaining imperial control amid decolonization pressures.[9] Van der Bijl received special commando training and participated in combat operations, exposing him to the raw brutalities of asymmetric warfare, including village skirmishes and the psychological strain of unpredictable engagements where both sides inflicted atrocities.[4][6] During his service in 1947, van der Bijl sustained a severe ankle injury from a gunshot wound, which incapacitated him and necessitated his repatriation to the Netherlands for treatment and eventual medical discharge from the army.[10] The physical trauma compounded the mental exhaustion from prolonged exposure to combat's dehumanizing effects, fostering a deep sense of disillusionment with authority, ideology, and human nature.[11] Back in the Netherlands amid the nation's post-war reconstruction, van der Bijl confronted an existential void, rejecting religious upbringing in favor of atheism as he processed the war's causal role in eroding his prior optimism and trust in institutional motives.[9] This period of crisis reflected broader patterns among returning soldiers, where the empirical realities of colonial violence—unresolved grievances, fragmented loyalties, and futile sacrifices—fueled widespread cynicism in a society rebuilding from occupation and imperial loss.[8]Religious Conversion and Calling
Post-War Recovery and Faith Awakening
Following a severe ankle injury sustained from a gunshot wound during Dutch military service in Indonesia in the late 1940s, Andrew van der Bijl spent an extended period recuperating in a Catholic hospital.[4] The injury, which shattered his ankle and terminated his military career, left him in prolonged physical and emotional distress, including reported struggles with pain management and a sense of purposelessness after returning to the Netherlands around 1947-1948.[12] During his hospitalization and subsequent recovery at home, van der Bijl began systematically reading the Bible for the first time, an activity he described as transformative in his autobiography.[13] This engagement with Scripture prompted a personal conversion experience, akin to a sudden spiritual awakening, where he renounced his prior atheistic worldview—rooted in wartime disillusionment and communist sympathies—and embraced evangelical Christianity with a literalist emphasis on individual repentance and salvation through Christ.[12] Van der Bijl attributed the causal shift directly to biblical texts addressing sin, redemption, and divine purpose, reporting an empirical cessation of inner turmoil and addictive tendencies tied to his injury, without reliance on external psychological interventions.[14] Post-conversion, van der Bijl integrated into conservative Reformed church circles in the Netherlands, actively participating in local congregations and distancing himself from liberal theological trends prevalent in postwar Dutch Protestantism, which he viewed as diluting scriptural authority.[4] This phase marked his initial foray into faith-based leadership, including informal mentoring of younger believers, laying groundwork for his later missionary pursuits while prioritizing fundamentalist interpretations of personal holiness and evangelism over ecumenical or socially progressive variants.[2]Initial Steps Toward Ministry
Following his religious conversion, Andrew van der Bijl pursued missionary training at the Worldwide Evangelization Crusade (WEC) school in Glasgow, Scotland, beginning in 1953 and lasting two years.[4][2] The program equipped him with practical skills for evangelism in challenging environments, including Bible teaching and cross-cultural outreach, preparing him for work among unreached peoples.[4] In 1955, van der Bijl undertook his first trip behind the Iron Curtain, joining a Dutch delegation to the World Youth Congress in Warsaw, Poland.[3] There, he visited a local Baptist church and encountered Christians enduring isolation and resource scarcity under communist rule, which suppressed religious practice through state atheism and surveillance.[3] These observations revealed the extent of persecution, with believers feeling abandoned by the global church despite their faithfulness.[3] To protect his identity amid these risks, van der Bijl adopted the pseudonym "Brother Andrew," derived from his given name Anne (the Dutch equivalent of Andrew) prefixed with "Brother" for anonymity in sensitive operations.[6] This initial exposure underscored the urgent need for discreet support to sustain faith communities in atheistic regimes, shaping his commitment to targeted aid without immediate large-scale smuggling.[3]Bible Smuggling Ministry
Operations Behind the Iron Curtain
Van der Bijl initiated his Bible smuggling efforts in 1955 during a visit to Poland for the communist-organized World Youth Congress, where he slipped away from the supervised tour to connect with underground Christian groups deprived of Scriptures due to state bans.[2][9] There, he delivered an initial consignment of Christian literature hidden in a suitcase, marking the start of targeted distributions to address the acute scarcity in persecuted congregations, where entire churches often lacked even one Bible amid Soviet-enforced atheism.[15] This trip revealed the empirical desperation: believers memorized passages collectively due to material shortages, with regime policies limiting imports and promoting secular indoctrination.[16] From 1955 through the 1960s, van der Bijl conducted systematic road trips in a modified Volkswagen Beetle, concealing Bibles—often hundreds per load—under seats, in the trunk, and within custom compartments to evade detection at borders.[17] He traversed into Poland, Czechoslovakia, Romania, and Yugoslavia, distributing thousands of copies overall to sustain clandestine house churches facing surveillance and confiscations by communist authorities.[18] At checkpoints, he recited a personal prayer requesting guards' temporary inattention to the cargo, attributing repeated successes—spanning dozens of crossings without seizure—to heightened boldness rather than chance, given the probabilistic risks of random searches and vehicle inspections.[19][2] These operations yielded measurable sustenance for underground networks, with recipients reporting bolstered doctrinal continuity and morale in isolated communities, as Scriptures enabled private study and evangelism despite intermittent raids.[3] However, the activities incurred tangible perils, including arrests of some contacts for possession of smuggled materials, heightened by regimes' responses like border tightenings and informant networks, which underscored the causal trade-offs of direct aid against potential informant betrayals or intensified crackdowns.[20] Van der Bijl himself evaded personal detention over two decades, but the ventures highlighted the precarious balance wherein individual undetected passages contrasted with broader evidentiary patterns of persecuted believers enduring imprisonment for similar holdings.[6]Methods, Risks, and Empirical Outcomes
Brother Andrew employed low-profile vehicular transport, primarily a blue Volkswagen Beetle, to cross Iron Curtain borders, concealing Bibles and Gospels in hidden compartments within the vehicle and luggage to evade routine customs inspections.[15] He supplemented physical concealment with behavioral tactics, such as feigning ignorance of cargo contents during interrogations and using coded language among contacts to coordinate drops without drawing attention from surveillance networks.[21] These methods relied on the probabilistic advantages of inconspicuous travel in an era when communist border controls prioritized ideological profiling over exhaustive vehicle searches, allowing repeated entries into countries like Poland, Czechoslovakia, and Romania.[9] Risks included frequent encounters with secret police such as the KGB in the Soviet Union and Securitate in Romania, where near-misses involved prolonged questioning and partial inspections that could have led to arrest or execution under anti-propaganda laws.[2] Documented incidents encompass his 1957 arrest and deportation from Yugoslavia after smuggling tracts and Bibles, resulting in temporary vehicle impoundment, alongside declassified KGB files exceeding 150 pages tracking his movements across Eastern Europe.[22] Cumulative stress from these operations exacerbated his pre-existing war injuries, contributing to chronic health decline by the 1960s, though no direct fatalities among his early networks were reported.[2] Empirical outcomes feature estimates of over one million Bibles distributed by the late 1960s through Open Doors networks, enabling underground churches to sustain literacy and doctrine amid shortages, as corroborated by recipient reports of distributed materials correlating with localized attendance increases in persecuted congregations.[2] Conversion testimonies from smuggling recipients, such as Polish and Romanian believers citing access to Scriptures as pivotal, align with broader patterns of church resilience under communism, though quantifiable causation remains challenged by regime suppression of records.[9] Failures, including intercepted minor shipments and the Yugoslav confiscation, represented low single-digit percentages of trips based on operational logs, underscoring the tactic's net efficacy against resource-constrained enforcers despite occasional losses.[22]Publication of God's Smuggler
God's Smuggler was published in 1967 by New American Library as the autobiography of Andrew van der Bijl, co-authored with American journalists John and Elizabeth Sherrill, who conducted extensive interviews to shape the narrative from his personal accounts.[23] The book chronicles van der Bijl's post-war conversion, training, and daring Bible smuggling operations into communist Eastern Europe during the 1950s and 1960s, portraying a theology of bold faith where prayer allegedly caused border guards' eyes to overlook hidden contraband, framed as divine intervention countering atheistic state suppression.[9] These anecdotes, drawn from van der Bijl's experiences, emphasize causal reliance on spiritual audacity over human strategy, with specifics like packing suitcases with Bibles and traversing checkpoints in a Volkswagen Beetle presented as empirically observed successes amid high risks of arrest.[2] The publication rapidly achieved bestseller status, selling over 10 million copies in English alone and translated into 35 languages, amplifying van der Bijl's profile from obscure missionary to global figure.[23] [9] This immediate commercial success catalyzed growth for his nascent ministry, Open Doors, by attracting substantial funding increases and volunteer recruits inspired by the vivid testimonies of perseverance against totalitarian barriers.[2] While praised for motivating Christian action, the book faced criticism from some evangelicals who viewed its dramatic miracles as sensationalized, potentially prioritizing fundraising through exaggerated claims of guaranteed divine protection over verifiable outcomes.[9] Contemporaries in smuggling networks corroborated core events through shared testimonies, though skeptics questioned the extent of supernatural elements without independent documentation beyond van der Bijl's recollections.[23]Establishment of Open Doors
Founding and Organizational Development
Open Doors was formally established in 1955 in the Netherlands by Andrew van der Bijl, known as Brother Andrew, as a network dedicated to distributing Bibles and providing support to persecuted Christians in communist Eastern Europe, beginning with his observations of church oppression in Warsaw.[24][25] Initially operating on a small scale with van der Bijl's personal involvement in smuggling and encouragement efforts, the organization relied on informal volunteer networks amid the restrictive conditions of the Iron Curtain.[24] In 1967, Open Doors underwent formal incorporation, coinciding with the publication of van der Bijl's memoir God's Smuggler, which detailed his Bible-smuggling activities and dramatically increased global awareness, donations, and volunteer recruitment.[24] This publicity, amplified by the Cold War's ideological tensions, provided causal momentum for structural growth, enabling the shift from ad hoc operations to a more organized entity with van der Bijl serving as director.[24][25] However, funding remained volatile, dependent on episodic surges from book sales and geopolitical advocacy against communism, which strained early administrative efforts.[26] By the 1970s, Open Doors expanded internationally, establishing connections across at least ten independent national affiliates by 1979 to coordinate aid in Africa, Asia, and Latin America alongside its core anti-communist focus in Europe and China.[24][26] Van der Bijl, prioritizing fieldwork over bureaucracy, directed these developments until the late 1980s, after which operational leadership transitioned while he retained advisory influence into the 1990s.[26] This period saw support extended to Christians in over 50 countries by the mid-1980s, driven by sustained demand for materials and training in persecuted regions but tempered by internal challenges in scaling logistics without compromising security.[25]Expansion and Support for Persecuted Christians
Open Doors expanded its operations to include large-scale distribution of Christian literature, reporting the delivery of approximately 1 million Bibles annually to believers in restricted nations, alongside training programs for church leaders and house church networks.[27] These efforts encompassed discipleship courses, trauma care, and persecution survival training, reaching over 3.8 million persecuted Christians globally through partnerships with local ministries.[28] Such initiatives focused on equipping underground fellowships in authoritarian regimes, where formal churches face closure or surveillance, enabling covert worship and evangelism despite risks of arrest.[29] The organization's World Watch List, an annual ranking initiated in the 1990s, employs a questionnaire-based methodology to score countries on factors like violence, private life interference, and church life restrictions, consistently placing communist states such as North Korea at the top and Islamist-governed areas like Somalia second.[30][31] This advocacy tool has highlighted empirical patterns of persecution under these ideologies, including state-mandated ideological conformity in North Korea's single-party system and clan-enforced Islamic extremism in Somalia, where conversion from Islam invites death penalties. Open Doors' reports document how such environments correlate with sustained Christian adherence, as underground networks in China, for instance, have grown to an estimated 96.7 million believers amid Communist Party oversight.[32] Aid programs have demonstrably correlated with resilience against these pressures, providing material support that bolsters believer retention and quiet expansion in regions where secular Western analyses often underemphasize ideological drivers like enforced atheism or sharia enforcement. However, heavy reliance on Western donors introduces challenges, including potential misalignment with local priorities and risks of fostering short-term dependency rather than self-sustaining local funding mechanisms, though the scale of operations in inaccessible areas justifies external resourcing for immediate survival needs.[33][34]Authorship and Broader Influence
Key Publications Beyond God's Smuggler
In addition to God's Smuggler, Andrew van der Bijl, known as Brother Andrew, authored numerous books drawing from decades of fieldwork in persecuted regions, emphasizing intercessory prayer as a tool against spiritual opposition and the realities of Christian witness under duress. These works often incorporated empirical accounts from his travels, including direct encounters with believers in closed societies, to argue for proactive faith rather than passive endurance.[23] And God Changed His Mind (1990), published by Chosen Books, examines how persistent prayer can influence divine responses, using biblical precedents like Abraham's intercession for Sodom alongside van der Bijl's ministry experiences in hostile territories. The book challenges deterministic views of God's will, positing that intercession for enemies—such as communist leaders or militants—can avert judgment and open doors for evangelism, based on reported outcomes from prayer initiatives in Eastern Europe and beyond.[23][35] Light Force: The Only Hope for the Middle East (2004), co-authored with Al Janssen and released by Fleming H. Revell, chronicles van der Bijl's visits to Christian communities amid Israeli-Palestinian conflicts and Islamist pressures. Grounded in on-site interviews and observations from the early 2000s, it highlights the resilience of local churches despite violence, advocating their active role in reconciliation through gospel proclamation rather than political mediation alone. The text reports instances of clandestine Bible distribution and discipleship yielding small but verifiable growth in believers, countering narratives of inevitable decline.[23][36] Secret Believers: What Happens When Muslims Turn to Christ? (2007), also with Janssen and published by Fleming H. Revell, details underground networks of Muslim-background converts in the Middle East and North Africa, derived from field reports via trusted contacts during the 1990s and 2000s. Van der Bijl describes the perils of apostasy laws and family reprisals, yet documents cases of sustained house churches emerging from bold personal evangelism, urging Western Christians to prioritize scriptural outreach over interfaith dialogue that dilutes conversion calls. Reception noted its unflinching portrayal of Islamist persecution, with accounts praised for authenticity in highlighting conversion dynamics amid threats.[23][37][38] Other titles, such as Prayer: The Real Battle (2009, with Janssen, Open Doors International), extend these motifs by framing prayer as frontline warfare against regimes suppressing faith, citing measurable impacts like resource deliveries to isolated groups following concerted intercession. These publications collectively underscore van der Bijl's conviction, rooted in decades of smuggling and support operations, that empirical perseverance in prayer and evangelism sustains churches under persecution.[23]Public Speaking and Advocacy
Brother Andrew emerged as a prominent speaker following the 1967 publication of God's Smuggler, which propelled him into international evangelical circles, where he delivered addresses emphasizing obedience to divine calls amid oppressive regimes. Over five decades, from the 1960s through the 2010s, he addressed audiences at key gatherings, including the 1974 International Congress on World Evangelization in Lausanne, Switzerland, where he urged churches to prioritize love as a counter to heresy in persecuted contexts.[40] His talks often drew on firsthand accounts of smuggling operations, inspiring listeners to support clandestine aid to believers under communist rule.[2] Van der Bijl's advocacy extended to influencing Western policies on religious freedom, particularly against Soviet-era communism; through Open Doors, he coordinated a 1982–1989 prayer and awareness campaign targeting the Iron Curtain, which heightened global evangelical focus on the issue just before the Berlin Wall's fall in 1989.[41] This effort contributed to broader congressional and policy scrutiny in the U.S., fostering increased aid and visibility for persecuted Christians, as evidenced by subsequent expansions in international religious freedom initiatives.[42] His platform mobilized resources, with Open Doors distributing millions of Bibles and providing practical support across over 60 nations by the 2020s.[43] While van der Bijl's efforts galvanized anti-persecution movements within evangelicalism, amplifying aid distribution and prayer networks, some observers critiqued his messaging for occasionally directing ire toward Western complacency without equally addressing secular encroachments on faith domestically, such as eroding religious liberties in Europe and North America.[2] He maintained that the primary threats shifted post-Cold War from communism to radical Islam, urging dialogue over confrontation, which shaped Open Doors' pivot to Middle Eastern advocacy.[15] This focus, though effective in sustaining momentum against foreign tyrannies, drew notes of imbalance from those prioritizing holistic defenses of Christianity against all ideological erosions.[44]Later Engagements and Theological Shifts
Family and Personal Life
Andrew van der Bijl married Cornelia (Corry) van Dam, a nurse who had treated his injuries following his repatriation from the Dutch East Indies after World War II, on an unspecified date in 1958.[8] [45] The couple resided in the Netherlands throughout their lives, where they raised five children.[1] [46] Corry provided essential domestic stability, managing family responsibilities in Harderwijk while van der Bijl undertook extensive international travel, thereby enabling the continuity of his commitments abroad. The family home served as a fixed base amid van der Bijl's absences, with Corry described in organizational accounts as remaining in the background to support his endeavors.[1] They were parents to five children and grandparents to eleven grandchildren, maintaining a household grounded in the Netherlands despite the demands of van der Bijl's peripatetic lifestyle.[46] [1] Corry van der Bijl passed away on January 23, 2018, at age 86, after 59 years of marriage, surrounded by family in the Netherlands.[45] [1]Dialogues with Islamist Groups
In the post-Cold War era, Andrew van der Bijl, known as Brother Andrew, redirected his missionary efforts toward Islamist contexts, initiating dialogues with leaders of groups such as Hamas, Palestinian Islamic Jihad, and Hezbollah during trips to Gaza, the West Bank, and Lebanon from the early 1990s onward.[43][47] In 1992, following Israel's deportation of 415 Hamas members to southern Lebanon, van der Bijl visited the exiles to provide aid and engage in conversations, aiming to model Christian compassion amid conflict.[48] He later entered Gaza at the invitation of a Hamas leader, where he met with the head of Palestinian Islamic Jihad and presented Bibles to participants in these encounters, including a personal gift to Yasser Arafat.[49][50] Van der Bijl's approach stemmed from a literal interpretation of Matthew 5:44, emphasizing prayer for and outreach to adversaries as a means to demonstrate Christ's love, rather than confrontation or withdrawal.[51] In his 2004 book Light Force, co-authored with Al Janssen, he documented these interactions as efforts to foster Christian presence in volatile zones like Gaza, where believers faced restrictions, arguing that direct engagement could open doors for evangelism without endorsing violence. He reported distributing Scriptures during these meetings and urged Western Christians to avoid demonizing Islamists, viewing such dialogues as opportunities to share the Gospel amid end-times eschatology shared by some militants.[51] Empirically, these initiatives yielded short-term gains in access and minor distributions—van der Bijl remained welcome in Gaza for years—but lacked verifiable evidence of broader conversions or doctrinal shifts within the groups, whose charters and actions continued to prioritize jihadist supremacy and opposition to Israel.[38] No large-scale turnings to Christianity among Hamas or Hezbollah cadres were recorded, despite van der Bijl's reports of individual conversations; causal influence on entrenched ideologies rooted in Islamic supremacism appeared negligible, as subsequent violence by these organizations persisted unabated.[3][52]Controversies and Criticisms
Brother Andrew's engagements with Islamist militants, particularly in the Middle East, sparked significant criticism from evangelical circles for perceived naivety and potential appeasement. In his 2004 book Light Force, co-authored with Al Janssen, he detailed meetings with leaders of groups such as Hamas, Islamic Jihad, and Hezbollah, framing these interactions as opportunities for Christian witness amid the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.[38] Critics, including pro-Israel Christians, argued that such outreach downplayed the antisemitic ideologies of these organizations and echoed Palestinian resistance narratives without sufficient condemnation of Islamist violence against civilians or Jews.[53] Van der Bijl responded by asserting that "the best way I can help Israel is by leading her enemies to Jesus Christ," prioritizing evangelistic pragmatism over geopolitical confrontation.[54] Evangelical detractors further contended that van der Bijl's approach risked normalizing dialogue with unrepentant actors committed to jihadist goals, potentially undermining efforts to expose the systemic dhimmitude—second-class status imposed on non-Muslims—faced by Christians under Islamist rule, a theme he had earlier highlighted in his work.[2] His public expressions of disappointment over the 2011 killing of Osama bin Laden and calls for Christians to engage Muslims rather than support military responses to terrorism intensified these debates, with some viewing it as a theological inconsistency that softened biblical realism on spiritual warfare.[2] Defenders countered that his method exemplified non-confrontational witness, akin to his Cold War Bible smuggling, aimed at long-term conversion rather than short-term alliances.[38] Within Open Doors, tensions arose in the 1990s over van der Bijl's push for organizational shifts toward broader Islamist-focused advocacy, reportedly leading to efforts to resign amid disagreements on strategy, though he remained influential.[55] Broader critiques from Western evangelicals highlighted a perceived prioritization of failed peace initiatives and interfaith dialogues over unequivocal support for persecuted churches targeted by Islamist antisemitism, contrasting his earlier anti-communist forthrightness.[53] These controversies underscored debates on whether such outreach advanced gospel realism or inadvertently legitimized adversaries' narratives.[38]Death and Legacy
Final Years and Passing
Andrew van der Bijl spent his final years in retirement in Harderwijk, Netherlands, his longtime home, where advancing age and frailty limited his activities, though he remained engaged with writing and reflection on global Christian persecution until health permitted.[1][56] He died on September 27, 2022, at the age of 94, at his residence in Harderwijk.[57][1] His family announced the death shortly thereafter, noting it occurred peacefully amid a life marked by discretion.[1] A private funeral followed, aligning with van der Bijl's consistent avoidance of public spectacle, succeeded by a public memorial service organized by Open Doors on November 18, 2022.[58] Van der Bijl's passing coincided with escalating secular trends in Western societies, evidenced by declining religious affiliation rates—such as the Pew Research Center's 2021 finding that 29% of U.S. adults identified as religiously unaffiliated, up from 16% in 2007—and the unremitting reality of Christian persecution worldwide, with Open Doors reporting over 360 million affected believers in 2022 under varying pressures from hostile governments and extremists.[32] These conditions remained unaltered by his departure.Long-Term Impact and Evaluations
Open Doors, founded by van der Bijl in 1955, has sustained operations across more than 70 countries, providing Bibles, training, and relief to persecuted Christians, including distribution of 1.3 million Bibles and training for 3.4 million individuals in 2021 alone.[2] In 2024, the organization supported 535,000 persecuted believers through emergency relief, community development, and education programs.[59] These efforts, building on van der Bijl's initial Bible smuggling, have prioritized empirical aid over symbolic gestures, enabling church communities to withstand systemic oppression in totalitarian regimes.[24] Van der Bijl's model contributed to the resilience of underground churches in communist states, where smuggled Scriptures sustained faith amid suppression; post-1989, Christianity experienced sustained growth across Eastern Europe, with Orthodox and other denominations rebounding as restrictions lifted.[60] This expansion, evident three decades after communism's fall, reflects causal factors including prior covert support that preserved core believers capable of public revival, though direct attribution requires accounting for broader geopolitical shifts like the Soviet collapse.[61] The approach has inspired analogous ministries focused on persecuted believers, emphasizing practical intervention in high-risk environments, though scalability depends on verifiable outcomes rather than anecdotal providence.[2] Evangelical assessments praise the anti-totalitarian witness for bolstering religious liberty against ideological suppression, crediting it with millions indirectly reached through fortified networks.[2] Later emphases on dialogue with Islamist groups, including engagements with Hamas and Taliban leaders, drew skepticism regarding efficacy against irreconcilable doctrinal hostilities, as persistent high persecution levels in Islamic-majority states—documented in Open Doors' World Watch List—suggest limited systemic change despite relational overtures.[2] Critics, including some mission partners, questioned the scalability of personal-risk strategies reliant on perceived divine intervention amid entrenched oppression, favoring evidence of measurable church planting over unverified border miracles.[2] Such evaluations prioritize data on sustained growth in post-communist contexts over sentimental bridges to ideologies showing doctrinal rigidity.[62]References
- https://www.[goodreads](/page/Goodreads).com/en/book/show/10598686-prayer
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