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Shortening the Distance Between Their Suffering and Our Comfort

*This post isn't really nearly education our children…but and so again, maybe it is.

Shorten the distance between their suffering and our comfort

My centre is heavy as I write these words. This might explain my blogging absenteeism equally of late. Try as I might, I merely tin't seem to observe the motivation to weblog nearly scientific discipline experiments and kindergarten readiness while reflecting on the suffering around the earth.

These are but a few of the many atrocities I accept read about recently:

Nine-year old girls being sold every bit sex activity slaves for the price of a new pair of shoes.

Parents fleeing ISIS who take to cull which children they tin can take with them as they abscond for their lives.

Orphans in Zimbabwe who will never know the protectiveness of a parent who loves them.

The unborn being dismembered.

Christians in Ethiopia being brutally executed.

And closer to home, a sixteen-yr one-time male child from our church who has been on a ventilator for over a month, unable to motility any part of his body subsequently suffering from a drain in his spinal string (of which the cause is withal unknown).

People around the world are in desperation. And I just don't even know what to practise about it.

I experience torn in ii…alien emotions that seem to be waging their state of war within of me. On one hand, I feel empathy and compassion for the devastating trials others are experiencing. And on the other hand, I experience guilt that I alive in immense luxury (in comparison to the rest of the earth) with a loving husband, salubrious children, and a home where food on the table is plentiful, where in that location is warmth in the winter and cool in the summer.

The other emotion, the most prominent as I blazon these words, is that of shame. Shame at my own self-centeredness that focuses on momentary pleasures and comforts rather than the suffering of others. Although I do not believe God is the giver of shame, I do believe He at times allows us to peer behind the curtain of our hearts and see our own sin. And seeing our sin, for what it truly is, produces a repentant shame of which I cannot escape.

Each time I retrieve about the sufferings of other half a world away and then quickly return to my own decorated agenda, I am reminded about this scene from the picture showHotel Rwanda. It had such a profound affect on me from the time I saw the motion picture many years ago. The hotel manager, played by Don Cheadle, questions one of the journalists staying at his hotel while filming the Rwandan Genocide, asking "How can the world not intervene after seeing such atrocities?" The announcer responds, "If people run into this footage, they'll say 'Oh my (Gosh) that's horrible!' so go on eating their dinners."

Information technology is sobering to call back how much this fits my reaction to devastating news. I think the reason I "proceed eating my dinner" is not considering I don't care (although I often need to caremore), I call up information technology is because I feel powerless to help.

How do y'all aid someone suffering half a world abroad, someone who you will never encounter in this lifetime? What do we do?????

In lite of such suffering, giving coin seems similar a alleviation of sorts. Often our giving is from our excess, rather than a sacrifice. Prayer, of grade, is the obvious answer…but it likewise seems distant and detached when nosotros cannot picture the faces of those who are suffering.

I'm all the same processing and praying almost what my response volition exist. But my prayer today is that God will shorten the distance between their suffering and our comfort, so that we cannot let a day go by without thinking nigh praying for those suffering all around the world, especially those suffering in the proper noun of Christ himself.

So even though tomorrow might be a normal day of taking care of my family, i where I become back to "normal" blogging and deal with an assortment of "get-go world problems", I pray that God will continue to lay on my heart those who are suffering. I pray that they will not exist nameless, faceless statistics, but that when I look in the eyes of my precious children, that I will see the faces of children in Iraq, Syria, Zimbabwe, and elsewhere around the world desperate for the hope that only Jesus Christ can provide.

*Scroll to the bottom of this post as a starting point to how we can help those being persecuted in the Middle East.

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