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Country for prayer this week is Comoros:
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 | Africa Population = 45 Million (2008) 0.21 % Protestant and
Independent 0.63 % Catholic <0.01 % Cults and Sects (Evangelical
Christian = 0.1 % of pop) 98.07 % Muslim 1.09 % Non-Religious / Other
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 | A group of islands in the Indian Ocean between Mozambique and
Madagascar |
 | In 1975 the Comoros declared independence from France but one
island, Mayotte, voted to remain a French overseas territory. However,
Comoros still claims Mayotte as part of its territory. Almost all of the
population are Muslim but many are deeply involved in occult practices.
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 | Officially there is freedom of religion but there are severe
restrictions on evangelism and distribution of Christian material. |
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We have to do with One who is Lord of all power and might, whose arm is not shortened that it cannot save, nor His ear heavy that it cannot hear; with One whose unchanging Word directs us to ask and receive that our joy may be full, to open our
mouths wide that He may fill them; and we do well to remember that this gracious God, who has condescended to place His almighty power at the command of believing prayer, looks not lightly on the bloodguiltiness of those who neglect to avail themselves of it for the benefit of the perishing.
- Hudson Taylor
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“Beginning to sink, he cried, saying, Lord, save me.”
- Matthew 14:30
Sinking times are praying times with the Lord’s
servants. Peter neglected prayer at starting upon his venturous journey,
but when he began to sink his danger made him a suppliant, and his cry
though late was not too late. In our hours of bodily pain and mental
anguish, we find ourselves as naturally driven to prayer as the wreck is
driven upon the shore by the waves. The fox hies to its hole for
protection; the bird flies to the wood for shelter; and even so the
tried believer hastens to the mercy seat for safety. Heaven’s great
harbour of refuge is All-prayer; thousands of weather-beaten vessels
have found a haven there, and the moment a storm comes on, it is wise
for us to make for it with all sail. Short prayers are long enough.
There were but three words in the petition which Peter gasped out, but
they were sufficient for his purpose. Not length but strength is
desirable. A sense of need is a mighty teacher of brevity. If our
prayers had less of the tail feathers of pride and more wing they would
be all the better. Verbiage is to devotion as chaff to the wheat.
Precious things lie in small compass, and all that is real prayer in
many a long address might have been uttered in a petition as short as
that of Peter. Our extremities are the Lord’s opportunities.
Immediately a keen sense of danger forces an anxious cry from us the ear
of Jesus hears, and with him ear and heart go together, and the hand
does not long linger. At the last moment we appeal to our Master, but
his swift hand makes up for our delays by instant and effectual action.
Are we nearly engulfed by the boisterous waters of affliction? Let us
then lift up our souls unto our Saviour, and we may rest assured that he
will not suffer us to perish. When we can do nothing Jesus can do all
things; let us enlist his powerful aid upon our side, and all will be
well. C H
Spurgeon
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