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By Georgia Coats

 

“You gain strength, courage and confidence by every experience in which you really stop to look fear in the face.”  Eleanor Roosevelt

 

The best part about cold winter months in Michigan is snuggling under warm blankets, reading or telling stories with my kids.  In these moments I often pause just to take it all in, and then thank God for the beauty of such simple yet priceless memories.   Children truly are a treasure and a gift in this life.  Recently, I took part in a short, two-question survey on FEAR.  The first question was: What is something you are afraid of?  A lot of things came to mind…debt, disease, destruction…but if I had to pick just one to write down, I would say that what I fear most regularly is something horrible happening to my children.  As a mom, I do all I can to protect my children from harm. I teach them how to be safe, I stay near them in uncertain circumstances, and I try to keep them healthy.

 

These things were going through my mind as we read the historical account of the birth of Jesus the Messiah together.  We got to the dark part of the story where a corrupt leader, King Herod, was feeling threatened by the news of a young Messiah being born.  Out of fear, King Herod terrorized the Palestinian town and region he governed, and ordered the mass slaughter of all baby boys under two years old.  As we read through the account, my eight-year-old son quickly named our young friend that fit that description.  We all agreed that it was horrible to imagine our friends losing their 1½-year-old son to the terror of a corrupt leader.

 

For days I was troubled by this disturbing account of age and gender profiling that went on as a result of the Messiah’s birth.  The families of those baby boys weren’t celebrating the birth of a promised and foretold anointed one sent from God.  Instead, they grieved deep loss around the event that led to mass extermination of baby boys in and around Bethlehem.  The story recounts that King Herod was “terrified” at the news of a prophetic Messiah-King entering the world and being revered by foreign Wise Men from the East.  He saw this child as a threat to his powerful position of leadership.  But the birth of Jesus also stirred a new hope far and wide.  The coming of a promised Messiah reminded the world that God Most High is near to His people.

 

I tried to imagine myself living in a time and place of such need for hope—a world of terror and destruction enacted by powerful people.  It didn’t take me long to realize that that is our world.  Those are the bleak circumstances facing so many Yemeni people today.  According to a recent interview that the Yemeni American News had with the President of the National Association of Yemeni Americans (NAYA), AbdulHakem a. Alsadah, the United Nations estimate 3 million “displaced” Yemeni people.   “There is no international awareness about this crisis,” Alsadah stated.  Tears stream down my face when I see pictures of Yemeni children who are near death due to acute malnutrition.  My heart breaks as I read stories about parents in Yemen who are forced to make hard decisions about losing their children, either to disease, destruction or starvation.  According to a December 2016 article in www.theGuardian.com, one man tells of how he and his other children don’t eat so they can pay for his young daughter’s cancer medication.  How does a father have to decide that?  How does any parent face that kind of fearful reality and not lose hope?

 

The second question in my survey was: What do you do when you are afraid? 

I am often overcome by the flood of images, emotions, and information to process around this crisis in Yemen.  It’s too much for a mother’s heart to read about parents’ worst fears coming true as they try to just keep their children alive.  It makes me want to hold my children tighter and never let them out of my sight.  It makes me want to turn off the news because I can’t possibly process all the destruction going on in the world—in Yemen, in Syria.  But what can I do about it?  Fear and ignorance are the easy ways out, at least initially.  If I raise my kids in fear, they are set up to react in fear.  There’s a reason why the angels who came to announce the birth of the Messiah always started by saying, “Fear Not.”  It’s because we do fear.  When the angels appeared, people were terrified.  We are afraid, and reacting in fear has consequences of hate and destruction.  It leads to acts of terror, like King Herod’s fearful reaction to breaking news.  His reaction of terror led to him terrorizing an entire group of people.  His fearful reaction had consequences.

 

Psychologist Dr. Susan Jeffers says that the ultimate human fear is that “we can’t handle it,” whatever “it” may be.  I look in on these horrible stories of children dying in wartime and think I could never be able to handle it.  But in war, children become our hope.  They represent our future.  In their eyes we see that we must go on, because we hope the best for them.  Hope and children go together.  The father in Yemen tries to keep all his children alive by juggling the desperate needs for both medication and food.  The hope that the birth of Jesus the Messiah would bring was shrouded in the despair of male infanticide.  Nevertheless, God Most High sends His chosen ones to a messy world because we need to hear from Him.  It is good to be near God, is the reminder from the Zabur.

 

Author and educator Hal Lindsey said that, “Man can live about forty days without food, about three days without water, about eight minutes without air, but only for one second without hope.”  Hope keeps us alive.  In the worst of our despair, hope anchors our souls.  It has to.  Otherwise we wouldn’t survive the fear, terror and destruction that surrounds us.  Education, compassion, prayer, hope.  These are the things we must hold on to when we are afraid.  God have mercy on the many displaced Yemeni children and their families.  May they know a hope and a future outside of their misery.  May they experience the hope that God Most High comes near to His people.

 

What is something you’re afraid of?  What do you do when you are afraid?

 

So, as you really stop to look fear in the face, join me in trying a few of these things:

 

  • Give thanks for the good things God has done.
  • Tell a story to raise awareness of the crisis going on in Yemen.
  • Hug your children a little tighter.
  • Pray for those who suffer.
  • Give of your resources (time, money, or talents) to help another struggling human being.
  • Educate children about how to process fear.
  • Take a moment to grieve sad and disturbing news when you see it or hear it.
  • Love your neighbor.
  • Look for ways to spread love and kindness, especially when it is easier to spread fear or hate.
  • Hold on to hope like an anchor for your soul.
 
  
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