A wonderful aspect of my work is that I meet and develop relationships and friendships with people in different parts of the world. They’ve helped me to see the world a little differently and remind me that the world is full of beautiful people doing all sorts of interesting and wonderful things. But it also means that when disaster strikes, the odds of me knowing someone who has been impacted has increased.
I’ve been following the Covid-19 situation in India and late last week we gathered with some students and alumni of the MTD to pray for those impacted. Yesterday there were almost 350,000 new cases, and more than 2,700 deaths (and while that’s the official record, it is likely those stats are higher). There are shortages of oxygen and medicine, and people are desperately trying to get help for family and friends struck down with Covid-19.
I prepared the liturgy below for us, and I thought it might be helpful to share for others who are praying for the situation in India. I’ve been finding myself gravitating back towards liturgies – I love spontaneous prayers, but I also find that set prayers help me to pray things I wouldn’t otherwise pray, and they often give me words when I don’t know what to pray.
Father, Son, Spirit,
We hear of our suffering brothers and sisters
Shut-in by Covid-19
Of hospitals and doctors
Overwhelmed by those in need of help
We hear of needless deaths
Of oxygen and medicinal shortages
And we are unable to help
We see the growing inequality
Unjust distributions of vaccines
Rich countries turning inwards
Throwing leftovers to suffering neighbours:
It feels like darkness and death are winning
We’ve prayed for so long:
‘Your kingdom come,
Your will be done’
But where is Eden being restored in this?
Where is your Nazareth Manifesto?
Where is ‘good news being proclaimed to the poor’1
And ‘the year of Jubilee’2
Being ‘fulfilled in our hearing’?3
Where is the power of your resurrection
In the midst of this suffering and death?
Have you abandoned the people you love?
With those whose lungs
Are inflamed by Covid-19
We cry out:
‘Have you rejected us O God’?4
With those desperately
Seeking help for loved ones
We cry out:
‘How long will you stand far off?’5
With those who have had to bury
Family or friends
Without ritual or saying goodbye
With those terrified
Of contracting this virus
Knowing it may be a death sentence
We cry out
‘from the depths of despair:
Lord, hear our voice!’6
Mixing their cries
With ours,
We hear your voice
Join ours in pleading:
‘My God, my God
why have you forsaken me?’7
Father, Son and Spirit,
We implore you:
Do all you can
To ‘be good news to the poor’
To make this ‘the Year of Jubilee’
To ‘fulfill this in our hearing’ even today.
Beloved Father,
Make your loving presence
Felt by those
Whose bodies are wracked by this virus
Surround and embrace
With your gentle peace
Those who are confused, hurt and suffering
In the midst of this chaos
Beloved Spirit,
Give renewed breath
To those with lungs too weak to breathe
Give renewed energy
To doctors and nurses struggling to stand
Give renewed hope
To family and friends who feel lost and abandoned
Beloved Jesus,
Walk the hospital wards
Touch and heal the sick
Enter the crematoriums and gravesides
And bring bodies back to life
Appear behind locked doors
To break bread and offer reassurance
That ‘you are with us to the end of the age’8
We also ask that you
Keep our hands
Steady on the plough
That although we may
‘Look around the universe
From which every trace of you
Seems to have vanished,’9
We will still be able to
– somehow –
Say:
‘Hallowed be your name.
Your kingdom come
Your will be done
On earth as it is in heaven.’
AMEN
___________________
1 Luke 4:18
2 Luke 4:18 cf. Isaiah 61
3 Luke 4:21
4 Psalm 60, 74, 108
5 Psalm 10, 13
6 Psalm 27, 130
7 Psalm 22, Matthew 27:46f
8 Matthew 28:20 cf. Luke 24ff
9 Lewis, C. S. The Screwtape Letters. Macmillan: New York, 1977.


Prayer with India – if prayer changes anything, thank you for the words. If prayer changes nothing, thank you for the love.
Thanks Daniel.
Hey Clint, I love the perspectives of this piece shrouded in love. A reminder to keep praying.
Thanks Larry, I’m glad it was helpful. Hope you and the family are well!
We are praying this prayer with you!
Thank you for it!