This week from Turkey, CBN News reporter George  Thomas told us about Hakan Tastan and Turan Topal, two Christians on trial in  January for allegedly insulting “Turkishness.”
         Most Turks today associate “Turkishness” with Islam; to be a  Turk is to be a Muslim.
        But Turkey  is a country with a rich Christian heritage. Christian Turks lived and  worshipped in the country for at least 600 years prior to the advent of Islam.  The Apostle Paul spent much time in Turkey  and the Book of Acts tells us a riot broke out at the amphitheatre in Ephesus after Paul and  Christian disciples had led “large numbers” of Artemis worshippers “astray.”  (ACTS 19:26) 
        The Book of Revelation mentions the seven churches—Ephesus, Smyrna (where  John’s disciple Polycarp was martyred), Pergamum,  Thyatira, Sardis, Philadelphia  and Laodicea.  All of these churches were located in Turkey.
        So, if the early Christian church was started in Turkey, why do Christians number less than one  percent of Turkey’s  66-million people? They numbered about 20% in 1900 so, what happened?
        I posed that question to an evangelical pastor not long ago  when I visited Izmir (ancient Smyrna). He told me, “You see, over the years  we spent much of our time teaching Turks ABOUT Christianity, but we never  really INTRODUCED them to Christ.”
        The good news today is that many young Turks are meeting  Christ because of the internet, satellite television and the efforts of bold  evangelists like Tastan and Topal.
         Pray citizens of the country that served as the cradle of  Christianity will come to realize that true “Turkishness” can include Turkish  Christians.