This month we are doing ATL…(Ask The Lord).

We sat down as a team and prayed about what and where we should go this month. The Lord showed up. We all got different things in sense and then after we all shared we were able to piece it together. We had one of our squad leaders with us to help us and to just be praying with and over us as we sought the Lord. 

Our team is going to Kosovo. We are leaving a lot of things this month up to the Lord. We will pray and worship for about an hour every morning. The rest is unknown at this moment. I know we want to do some healing and coming together better and stronger as a team. 

Below is a bit of info on Kosovo. Look it over and join us in prayer. for what the Lord wants to do in and through us this month. 

PRAYER POINTS

• Pray for continued freedom to evangelize among the 80% Muslim population.

• Pray for the peace of Jesus to heal the hatred between ethnic Serbs and Albanians.

• Pray for spiritual growth and bold proclamation among the small group of committed Christians.

 

 

SUMMARY

The unique Kosovar national anthem has no words, as the government feared the addition of lyrics might offend minority ethnic groups. To this day, the anthem remains purely instrumental.  Such concessions may seem polite and peaceful, but they highlight centuries of ethnic strife that have divided the southern European nation of Kosovo and nearly destroyed it.

 

During the 600’s, Ethnic Serbians migrated to Kosovo and maintained control until 1389, when they were defeated by the Ottoman Empire. For nearly 500 years,  Kosovo saw an influx of Turkish and Albanian migrants. In 1912, Serbian forces regained control of Kosovo and established it as a province of Serbia, leaving the growing Albanian majority without political recognition. During the early 1990’s, Slobodan Milosevic, a Serbian national, assumed control of Kosovo and disregarded Albanian requests for independence. After a failed attempt to secure an alternative government, progressive Albanians formed a resistance army. Serbian militants responded harshly to the movement, massacring many and forcefully relocating over 800,000 ethnic Albanians. With NATO and UN intervention, Kosovo eventually gained independence from Serbia in 2008, after nearly 10 years of negotiation and brutal ethnic conflict.

 

The intense conflict devastated both Serbs and Albanians alike, making Kosovo one of the poorest nations in Europe, with more than half its inhabitants living in poverty and an unemployment rate of 70%. Kosovo is dominated by Islam, as 80% percent of the population is Muslim, the vast majority of those of Albanian descent. Though many are nominal in their faith, extremism is increasing, as is opposition to Christianity. Even so, there are a growing number of believers, especially among the youth and young adults, and more churches are being established. Pray that believers in Kosovo would grow into mature Christians who lay aside ethnic differences and strive for reconciliation and healing for their fellow countrymen.