Spreading hope and love amid the darkness
Baptist organisations in Palestine and Israel are continuing to support people amid the ‘heart-wrenching reality’ of the war in Gaza.
One such organisation is Christian Mission to Gaza, whose founder and president is Hanna Massad, the former pastor of Gaza Baptist Church.
In regular newsletters to supporters, Hanna details how CMG is actively involved in providing essential aid to those affected by the conflict. This includes winter clothes, groceries, meals for people sheltering in churches and beyond (many Christians are sheltered at St. Porphyrios Greek Orthodox Church and the Holy Family Roman Catholic Church), as well as financial support to help families meet basic needs. Alongside this he offers insights into the traumatic circumstances in Gaza. On 13 February he wrote:
In a newsletter titled ‘Spreading hope and love amid the darkness’ on 16 January, he included an account of a church leader at the forefront of the crisis:
A group of anonymous donors have offered to match all donations to Christian Mission to Gaza up to $110,000. - click here for more.
The scale of the bombing has taken its toll on buildings – including Gaza Baptist Church, which Hanna reported has sustained ‘significant damage’. People had sheltered in the church earlier in the conflict, but no one was believed to be there when the damage happened.
He told Baptist Press his organisation would attempt to repair the damage after the war. However, he wasn’t sure how many church members would remain in Gaza – many have visas to enable them to travel.
The dire conditions were also reported by a Christian NGO working in Gaza, which the European Baptist is supporting. The NGO has collated messages from Gazans, describing a 'brutal war' , where 'everything is getting worse.'
'We need food,' one message states. ‘Hunger cuts our intestines. We issue a loud distress call to you.’ Another read: 'I was displaced to Rafah - the situation is very difficult. Suddenly tanks were next to the house.’
RCO Ministries, formerly Ramallah Christian Outreach, is also providing regular updates.
Its latest newsletter requested prayer both for a complete cease-fire and a way for restoration and rescue efforts to be made; and ‘for the wisdom and righteousness of God to rule over the hearts and minds of ALL those who are in position to take decisions that affect thousands of lives.’ The letter spoke of 'agents of peace that have been rising up amid the darkness of this war, like stars in the darkest skies,' and even a few reports of ‘miraculous divine intervention amid the myriad of bad news— reports such as Christ Himself appearing in person or dreams even to Muslim brothers and sisters in Gaza.’
More prayer requests from RCO can be found here.
RCO runs the Home of New Life, a ministry to vulnerable children from the West Bank and Gaza, and supports Ramallah Local Church, a Baptist church led by Munir Kakish. Munir is president of the Council of Local Evangelical Churches in the Holy Land, a European Baptist Federation partner which represents 13 churches in the Palestinian Territories, including Gaza Baptist Church.
RCO has been able to continue to conduct its services as usual, Munir added, including hosting the children at the Home of New Life for their program of providing a meal and after-school tutoring, as well as hosting ‘all sorts of different programs for the children, youth, and adult Bible studies that are so vital as we seek to draw near to the Lord and process all what is going on around us in this Land.’
Elsewhere Bader Mansour, Development Officer of the Association of Baptist Churches in Israel (ABC), said Christians ‘are even more determined in our commitment to serve the Lord in this land’.
'We've faced considerable challenges, devastation, and an overwhelming sense of despair and hopelessness,' he wrote in a recent newsletter. 'Yet, in the midst of these trials, we get strength through our faith in our Lord who holds the universe by the word of his power (Hebrews 1:3), and through the encouragement of our friends, as the hearts of the saints have been refreshed by you, brother (and sister)(Philemon 1:7B).
In December ABC hosted a gathering for 200 young people, titled Broken Love. The gathering was initially postponed due to the war. It ‘brought people together at a difficult time, putting their struggles at God’s feet, joining in worship and prayer, as well as receiving something meaningful which they can take for their own lives,’ said the newsletter.
Meanwhile, the Revd Dr Munther Isaac issued an uncompromising call to the UK church, stating it is called ‘to be the church, and to act in costly solidarity towards an immediate and comprehensive ceasefire. This is a moral obligation. This is not the time for neutrality or soft diplomacy.'
Dr Isaac, pastor of Christmas Evangelical Lutheran Church in Bethlehem, was speaking at Bloomsbury Central Baptist Church on Sunday 18 February.
The vigil was attended by nearly 600 people, with a further 600+ watching online.
The video and audio can be found here
Lynn Green, General Secretary of the Baptist Union of Great Britain, joined Christian Aid and 20 other Christian leaders in December in calling for an immediate ceasefire and the release of hostages, alongside other movements towards peace and accountability in the devastating conflict in the Holy Land.
First published in Baptist Times, 21/02/2024, and used with permission. Please note that links may change or may no longer be active.