An article from the
Jamaica Observer.
An eight-year-old
girl, who on Saturday took the pulpit at her church
and delivered the sermon, appealed to gunmen in the
island to disarm themselves for the sake of the
country's future.
"I call on all the
gunmen to turn over your guns, to forgive and let
God take control of your lives. Do it for the
adults. Do it for the children. Do it for Jesus'
sake and the reason He went to Gethsemane for all
mankind," urged the child.
So far this year,
almost 600 persons have been murdered.
"Crime and violence in this our beloved country
leaves us daily with the question in our minds, 'who
is next?' It could be you or me. Children are no
more safer than adults these days. In fact, we are
more vulnerable to abuse and the acts of various
crimes which now endanger the future of our
country."
Chaddae Donaldson,
a student at Willowdene preparatory, presented the
sermon on Saturday's culmination of its week-long
children's evangelistic series. The theme for the
week was 'When children thirst for Jesus'.
Chaddae's
presentation was based on the topic 'Gethsemane: A
Sign of Hope for All'. She used references from Luke
22: 39-45, Mark 14: 32 and Psalm 77:7-10 to
illustrate the difficulties faced by Biblical
pioneers and by Jesus himself and how they each used
prayer to prepare themselves.
"The world is
crowded with Gethsemanes. Herrods slaughtering the
innocent, crime and violence on the rise, a teacher
in St Mary arrested for scolding a child, the death
of loved ones, homes breaking apart, and the list
goes on and on and on," little Chaddae continued.
"Yes, the world is
full of Gethsemanes; times when the innocent have
suffered. In the face of such unspeakable horror, we
ask ourselves these questions: Who do we turn to?"
She asked two other
questions: "What are we to do?" and "Where do we go
from here?" and the answer she provided for all
three was prayer.
"The answer isn't
easy because life isn't," said the grade three
student, exuding the confidence, experience and
wisdom of a 30-year-old.
"At times we all
seem to be running from the garden of despair to the
hill of suffering [but]...when we are faced with
troubles we need to pray. This is what Jesus did and
He is our example.
When we are faced
with sorrows, no matter how painful and although at
times it seems more than we can bear, we must get on
our knees and pray to our God. We should pray in
good times and bad times. Pray and pray and pray
until we feel a sense of peace," she said.
Had the words come
from the lips of an ordained preacher, they would no
doubt have stirred emotions, but that they were
uttered by an eight-year-old girl made them even
more forceful. And the effect was not lost on
members of the congregation who often shouted
'Hallelujahs' and 'Amens' in response to Chaddae's
moving and engaging speech.
Chaddae was the
youngest of the eight child preachers to present
sermons during the church's evangelistic series
which started last Sunday.