Wed. Dec 3rd, 2025

Vengeance, Anger or Prayer? How to Respond When Terrorists Strike

The father and injured mother of Sajuni, 23, who died during a string of suicide bomb attacks on churches and luxury hotels on Easter Sunday, mourn at her funeral.

Yesterday was Sri Lanka’s day of mourning over the terrorist’s bomb blasts at churches and hotels on Easter morning.

A place of worship, as believers call on their respective gods for protection and provision, is the most vulnerable of all locations to strike and kill.

Our “thoughts and prayers” have been with the nation and families of victims over these last few days. Although “thoughts and prayers” has become a responsive but ineffective cliche, it could not apply better than when mosques, churches and temples are attacked—where thoughts and prayers are most thought and expressed.

Further, the Christian faith’s holiest day, which celebrates that which makes its founder most distinctive among the various salvation offerings, was picked by terrorists for the most possible number of casualties among believers. They had gone in droves to worship Jesus, the Christ, who rose from his death three days prior. This annual commemoration of the only verifiable self-resurrection in all of history gives eternal hope in the face of death— whether by age, illness, accident or murder—the pervasive final equalizer. In the middle of their deep sorrow, our thoughts for them are help-filled, because they are hope-filled.

And in the face of sorrow for brothers and sisters and others who died, we are prayer-filled.

Perhaps the most-known teacher of the evangelical Christian faith in Sri Lanka humbly wrote the following prayer requests for his land. Please join him, me and thousands of others in mature, forgiving and targeted prayer:

  • Please pray that the church would act with maturity reflecting the holy love of God: on the one hand, insisting that the authorities will carry out a thoroughgoing investigation and will punish the wrongdoers; and on the other hand, personally and corporately showing love to all, including our enemies.
  • Pray for the injured and for their speedy recovery.
  • Pray for the emotionally scarred and for their steady recovery.
  • Pray for God’s comfort and strength to the many Christian and non-Christian people who have been devastated by the loss of their loved ones.
  • Pray also that extremist forces would not use these incidents to cause unrest in the country.

A theologian-evangelist, philosopher-expositor, educator and author, Dr. Ramesh Richard holds a Th.D. from Dallas Theological Seminary and Ph.D. from the University of Delhi. In addition to serving as president of RREACH, he also serves as Professor of Global Theological Engagement and Pastoral Ministries at Dallas Theological Seminary. Through RREACH, he has trained thousands of church leaders in over 100 countries to preach, live, and think biblically.

By

Leave a Reply

By submitting your comment, you agree to receive occasional emails from [email protected], and its authors, including insights, exclusive content, and special offers. You can unsubscribe at any time. (U.S. residents only.)

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related Podcasts

More News
Lee Strobel: 5 Shocking Proofs the Supernatural Is Real
Lee Strobel: 5 Shocking Proofs the Supernatural Is Real
previous arrow
next arrow
Shadow

Latest Videos
131K Subscribers
1.5K Videos
16.5M Views

Copy link