A Champion for the Persecuted

On April 10, President Trump announced the appointment of former North Carolina Congressman Mark Walker as the United States ambassador at large for international religious freedom at the State Department. If confirmed, as expected, by the Senate, Walker will be the seventh such person to serve in this role.

Walker comes to this important position after serving three terms in the House of Representatives, serving North Carolina’s Sixth Congressional District. He chaired the influential Republican Study Committee and was vice-chair of the House Republican Conference. Walker also co-chaired the Congressional Prayer Caucus.

The former congressman’s background as a Southern Baptist pastor will serve him well in this new role as a champion for religious freedom. He pastored churches in North Carolina and Florida before entering public service.

The role of ambassador for religious freedom at the State Department was created in 1998 with the adoption of the bipartisan International Religious Freedom Act, passed by Congress and signed into law by President Bill Clinton. It not only created this role, which reports directly to the secretary of state, but it also created the separate U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom. Both offices create separate reports on the state of religious freedom around the world.

The ambassador for religious freedom helps integrate the country’s core value of religious freedom into its diplomacy and foreign policy, both championing religious freedom and calling out bad actors on the world stage. The United States is the only country in the world with an office specifically designed for this kind of diplomacy. Walker will have access to the secretary of state and the president and can help shape policy recommendations.

It’s good and right for the United States to use her status as the world superpower to champion religious freedom around the world. Former Ambassador Sam Brownback, who served in this role for President Trump’s first term, said of the office, “The United States is the preeminent country in the world that stands for religious freedom. There’s nobody anywhere close to it. So to be the ambassador for international religious freedom for a country that stands for it … affects billions of people around the world that simply want to peacefully practice their faith.”

Click Here to Read More (Originally Published at World Magazine)

Daniel is director of the Land Center for Cultural Engagement at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary. His forthcoming book is Agents of Grace. He is also a bestselling author of several other books, including The Original Jesus, The Dignity Revolution, The Characters of Christmas, The Characters of Easter, and A Way With Words, and the host of a popular weekly podcast, The Way Home. Dan holds a bachelor’s degree in pastoral ministry from Dayspring Bible College, has studied at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, and is a graduate of Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. He and his wife, Angela, have four children.

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