Hope for Syrian Students - August 2021 Update

Syria and Lebanon

A team from The Outreach Foundation (Jack Baca, Julie Burgess, Mark Mueller, Nuhad Tomeh, and Marilyn Borst) made a 2-week journey to Lebanon in late May. The purpose of the trip was to encourage our partners who have been through so much over the past 19 months: a collapse of their government and the economy; the pandemic and the necessary lockdowns; the cataclysmic explosion in the port of Beirut on August 4, 2020 which left over 200 dead, 6,500 injured and 300,000 homeless. The National Evangelical Synod of Syria and Lebanon made it possible for us to visit many of their churches. One of those, in Minyara, runs one of the Synod’s four schools for Syrian refugee children (all schools in Lebanon hope to reopen this fall after the pandemic lockdown). Mark Mueller was deeply impacted by this visit, as you will read here in his reflection…

Where is God in the Midst of Suffering?

The question has been asked since the beginning of time. Theologians have been quick to write their responses. The Bible gives its “Emmanuel” answer. Still, the question announces itself seemingly not fully satisfied with our words or our thoughts.

The question was asked again of me as our team visited a refugee school operated by the Synod of Syria and Lebanon near the Syrian border, only two hours by car north of Beirut. Upon arriving at the school and hearing from its leadership that question announced itself loudly. 

Where is God in the midst of this suffering?

Our team of five was in the northern region of Lebanon in the small town of Minyara. The Evangelical Synod of Syria and Lebanon, composed of about forty Presbyterian churches split between the two countries, opened up refugee schools to care for the huge number of refugee children from Syria living nearby, a few in apartments but many in tent camps. The school in Minyara is overseen by Rev. Hadi Ghantous, pastor of the Presbyterian church there. The Outreach Foundation is humbled to have supported this unique ministry from its beginning in 2016.

It is here that we find God’s children, many with little medical or dental attention. There is no school for the children, nor transportation for thousands of people. So, the Synod responded by opening refugee schools to attend to the children and some of their needs.

Children came to one of these schools, a building that in another life was a three-bay garage, on a first-come, first-serve basis, with the Synod incurring the cost of the entire education process. The refugee children who attended had never been to school. A 12-year old boy had never seen a bathroom with a toilet. He, nor any of the other children, did not know their alphabet or their colors. The clothes on their backs were the ones they had been wearing for many days. It is this type of child the Synod is called to educate. It is beyond anything imaginable. Where does one begin with a lost generation of children?

Couple this challenge and place this story with Lebanon now becoming a collapsed state. There is a recipe for disaster here on a scale of unimaginable proportion. For the average Lebanese person, unemployment is 60%, food has increased nearly 500% and wages have plummeted by 90%. There is little money to care for one’s family let alone care for the refugees. The government has failed to form year after year and global, governmental relief is nowhere to be found. Corruption is a word heard everywhere. 

As we left to go to another location and to say goodbye to this place, the only question that came to my mind was this: My God, where are you in this suffering? God, you are the only one that can make sense out of this. I can’t.

As the day gathered strength, however, and as we met with the lovely people of Lebanon, I kept asking myself this question. God, where are you? Slowly, in conversations while breaking bread, sipping some world-famous Lebanese wine, and eating with a Maronite monk, I have discovered that I don’t think I have been asked to answer the question of where God is in the midst of suffering. The situation is bigger than I will ever understand...

God has called me to be here and to be with the people (in their suffering, as is he). I have been called to love these people and support them as best I can and leave the larger questions to God.

Mark Mueller                                                                  
Executive Director

Read more about Hope for Syrian Students HERE.

THE NEED
The Outreach Foundation is seeking gifts totaling $50,000 to help educate Syrian children and young people, be they refugees in Lebanon or those who remain in war but are preparing for God’s future in their own land. You may make a gift HERE or by sending a check to our office.