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MERCYSTORIES

SHARING WORKS OF MERCY

Protecting the Most Vulnerable: Answering the Call in Isaiah 1:17

by MercyWorks on February 6, 2020

One of the overarching themes in the prophetic books of the Old Testament is the importance of God’s people caring for the anawim: the widow, the orphan, and the stranger. In the ancient world, these were the most vulnerable members of society. The same can be said today, especially in countries like the Philippines.

Through MercyWorks' mission at the Sunflower Center in Manila, we are doing our best to answer the Lord’s call in Isaiah 1:17 to “Learn to do good; seek justice. Rescue the oppressed. Defend the orphan; plead for the widow.”

"Learn to do good; seek justice. Rescue the oppressed. Defend the orphan; plead for the widow."

Support the healing of neglected, abandoned, and abused children in the  Philippines. Learn how far your dollar goes! 

The Awful Reality of Abandoned Children in the Philippines

In the Philippines, many children from poor families are abandoned, neglected, or abused. If left on the streets, many of these children will be trafficked into sex or labor slavery. Some are drawn into the drug trade by the promise of money, security, or safety. Without intervention, orphans in the Philippines face a life of brutality, abuse, and loneliness. Not to mention other hardships such as lack of education, extreme poverty, and poor health care in the Philippines.

Hope at the Sunflower Center

The Sunflower Center is a halfway home where vulnerable children can come for spiritual, emotional, physical, and psychological help. Fr. Geraldo Costa, CICM, opened the Sunflower Center in 2003, and since then has made it his mission to be “God’s healing hand” to these young people who may have never experienced His love before.

In conjunction with the Reception and Study Center, a state-sponsored facility where abandoned children can live until they are either reunited with their families or adopted, MercyWorks priests and other volunteers defend these orphans from having to live on the streets. Our missionaries have been partnering with the center since the 1990s, when it opened. Most of the children are referred to Sunflower for therapy. Fr. Costa also recruits volunteers to decorate the children’s rooms so that they are homey, uplifting spaces.

Partner with Us to Help These Children

At the Sunflower Center, abandoned children are given the opportunity to thrive, not just survive, but Fr. Costa and his volunteers need your help to continue their work.

First, please pray that our missionaries can help these children cope with and heal from the horrific abuse they have survived so that they can become happy, healthy, thriving members of society.

Pray also that Filipino families would be open to adopting older children (most of the older children are adopted by foreign couples and are not able to stay in their home country), and that more of the children would be able to be reunited with their families of origin.

Above all, pray that the volunteers and staff at the Sunflower Center will be given the grace they need to show God’s love to children who have not experienced it from their parents. Pray that these children would come to know the perfect love of God the Father and that He would heal the wounds of abuse and neglect that so many suffer from. 

From the bottom of our hearts, thank you for your support!

To learn more about our mission, explore our guide— Working Toward Freedom, Belonging, and Healing: Children's Well-Being in the Philippines. 

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Explore the Guide

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