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Chávez death prompts evangelicals’ prayer
Laura Fielding, Baptist Press
March 08, 2013
3 MIN READ TIME

Chávez death prompts evangelicals’ prayer

Chávez death prompts evangelicals’ prayer
Laura Fielding, Baptist Press
March 08, 2013

CARACAS, Venezuela – With the death of Hugo Chávez, Venezuelans face an uncertain future after his 14-year presidency. The nation’s evangelical community is urging Christians around the world to be in prayer for their country.

Chávez, 58, died March 5 after battling cancer.

“… Scores of people came into the street [in Caracas] to view his funeral procession and show their respect for the fallen leader,” a Christian worker in Venezuela said. “Leaders from many countries around the world have also gathered for the funeral service ….”

The country declared seven days of mourning for their president.

Consejo Evangélico de Venezuela (The Evangelical Council of Venezuela), a Venezuelan organization of evangelicals including the National Baptist Convention of Venezuela, issued a statement March 5 on its website and Facebook page, offering condolences to the president’s family and all Venezuelans, and calling for Christians to pray for peace and unity in their nation.

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A graffiti mural of Hugo Chávez, Che Guevara and Jesus Christ is plastered on the wall of a Caracas neighborhood. Since the March 4 death of Chávez – Venezuela’s president for 14 years– the country’s political future is uncertain.

The statement urged Venezuelans to “avoid hatred, damaging language and confrontational attitudes” during this time of national grief and to “look to God as our only giver of grace and truth.”

Alluding to political divisions and tensions that have plagued Venezuela during the Chávez administration, the statement encouraged Venezuelans to “live together in the midst of differences” and to “maintain a heart free of bad feelings so that we may see the hand of God acting in our country.”

Citing several verses from Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount from Matthew 5–7, the statement also challenged Venezuelans to be peacemakers– to “be a country that constructs peace and rejects confrontation.”

“Venezuela plays a critical role in influencing the affairs of Latin America,” the Christian worker noted, “and has one of the largest petroleum reserves of any country in the world.

“The capital, Caracas, is one of the least evangelized cities in Latin America,” the Christian worker added. “Thus, the death of the president behooves Christians everywhere to pray not only for the peace and unity of the nation, but that its citizens will use the death of their fallen leader to reflect upon the frailty of life and seek eternal security in the person of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.”

(EDITOR’S NOTE – Laura Fielding is an IMB writer. Maria Elena Baseler, IMB writer/editor, contributed to this story.)