Commentary

Trusting God When Terrorists Captured My Son

In Fiji, an Adventist mother recalls an ordeal that tested her faith to the limit.

Salote Rabuka, Adventist Record
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Trusting God When Terrorists Captured My Son

It was in early 2014 that I was praying earnestly for my son’s safety — and for God’s leading — in the role he was going to undertake as a Fijian peacekeeper in the Middle East.

He was 34 years old and married with three children, and a fourth one was on its way, when he left with a group of Fijian soldiers in early July for a tour of duty in the Golan Heights.

Not long after the group had left, we received news that a group of 45 Fijian male peacekeepers had been taken captive by the Al-Nusra Front to an unidentified location in Syria. No names of the 45 men were released, but the news brought me much anxiety and uncertainty. My strength was solely in the fact that I had been praying earnestly for my son before he left. At the same time, I was prompted, I believe by the Holy Spirit, to assume a realistic position on the matter, should the unthinkable happen. I found comfort from His Word in Jeremiah 29:11, which says, “ ‘For I know the thoughts that I think toward you,’ says the Lord, ‘thoughts of peace, and not of evil, to give you an expected end’ ” (KJV 2000).

A day after the news broke of the capture, my son’s wife called me over the phone. Crying, she informed me that my son was one of the 45 men and the group leader. My immediate words to her, for which I was thankful to God, were, “Don’t worry. God has allowed this to happen, and He has done so for His divine purpose. You and I are to accept this and pray for God’s help in the release of the 45 men.”

I was thankful that God had placed my daughter-in-law and me on the same page right at the start. This gave us peace and courage as we went through — with other mothers and wives and families — the days that followed of praying, fasting, sharing, and claiming God’s promises.

At that time, the 45 men had been surrounded by about 200 armed rebels at their assigned camp. The Al-Nusra Front was linked to Al-Qaeda. The negotiation between their leader and his Al-Qaeda deputy and my son and his second-ranking officer resulted in the 45 Fijian men losing all they had, as the rebels took over their arms and belongings. 

The 45 men were taken to a place they didn’t know and that even UN or US technology could not identify. They were not assured of food at their new location. If they were lucky on a given day, they would get a cup of rice for lunch. Worship in any form was forbidden. The 45 decided on their third day of captivity to fast and pray. Prayers were offered in silence, one by one, when the men were lying down holding hands. When one finished praying, he would tightly squeeze the next person’s hand and so on. Four demands were given to the UN by the Al-Nusra Front for the release of the 45 men.

A few lessons I learned during this testing time that I will draw out here:

First, when there is uncertainty about the future, I believe that the uncertainty can be reduced or removed when there is peace of mind. Isaiah 26:3 speaks plainly of who God will keep in perfect peace — those whose mind stays on Him because they trust in Him. Verse 4 further says, “Trust in the Lord forever: for in the Lord Jehovah is everlasting strength” (KJV 2000).

Second, it’s important to assume a realistic position that will provide stability of mind and strength should the worst thing occur. Philippians 4:6 says, “Do not be anxious about anything, but in every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God” (NIV).

Further, as many have professed, I believe that a prophetic understanding of the time we are now living in should bring us hope and be a source of strength and stability. General Conference president Ted Wilson recently remarked that we are now at the tips of the toes of the statue in Daniel 2. So, Jesus’ soon return is a reality that will place us, His people, in a realistic and not presumptuous position in this time of the end.

Third, there is a state of “nothingness” for many. While in captivity, my son and his men had absolutely no one to turn to for help except the God they believed in. For others, restrictions of other types may prevail, like a denial of free expression of belief and faith. Now the question is, should we be denied what is dear to our hearts, including worship and the truths that we cherish, simply because a man’s wish has to be met? What a challenge for our faith in the God whom we serve.

Fortunately, we can be comforted by John 4:23, where Jesus is speaking to the Samaritan woman at Jacob’s well. Jesus says, “But the hour comes, and now is, when the true worshipers shall worship the Father in spirit and in truth” (KJV 2000). There will certainly be no nothingness — no lack of help — for God’s faithful people in these times.

Finally — and this is what I most treasured and admired — is the fact that love penetrated the walls of captivity, as the captors befriended the captives, to the extent that the rebels shed tears as the Fijians departed, unharmed, to return to their camp. This was 14 days after their capture when the issue was settled.

In her book The Desire of Ages, Ellen White states, “We are to acknowledge His grace as made known through the holy men of old, but that which will be most effectual is the testimony of our own experience” (347).

Of course, it is the love of our great God that is the basis of His creation and plan of redemption. He is certainly present where His love is demonstrated, and He will provide the means for sharing His love and message of redemption, even under the most challenging circumstances.

The original version of this story was posted by Adventist Record.

Salote Rabuka, Adventist Record

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