
By Stefan J. Bos, Chief International Correspondent Worthy News
JAKARTA (Worthy News) – Muslims have threatened massive protests against the construction of a Catholic church in Indonesia’s West Java Province in the latest standoff over Christian worship in the world’s largest Muslim country.
In comments monitored by Worthy News on Thursday, lawyer Anton Minardi said he had been authorized by residents of Cipamokolan village in the Rancasari Sub-District of the provincial capital Bandung to challenge the project.
The lawyer of law firm Anton Minardi & Partners warned he “would take legal action” due to “criminal elements in the case” surrounding the construction of the St. Anthony Sang Hyang Hurip Catholic Church.
Residents, who are mainly Muslim, “plan to hold a large-scale demonstration to express their disappointment over what they perceive as government officials ignoring their strong protests,” he added.
The lawyer cited parts of a 2006 Joint Ministerial Decree that said, “the local community should resolve any conflict arising from the establishment of houses of worship.”
Minardi stressed in published remarks that the decree also mandates that the “actual needs of specific religious groups in a given area must be considered when building houses of worship. Ideally, local authorities should facilitate dialogue between conflicting parties.”
The conflict comes despite Pope Francis’s 2024 visit to Indonesia, where he called for religious dialogue between Muslims and minority Christians.
SUMMONING PARTIES
With tensions mounting, Worthy News learned that Bandung’s Regional People’s Representative Council, an influential local authority, wants “to summon all involved parties.”
It cited alleged “mismanagement, false declarations, fictitious residents, forged signatures, and indications of bribery” related to securing support for the church’s construction from local officials.
Christians have vehemently denied wrongdoing and say obtaining such permits is nearly impossible for most new churches. “Especially in places such as Bandung, it is very difficult to get a permit to build a church. They don’t want churches because they are not preaching Islam,” a church worker told Worthy News.
“When there are a lot of Muslims, they will not allow Christian sites such as churches and schools. We have recently seen the same issue in Sulawesi Province where a Christian could not open,” added the church worker, who identified herself only as Victoria.
Even when smaller churches manage to fulfill the requirement of obtaining 90 signatures from congregation members and 60 from households of different religions in the area, they often face delays, Christians say.
Victoria and other believers in Indonesia say they are frequently pressured to pay extra fees, referred to as “grease money,” to local officials or residents to secure building permits for churches or other institutions such as schools.
According to the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), people identifying themselves as Christians comprise at least nearly 11 percent of Indonesia’s 282 million people.
MUSLIM CONVERSIONS
Some evangelical leaders have told Worthy News the actual figure may be higher as many Muslims turn to faith in Christ, adding to tensions with the Muslim establishment and residents.
The latest standoff over a church construction in West Java Province did not surprise Christians. The pressure [on Christians] is also higher in places like West Java or Aceh, where radical Islamic groups exert a heavy influence on society and politics,” noted the advocacy group Open Doors.
It has ranked Indonesia 42nd on its annual World Watch List of 50 countries where it says Christians face most persecution for their faith.
“The situation for Christians has been deteriorating in recent years, with Indonesian society increasingly influenced by conservative interpretations of Islam. Polls regularly show that especially young people hold conservative views, and by-laws on Islamic dress are becoming more common.”
It noted that “Many converts from Islam experience pressure from their families. However, the intensity of the pressure depends on the individual family and place.”
Despite the crackdown, Christian leaders have told Worthy News they are encouraged by the spread of the Christian faith in the country.
Copyright 1999-2025 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
More Worthy News
U.S.-based singer and rap star Nicki Minaj brought her global profile to the United Nations on Tuesday to draw attention to the mass killings of Christians in Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation, where more than 7,000 Christians were murdered in the first seven months of this year, according to the watchdog group Intersociety.
Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MBS) used his first White House visit in seven years to deliver a blunt message: Riyadh is ready to join the Abraham Accords — but only if there is a real, irreversible path toward a two-state solution.
In one of the most lopsided votes in recent congressional history, the House of Representatives voted 427-1 on Tuesday to force the Department of Justice to release all unclassified documents related to the Jeffrey Epstein investigation. The Senate quickly followed suit, passing the measure by unanimous consent, sending the bill to President Donald Trump–who announced this week that he would sign it.
As the United Nations Security Council approved a U.S.-drafted resolution laying out a pathway toward a Palestinian state, new polling shows Israeli public opinion moving sharply in the opposite direction.
Martin Bosma of the anti-Islam Party for Freedom (PVV) has lost his bid for another term as speaker of the Dutch House of Representatives, in a vote signaling shifting parliamentary dynamics after last month’s election.
A visibly angry U.S. President Donald J. Trump said the broadcast license of U.S. broadcaster ABC should be “taken away” after one of its reporters confronted him over his ties to the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein — an exchange that played out with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman seated beside him in the Oval Office.
Palestinian attackers killed an Israeli man and wounded three others in a combined ramming-and-stabbing assault in Judea and Samaria (also known as the West Bank) on Tuesday, shortly after the United Nations Security Council endorsed U.S. President Donald J. Trump’s peace initiative for Gaza, Israeli officials said.