Invitation to Prayer ... Wednesday
Hi Friends,
If you're in town and free, please join us to pray together on Wednesday at 11:00 a.m., in the gym conference room at First Presbyterian Church of Midland, Texas.
Please note the new time. We are trying this for one semester so that we have less time conflict with the new women's Bible study that is starting on Wednesdays at 11:30.
Also, Faces of Children is now on Facebook! I invite you to like our page so that you can see regular stories, prayer needs, and updates from partner ministries.
All the best,
Carrie
She gave this name to the Lord who spoke to her: "You are the God who sees me, " for she said, "I have now seen the One who sees me." Genesis 16:13
Dear Intercessors,
El Roi. The God who sees. Hagar first used this name of God when she was fleeing her mistress. In the midst of her flight, she encountered God. A servant -- powerless, hopeless, scared -- fleeing her powerful mistress. Presumably, Hagar didn't have much value assigned to her in the household where she served... another set of hands, another body, another tool. And yet as she was running, she did not escape God's notice. He saw her. And somehow in being seen, Hagar was able to see her worth and to see God.
New York Times Photo |
Sadly, this escalation has corresponded with other headline-grabbing events, such as Hurricane Harvey and the simmering crisis in the Korean peninsula. And as a result, most of the world's attention is diverted elsewhere, and thousands of Rohingya suffer and die without many noticing.
They need to know El Roi.
We need to know El Roi.
We need to open our eyes and see. We need to look at the mothers, scrambling over steep ravines clinging to listless, dehydrated babies, trying to find safety. We need to look at the fathers, backed into corners of deprivation, watching their children slowly starve and being stripped of their land, property, animals, and livelihoods. We need to look at the children, who have grown up knowing only hunger, thirst, sickness, and violence - the spark of childhood innocence and playfulness never able to take root.
We need to confess that we are too quick to focus our attention, empathy, and assistance on neighbors who are close-by... whose tragedies feel more familiar. We ignore those whose sorrows and losses seem so overwhelmingly large and unsolvable. We don't know what to do, so we look away.
And as we see and confess and pray, may we also find some comfort in the fact that we serve a God named El Roi. He sees every single Rohingya person. He sees their sorrow, loss, and pain. He sees their hunger and their heartache. He sees their suffering. Even as we pray for the alleviation of all the brutality they face, may we also pray that in the midst of it all, they are able to behold El Roi, the One who sees them. Come quickly, Lord Jesus.
Praying with you,
Carrie
PS: Finally, as we see, confess, pray and trust, may we also give thanks for groups like Partner's Relief and Development who have never fallen silent and who continue to tirelessly work to bring relief, attention, and hope to the Rohingya.
Carrie J. McKean
Faces of Children Director
First Presbyterian Church of Midland, Texas
(432) 684-7821 x153
If you have prayer requests about children, those who care for them, those who have authority over them, or those who harm them (the really hard prayers to say sometimes), please send them to info@facesofchildren.net
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