This piece was first written in 1995, situations in the Sudan have changed, and south Sudan is now a nation. The persecution of Christians has not changed.
WILL YOU PRAY AT US?
I
pray for them. I am not praying for the
world, but those
you
have give me, for they are yours.
John
17:9
They were Sudanese Christians. The country is rated one of the worst
violators of human rights in the world and I wouldn't dare mention their names
here, but I had the opportunity to meet them at an athletic competition in
another country. I did not want to meet
them. I had just received news from home
that a friend had died and I just wanted to be alone. The last concern, the last desire on my heart
was to reach out to someone else, I was busy being wrapped up in my own grief.
Fred persisted. He made the contact. He got to know the whole group. Finally I had the opportunity to spend the
afternoon with them. We ate together and
we watched a video of a basketball game, and then the two who were Christians
invited us into their room before they left to return to their country. When the one looked at us and said,
"Will you pray at us?" I
almost cried right there.
They told us the needs they had. One had been married only seven months. Both
were extremely worried about their families and the religious persecution they
were facing at home. They told us how
friends seemed to disappear everyday.
They had a little security because they were athletes and affiliated
with the military, but if it wasn't for that they did not know what would
happen to them. Militant Islamic forces
are still waging war against the people from southern Sudan where these men are
from.
When they finished telling their stories
we began to pray. I prayed for one, Fred
the other, and not only did we pray for them, we prayed at them, we threw our
hearts and souls into the battle. We
realized that our time with them was brief, that we would soon be
separated. We also realized that God had
put them in our lives at that particular time for us to encourage as they
returned to face the struggle ahead.
Jesus knew he was about to be separated
from his disciples as he prayed in the garden.
The prayer he prayed is recorded in the seventeenth chapter of
John. An interesting thing is that he
did not pray a general prayer, "Please keep them all safe." Rather, he said, "I pray for them. I am not praying for the world, but for those
you have given me, for they are yours."
Jesus said, in essence, let me get
straight to the point, let me pray directly at the subject at hand - not
everyone, but these you have given to me.
He prayed for just a few men, the ones in his life, realizing that they
were part of the great plan, the Father's plan.
Luke goes so far as to tell as that as Jesus prayed in the garden he
shed great drops of blood. We need to
learn from the master how to pray at the people He has put in our life. We need to move away from the generic,
"God bless everyone" prayers, to Christ-like, "God hold this my
sister or this my brother" prayers.
We need to be specific in who we pray at.
Thank God he gave us the chance to pray at
our Sudanese brothers. We prayed at them to encourage them, to remind them that
Jesus died and lives for all men. We
prayed at them to remind them that they had brothers in other parts of the
world who held them in their hearts. As
we drove away from their hotel the last image we had was of the rest of the
team going through their Muslim prayer ritual, prostrating themselves and
praying toward Mecca. These men returned
to a land where they will be persecuted for their faith. We fervently pray that we will hear from them
again, but they could be gone in no time.
Who do you pray at?
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