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Issue: Other Diseases

April 05, 2008

Rude Awakenings

I’m not ashamed to tell you that we now have three kids sleeping in our room.

Two year-old Hannah has staked out her position between Lisa and me on our king-sized bed. Caleb, five years old, camps down on a toddler mattress next to the footboard. Newborn Naomi is strategically set next to Lisa in a bedside bassinette.

Three children under the age of six in our room?

Yes, it certainly makes for moments of late-night chaos, especially for a really light sleeper like me.

Naomi is up every three hours or so for her feeding. As Lisa takes care of the new baby, Hannah, realizing that mommy is occupied with someone other than her, wakes up in protest. Hannah is also known to talk in her sleep, often arguing with Caleb or loudly proclaiming, "Mine! Mine!" to an imaginary acquirer of her toys.

Caleb takes his middle-of-the-night trips to the bathroom while totally oblivious of those trying to sleep around him. Thump, thump, thump across the wood floors, followed by the illuminating of every light possible and a toilet visit and flush with door wide open.

Meanwhile, Faith, our less-than-quiet six-year old in the next room, makes similar nighttime journeys down the hall past our open door.

Is it any wonder that I’m quite tired these days?

I was once told in the Philippines that the reason Americans don’t have larger families is because we don’t have enough rooms for each child. There is a belief in some parts of the developing world that we rich affluent Americans, with our desire to put each child in a room of their own, limit our families accordingly. Two extra bedrooms translates into two children.

Meanwhile, in the slums of Bombay, Manila, Lima, Nairobi and the world over, families of eight are crammed into one-room 8 ft. by 8ft. shacks.

My nocturnal distractions occur in a scene of great comfort – a room set at 72 degrees Fahrenheit with a constantly circulating fan providing a gentle breeze, a plush pillow-top bed so thick that you could lose yourself in it, plenty of space for the five nighttime inhabitants, and a peaceful sense of stability and security. Everybody goes to sleep with full bellies and, should anybody be sick, there are multitudes of medicines on hand.

To the contrary, those shanty-town dwellers live on urine-soaked dirt floors with no running water. Any stirring of disease-ridden children in the middle of a hot and humid night means that the whole family is awakened. Mosquitoes buzz around the heads of the feverish kids, while the danger of a home invasion by thieves is ever present. The black sooty walls choke the lungs while splintered wood makes a comfortable sleep-time position even harder to attain. Sweat-drenched sheets enunciate the combined body odors of a family that hasn’t been able to bathe in weeks.

Like most, I love weekends. After a restless night of multiple rude awakenings, I arise later than usual to sunlight flooding in through stained-glass windows. Soon there will be the scent of coffee and bacon filling the air. A nice hot shower, and a pick from many freshly-cleaned clothes, helps to get the day in order. All my smaller bed-chamber mates have long scurried off in search of cartoons and fairytales.

Meanwhile, it’s just another day of hard labor for the father in the developing world who tried to fight for a few precious hours of sleep inside his sardine-packed abode. His young daughter vomited on him last night, just another episode among many like it, night after night. There is no aromatic food greeting him, nor any fresh shower and clean clothes. The only light streaming into his dark hovel is through the same slats that neighbors can peer through, the same openings that bring the bugs and vermin.

How on earth does he have a day where he has the rest, energy and health to provide for his struggling family?

Maybe my sleepless nights aren’t so bad after all.

October 02, 2007

30,000

The United Nations and World Health Organization report that 10.5 million children – all under the age of five - die each year from "easily-preventable" conditions in the developing world. Malnutrition and unclean water are common or complicating factors in most of these deaths, but pneumonia, diarrhea, malaria, measles, HIV/AIDS, pregnancy issues, and a whole host of related items, get the official credit on the death certificate.

Poverty and lack of access to decent healthcare are mitigating factors. Unavailable or unaffordable $1 vaccinations take their toll in a world where half the population - over 3 billion people - tries to survive on less than two dollars a day.

The UN/WHO annual child mortality number equates to 28,800 children dying each and every day - almost ten times the tragedy of 9/11...each and every day!

And these are just the children under the age of five!

Image if you increased that range to six years old? Seven years old? Eight years old?

Regardless, at least another 1,200 children under five (conservatively bringing the total to over 30,000 children) perish daily because of infanticide or sex-selective abortion. We can go on and on, but 30,000 is already significant enough a number.

30,000 little lives. 30,000 souls. 30,000 hopes and dreams.

30,000. Think about that number today. Pray about that number today.

September 08, 2007

Lifeblood

As I sit in Nairobi, awaiting the next leg of my journey to Kampala, Uganda, I’m reminded of just how familiar Africa has become to me. This is my eighth or ninth trip here, I lose count. And I’ll be making yet another trek, to a couple of the genocide regions, before the year is out.

I’ve crossed the continent from east to west, north to south and back again, visiting more than a dozen ailing nations of Africa in just the last few years alone.

I’ve seen sprawling urban metropolises teaming with western-attired people going into American fast food restaurants. And I’ve shared time in mud huts with sarong-cloaked tribal families who boil weeds to survive. I’ve been to progressive municipalities where development can’t keep up with the insatiable demand for new infrastructure. And I’ve been to cities that are digging themselves out of the ruins of decades of civil war, every building peppered by rain showers of bullets and terror.

Liberiabulletholes

(RAINSHOWERS. Bullet-pierced guardrails and signs are evidence of the strife in Liberia)

But it’s all Africa to me. Despite the amazing diversity of ecosystems, cultures, tongues and circumstances, Africa has become a recognizable whole, a cohesive gathering of nations bound by common struggles.

It is a land of shared tragedies and hardships.  Whether on the gold cost of Ghana, the game lands of Tanzania, the parched sands of Sudan, or Lake Victoria’s shores in Uganda, I’ve encountered the same deathly lances everywhere. HIV/AIDS, malaria and other scourges have broadly spread their dark wings over all these varied areas. They know no geopolitical or socioeconomic boundaries.

Man does the rest. War and ethnic conflict take barbaric forms of individual brutalism and communal slaughter. Greed and corruption take life-giving food and medicine away from struggling families.

Life is in the blood.

Blood is spilt often here. Blood is infected often here.

Ugandaaidsclinic

(A SIGHT TOO COMMON. Ugandan HIV/AIDS clinic)

From city to city and village to village, it is the same recognizable tune, a swan song for nations that are crumbling under the weight of a fallen world. Africa is hemorrhaging, bleeding from lesions that run long and deep. The profuse outflow is internal and external. There are seemingly not enough sutures to stop the present tide.

Our Savior shed his blood for such a place. Only he can bind up the wounds. And he has chosen to do so through the mechanism he established, his Church. It is the only organization, only ‘movement’ hat has the love and capacity to do so.

May 08, 2007

Visible yet Invisible

This past Sunday, 18,000 people bared all and had their picture taken en mass on the main square in Mexico City by famed photographer, Spencer Tunick. According to the Associated Press, the huge naked spectacle was comprised of "Men and women from a broad cross-section of ages and social classes."

I’m certainly not a proponent of public nudity and see this event as just another example of the corruption of man. When we cease to even be shy about our own nakedness, we truly have degenerated further from the reality that hit Adam and Eve in the garden.

As an artist and photographer myself, I understand that one of the primary purposes of ‘art’ is to invoke a response in the mind of the viewer. Our media-cluttered society is causing people to become numb to the barrage of images that constantly assails them. As such, artists feel like they have to constantly ‘push the envelope’ in order to obtain the desired contemplations and reactions. This is the scourge of the artist in our society today. It is the curse of Hollywood and the cause of the filth that increasingly perpetuates itself on our television and movie screens.

The images of Sunday’s photo shoot have popped up all over the web. These versions are typically shown from a distance so as to not reveal specific individual nudity. They simply present a mass of bodies standing, crouching and lying together in a public expanse. As such, the photos themselves don’t bring as much offense as the thought of what it all signifies.

Tunick_3_2

As I saw the thousands of people, representing different levels of poverty and affluence, I thought of the individualities and commonalities. Each person that participated was stripped down of the things we typically use to identify and categorize. They were all there anonymously in a shared state of awkwardness and vulnerability. But each person also represented a book of unique chapters, unseen and un-interpretable with the covers removed. Visible yet invisible.

Tunick_2

According to UNICEF, 30,000 children under the age of five die each day due to poverty-related conditions. They "die quietly in some of the poorest villages on earth, far removed from the scrutiny and the conscience of the world. Being meek and weak in life makes these dying multitudes even more invisible in death."

This mass of children seems as nameless and impersonal to us as 18,000 unclothed people standing in a square. But they all have names and personalities. Jeremy liked to kick around a ripped soccer ball with his friends. Esmeralda enjoyed chasing butterflies across the grasslands next to her home. Sergio was the absolutely best hide ‘n’ seeker in his village. Mercy dressed up as a beautiful princess after school every day.

Tunick_post_2

Look beyond the overwhelming statistics and know that each incremental notch is a unique and priceless life that was snuffed out way too early. Each count represents a soul that could have been reached through love and proclamation.

Take a look again at the Mexico City photos above. Put aside the repulsion of their nakedness. Instead, imagine a further 12,000 standing among them. Imagine that they are all under the age of five and will die today. What thought unsettles you the most? Degenerate art or the thought of 30,000 infants, toddlers and pre-schoolers painfully dying of dehydration, starvation, malaria and other easily-preventable conditions associated with poverty?

Tunick_post

(Lower Images: Uganda, 2006)

April 03, 2007

Contrasts

In the past hour...

  • 1,625 children were forced to live on the streets by the death or abuse of an adult
  • 1,667 children under the age of five died from malnutrition and vaccine-preventable diseases
  • 115 children became prostitutes
  • 66 children under 15 were infected with HIV
  • 257 children were orphaned because of HIV/AIDS

A world of contrasts. Are we too comfortable?

Street_children_in_india

(Image: Street girls in Mumbai, India, 2000)

Kids_with_easter_baskets

(Image: Contrast...Myhill children with Easter baskets, March 2007)

March 09, 2007

The Mega-issue (part four)

We have talked about two chain reactions, two cycles.

The first is how the rescue of orphaned and abandoned children (the mega-issue) affects so many other problems and concerns – poverty, HIV/AIDS, prostitution, child exploitation and other interrelated matters. To save children is to proactively attack and diminish all these societal plagues and afflictions. As children are liberated from the vicious cycle, parts of the cycle unravel, producing a geometric impact that reaches through generations. It’s not just about the current statistical decline of these troubles; it’s about the rescued children’s children, grand-children, great-grand children and beyond, who are now freed from the cause and effect spiral of despair. The changes project forward exponentially...because of children’s removal from the cycle.

The second regards an expanding numerical impact also. As the Church is the vehicle and purpose of rescue, children learn about their value in God’s eyes. They learn what the Bible has to say about teaching others, helping others, changing others. The children are removed from the problem but also become part of the solution as they teach against abuse, addiction and exploitation. They become an army of change agents for their communities, nation and world. The changes project forward exponentially...because of more workers attacking the cycle.

We have also talked about the spiritual element inherent in the church being the means of rescue and how this also has additional and multiplicative ramifications for eternity. People are attracted to the church because of the church’s love for the children. And the children above not only go into the world teaching about the issues of the temporal world, but they go teaching about the gift of eternity. These children become an army in another sense – an army of missionaries, spreading the greater truth of love and transformation. The changes project forward eternally...because of the spread of the message of new life.

It is this last thought that I’d like to now briefly expand upon.

Many parts of the developing world have evangelical Christian populations of less than 5%. In most of those same regions the composition of born-again believers is 2% and under. These are the same areas where significant orphaned and abandoned children struggle to survive.

In a sense, those red areas of blemish described in the previous section The Mega-issue (part three) also represent areas where Biblical Christianity is less than 5% established. As the white crosses of hope serve to shrink those red sections, the percentage of believers increases accordingly. Those believers, in turn, can expand the Kingdom exponentially as they take on the task of outreach and evangelism.

In short, orphans represent a unique opportunity for the recruitment and training of workers for the harvest fields of eternity. What a huge opportunity that really is...tens of millions of children ready to be raised by the Church family; tens of millions of children that have been orphaned and abandoned out of Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist and animistic families; tens of millions of children that will be ‘sent out’ as missionaries to those same communities.

God works in all things. The tragedy of our time is also the greatest prospect of our time.

Do you want to know what the evangelical Christian response should be to radical Islamic schools that take in children, indoctrinate them, and send them out as terrorists, as armies of hatred and destruction?

Answer: Support indigenous churches all over the world to take in the orphaned children of Muslim communities, train them up in the knowledge of the Lord, and send them out as missionaries, as armies of love and reconciliation!

The mega-issue is now. The mega-opportunity is now.

March 08, 2007

The Mega-issue (part three)

All of society’s woes are related to one thing...sin. This is the point of commonality.

The world and everything in it was originally created as flawless, unspoiled...perfect. The world we live in today is not that world. It has been gravely corrupted as a consequence of a devastating choice. Everything we now see as imperfect, evil and tragic can be traced back to that specific moment that shattered the timeline forward. Murder followed. Disease followed. Abuses of children followed. Orphans followed.

The first Adam brought death and disease. The second Adam, Christ, brought life and healing.

Christ established His Body, the Church. The Spirit uses the Church to regenerate, restore and reconcile. The Church is God’s principal instrument to tackle the core commonality. Only the Church can truly address the mega-issue and everything it touches and represents.

God has positioned His Church around the world for such a time as this...

Orphaned and abandoned children flood the region previously known as the Third World. The burden knows no boundaries or borders. The whole area is awash with the weeping of desperate children that don’t ask for much...just simple safety, security, and sustenance...and the knowledge that somebody loves them. Much of that same area is populated by the Church, local indigenous bodies of believers that understand the call and strength of James 1:27 and over forty other passages of Scripture related to orphans; that understand the heart of God for the lost children who are abandoned and polluted by this cruel and wicked world.

Visualize a map of the developing world produced on a letter-sized piece of paper. Imagine that all the areas where significant orphan populations exist are represented by blood-red dots. In India, Africa and Southeast Asia, these red dots converge to form huge swatches and blotches across large urban areas. Whole regions are bathed in crimson.

Now think of a second map copied onto a similarly-sized transparency sheet. It is faint and translucent accept for opaque white crosses printed all over it, each symbolizing where specific indigenous churches are established. In those same large city agglomerations above, the white crosses join hands to form a white field, a safety net of rescue, a mesh of hope.

Now imagine placing the transparency sheet on top of the red-stained sheet. The blood and cries of the children are covered by the crosses. The regions of red blemishes are punctuated by little white points of intersection and hope. Most areas where orphans live and die are populated by native churches that are strategically placed to rescue them, temporally and eternally.

The numbers of people represented by these white crosses aren’t necessarily large; the sizes of the crosses aren’t very big in some areas; the spacing between crosses is quite far apart in others. But they are spread out over the same geography where the mega-issue continually and persistently rears its ugly head. There is a presence. There are partners for the task.

Indigenous churches are uniquely positioned to care for the children of their communities. Most have the heart and are responding in obedience and love with limited resources; they just need a boost to more broadly and effectively engage the task.

As these churches do engage the task, they expand. Rescued children accept the promises of Christ and commit to love and serve Him. Surrounding communities, warmed by the affection of the church towards their children, are attracted to the church and find love and forgiveness there. The children, themselves, go out amongst neighbors and peers who witness their transformation and want a part of it. The churches grow.

Imagine those white crosses increasing in size and numbers as they start to take in the 150 million orphans in their vicinities. Imagine them absorbing the scarlet stains like sponges, swelling and multiplying as a result; the purity and hope of Christ covering the abuses and corruptions of man. Churches develop and extend. The Kingdom advances.

March 07, 2007

The Least of These

Jacob has slept on a hard concrete sidewalk for the past two years, huddled with many other boys and girls that are clothed in tattered rags and hopelessness

Elena, a frightened 10-year old, has just been forced into prostitution by the local slum lord

Sanjay spends the day scavenging the garbage heaps for scraps of food and sniffing glue to numb his hunger pangs and sorrows

Ursula is frightened and alone after witnessing her family savagely killed with machetes during an "ethnic cleansing" campaign

Serge worriedly tries to comfort his sick baby sister during yet another long, cold night under a frozen bridge

"I tell you the truth, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers of mine, you did for me." - Jesus (Matthew 25:40 NIV)

(Acronym: Copyright World Orphans 2006)

March 06, 2007

The Mega-issue (part two)

Extreme poverty, the devaluation of women, illiteracy, disease, sexual exploitation, slavery, child labor, drug abuse, pedophilia, addiction, child soldiers, violent extremism – they are all results and components (sub-issues) of the mega-issue of orphaned and abandoned children.

They interlace and provide momentum to a truly wicked cycle of calamitous reach and proportions.

Any particular sub-issue has hugely damaging consequences. AIDS, for example, causes millions upon millions of orphans as children’s parents are afflicted and felled. These orphaned children are then menaced and victimized by despicable individuals who are contaminated with HIV/AIDS themselves. Some of these people believe the wretched lie that, by sleeping with a young virgin, they can be cured of AIDS. Others, who are known to be infected and are stigmatized by their communities, hunt vulnerable children as the only option to act out their sexual desires. In addition, orphaned children, unable to find shelter and feed themselves, will reluctantly or forcibly enter into lives of prostitution or serial ‘sugar daddy’ relationships. There, they find food, but they also find something else...HIV/AIDS. The vicious cycle continues.

Any particular sub-issue feeds that same sub-issue. Prostitutes die of AIDS and leave orphans who sell their bodies for food. Poverty breeds the desperate act of abandonment, creating a whole class of children who are, themselves, deeply impoverished. Drugs take lives and produce orphans who end up using and selling addictive substances. Child soldiers are forced to decimate villages, generating orphaned children who are then stolen into warfare. Female children are discarded, reinforcing their society’s belief that they are worthless, and devaluing the status of girls and women yet further. The vicious cycle continues.

Any particular sub-issue also feeds the other sub-issues. Poverty causes girls to be traded into prostitution. Drugs kill and leave orphans that become enslaved in child labor schemes. AIDS ravishes communities, triggering orphan populations that eventually find solace in drugs. Poverty-stricken orphans are recruited into radical Islamic schools, fostering future terrorism activities. Young drug users spread HIV/AIDS through tainted needles. Child prostitutes allow pedophiles to discover and explore their behavior, spawning more pedophiliac activity. The combinations and permutations are countless and endless. They are all interrelated. The vicious cycle continues...and spirals outward.

The question then becomes, "What is the easiest point in which to insert oneself into the cycle in order to break the cycle?"

There really are two choices. You can either try to change things at the societal level by implementing broad outreaches for each issue (i.e. HIV/AIDS prevention programs, child labor laws and enforcement, anti-prostitution measures, financial aid packages, etc.)...or you can simply break a common link in the chain and severely attack the umbrella issues accordingly and jointly. A very strategic point of commonality is the mega-issue of orphaned and abandoned children.

As orphans are rescued, all those dreadful demons are dealt massive blows. As children are taken off of the streets, prostitution is diminished, pedophiliac opportunities are minimized, drug dealing and usage are reduced, recruiting grounds for child soldiers and extremists are decreased, child trafficking pools are restricted, AIDS infection is lessened, and on and on. It’s a highly-strategic ‘multiple birds with one stone’ scenario.

The issues do need to be tackled at the societal level also. There is always a need for general awareness programs and measures. But where the ‘rubber meets the road,’ there are very few involvement opportunities that have the punch, power, and potential like the rescue and care of orphans.

There is, of course, another element to this: mobilization and geometric impact. As children are rescued and restored, trained up to honor life and love others, they will go into their communities to teach against prostitution, child labor, drugs, slavery and the other issues. The children are taken out of the statistics and the cause/effect cycle, but are also part of the greater solution as they become advocates and act as compassionate examples to transform lives.

Yes, we have still limited the discussion to temporal terms here. Next, we will converse about local indigenous churches as the practical and spiritual tools of rescue. This is the most exciting part...seeing orphaned and abandoned children comforted, sheltered and educated...by believers who touch eternity as they touch the temporal; by churches that are willing to break the cycle of abuse and exploitation; by pastors who are fully engaged in the mega-issue.

March 05, 2007

The Mega-issue (part one)

John and Mary Smith are driving home from a New Year’s Eve party when their car is struck from the side by a drunk driver. The impact takes the life of their three year old daughter, Danielle. Broken and angry, they start a political advocacy group to support candidates and advocate laws that take a tough stance against repeat DUI offenders.

Jake Jones has just died of a rare childhood cancer. His parents, Bob and Sally, watched over him the past year as the disease drained life and resources. Now, without their son and any personal assets, they plow headlong into the non-profit world, starting a memorial foundation to assist their family financially and to create exposure for more research into the specific cancer that took Jake’s young life.

Nancy Brown was a single mother to Alison, her twelve year old daughter who adored her and ballet. After a desperate two month search, Alison’s body was found in a muddy ditch, the victim of a pedophile abduction, abuse and murder. Internet records show that he had stalked her online. Nancy, horrified that such things could happen through the computer sitting in her living room, begins a nationwide appeal to raise awareness of the dangers of Internet chat rooms.

We have all heard similar stories, haven’t we? Parents who are propelled by loss to vocally and fervently battle the factors that took the lives of their children.

But would Nancy Brown, the Smiths and the Jones have done anything if tragedy hadn’t touched their lives? Would they have instead remained comfortable and apathetic if death hadn’t knocked on their doors and shook their worlds? Would they have even given a second thought to drunk drivers, cancer and Internet predators...or would they have just gone about their contented lives and concluded that it was "somebody else’s problem"?

I used to think this way. I say it to my own shame. Yes, an element of it is true and perhaps resonated with you. We live in a listless, indifferent, selfish world. As such, many ‘causes’ are only championed by those that have been affected personally. They expect other people to immediately understand, own it, and jump on the bandwagon when they, themselves, refused to listen beforehand. They were deaf to the cries until the pain was their own.

But...God allowed something to happen and now they hear...and serve.

I love the way that C.S. Lewis so eloquently and succinctly put it, "Pain is God’s megaphone to rouse a deaf world." This is just as true for individual tragedies as it is for natural disasters or gross perversions that affect thousands. As lives are racked by pain, people are pressed into action and the world is touched as a result. These aren’t just temporal ripples. In many instances, waves wash through eternity.

Our Sovereign Lord, in His providential wisdom, sees that people are fully engaged because of, and in spite of, the calamities and catastrophes that have befallen them.

Nobody would have expected Nancy Brown, and the Smith and Jones families to have previously cared about all those issues – reckless drunks, cancer and pedophiles. There are simply too many causes in the world, too many hurts and injustices, to expect any one person or family to have a heart, understanding and involvement in all of them. Through circumstances and intervention, people are given specific wirings for specific calls upon their lives.

It is not fair, therefore, to judge the prior apathy of the individuals mentioned above. The flashpoint event should be acknowledged and the response should be applauded as these people have been compelled and propelled into action. In a lost and hurting world, any and all action should be commended, provided necessary education and preparation has occurred beforehand. Obviously, the discussion as to whether the context is Christ-centered or not comes into play, and is all-important, but we’ll leave that for another conversation.

There is certainly a distinction between personal causes and shared causes. There are some things that are so huge, so universal, that they absolutely require the mindshare and hands of every person on the planet. These are the things that whole generations will have to stand before the judgment seat of Christ, either as believers or as unbelievers, and give an account by answering the question, "What did you do about it?" These are the matters that have everything else wrapped up into them – including disease, abuse, poverty, prostitution, drugs, conflict – and are the ‘mega-issues’ that encompass and feed so many of these ‘sub-issues.’

We were created to have relationship...relationship with God and relationship with each other. We are bound together in degrees, regardless of whether we are children of God or children of this world. The things that touch so many of us, touch all of us. The things that affect our world so greatly, should affect each of us individually. As humanity is tested and tormented, we are responsible to take up our part of the struggle.

The mega-issues of our world are all related to the fall and corruption of that same world. Ultimately, it’s all about sin, but the concerns and afflictions manifest in different ways.

What are the mega-issues of our world and generation? – HIV/ADS, Malaria, gross poverty, violent religious radicalism, and the devaluation of women. They all cause, are part of, and envelope, a standalone issue that represents the single greatest burden (and opportunity) of our time – orphaned and abandoned children. Children in the hundreds of millions. Children of disease, abuse and poverty. Children of hopelessness. Children of promise.

Jesus proclaimed that, "The Spirit of the Lord is on me, because He has anointed me to preach good news to the poor." He also indignantly said, "Let the little children come to me, and do not hinder them, for the kingdom of God belongs to such as these." There are multitudes of times in Scripture where it is clearly revealed that God has a very special heart of compassion for the poor and for the children. How about those that are poor and children? What do you imagine He thinks of them? What do you think His attitude is towards destitute children, children that truly represent the "least of these"?

Over forty times in Scripture, God speaks of His love for orphans. The fact that God gave His son for us, as spiritual orphans, in order to place us into His family, is startling evidence of His burning passion for those who are cut off and removed from love and belonging. How much more does the poor temporal orphan here on earth represent His heart of hearts, the core of His compassion, the ‘sweet spot’ of His sacrifice.

No matter how you are wired or have been touched by personal tragedy, to rescue and look after orphans embraces a multitude of specific passions. Expressed, specialized and focused purpose does indeed reside there.

Do you desire to assist the poor and crush poverty? – Rescue orphans.

Do you wish to combat HIV/AIDS and other heinous diseases? – Rescue orphans.

Do you hope to prevent pedophiles from abusing young children? – Rescue orphans.

Do you want to stamp out prostitution? – Rescue orphans.

Do you yearn for the end of drug dealing and addiction? – Rescue orphans.

Do you crave to uphold the worth and significance of women? – Rescue orphans.

Do you long to stop violent extremism and the placement of children into radical schools? – Rescue orphans.

Do you dream to crush illiteracy? – Rescue orphans.

Do you aspire to eliminate child labor? – Rescue orphans.

Do you seek to eradicate the recruitment of child soldiers and atrocities they are forced to commit? – Rescue orphans.

All these things are targeted, attacked and addressed as you help to rescue orphans from their circumstances, abuses, exploitations and vulnerabilities. The 150 million abandoned and orphaned children of the world are directly related to, involved in, and susceptible to desperate poverty, female degradation, illiteracy, disease, sexual maltreatment, prostitution, unfair child labor practices, drug peddling, and all manner of petty crime and addictions. They also provide fertile ground to be developed and stolen into extremism, slavery, and war.

To address the orphan problem is to address a whole host of societal plagues. However a person is wired for specific activism, their goals and needs are met in the faces of orphaned and abandoned children.

Addictions. Disease. Predators. The Smiths. The Jones. The Browns. All are related in the fields of the fatherless. All can work in concert by tackling the core mega-issue of our time, the core heart-breaker of Our Lord and Savior – orphaned and abandoned children.

Do you want to change your world? – Rescue orphans.

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