Journal Offering wisdom and encouraging words

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Journal entries focus on the heart and motivation for World Christian parenting. Monthly articles written by key authors and ministry leaders offer wisdom and inspiration as you disciple your children and pursue intentionality in the midst of family life. Additional thoughts and devotionals written by Weave team members encourage you to draw near to Jesus for wisdom, strength, and grace as you navigate everyday realities and encounter situations you don’t feel equipped to deal with. Enlarge your vision for what God can do with ordinary families whose hearts and lives are yielded to Him.

Connect With God’s World:

Meet the Kazakhs

Note to Parents: Help your family embrace God’s love for the world. Read this story together to learn about and pray for the Kazakhs, a people group in Central Asia.

Come with me to the capital city of Kazakhstan, where giant skyscrapers tower over giraffe and elephant topiaries, bubbling fountains, and plazas carpeted with brightly colored flowers. Many Kazakh families here pray to Allah and follow the rules of Islam. They do not understand who Jesus is. See that group of children cutting through the plaza? They are headed to the home of the giggling girl in the bright pink shirt …

Hi, I’m Zamira. Welcome to Astana. My friends and I would be honored if you would attend our dastarkhan (dahs-tarh-qan), a feast for special guests like you. Slip off your shoes at the door and join us. How do you like the colorful tablecloth I spread out on the floor? We don’t eat at a table. Here comes Mother with her best teapot and a platter of puffy, fried breads. I think they look like little pillows. The sweet ones taste similar to doughnuts.

Since this is your first time in Kazakhstan, I will help you learn our customs. Some are passed down from the days when our ancestors lived in yurts – tents they could set up and take down easily as they followed their cattle and horses to good pasture. Most Kazakhs don’t live in yurts anymore, but we still enjoy sitting on thick beautiful carpets, sharing tea, and eating feasts together.

My friend is bringing a pitcher of warm water, a basin, and a towel for washing up. We usually eat with our hands. In fact our national dish is called “five fingers.” You will get to try this dish of sheep meat, egg noodles, carrots, and potatoes a little later. But first, here’s your kesey (key-see-ay), or teacup. It’s only filled partway so you can drink all your tea before it gets cold. Just pass your empty cup to Mother and she’ll keep pouring more. Kazakh tea may taste a little different than what you’re used to – we add salt and butter instead of cream and sugar.

After dinner, Grandfather will entertain us with his dombra (dohm-brah), a two-stringed instrument similar to a mandolin. He loves telling stories of the olden days when wild horses roamed the grassy plains as well as recounting the historic events of 1991, the year our country gained independence from the Soviet Union. Grandfather often speaks of how the communists closed the mosques and churches and brought their atheistic beliefs to our country. “Now,” he proclaims, “Kazakhs are free to worship and follow Islamic traditions once more.”

Tomorrow, you can visit my class at school. I attend the morning shift, but some students begin class after lunch. I have had the same teacher since Grade 1 and she is like a second mother to me. My class is learning math, history, geography, writing, and reading. Even though my family speaks Kazakh at home, we use Russian at school and in town. When school ends I must do homework, but afterwards we can play Blind Man’s Bluff or Hide and Seek.

 

Pray:

 

  • Many Kazakhs consider the Christian faith to be a belief system for Russian families. They believe that to be Kazakh is to be Muslim. Pray that they will understand that following Jesus will not cause them to lose their cultural identity as Kazakhs.
  • A few small gatherings of Kazakh believers exist in the cities. Pray for urban believers to share their faith with friends and family living in the villages.

 

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