This one will be slightly different from my usual blogs
in that this one will be sincerely introspective in the hopes that you will
perhaps either see some similar flaw in you, or that you may better prevent
this flaw from becoming a part of you. This is definitely a touchy subject due
to what's occurring within America. I was watching a series of
podcasts from Dallas Theological Seminary's Chapel Hour, which was being
led by Dr. Danny Carroll, distinguished professor of OT, from Denver Seminary.
He asked us to look at them through the lens of the Old Testament, through our
own past, and through their eyes. I know that there will continue to be
arguments from all corners of society. Some of these are based, selfishly, on
political votes, financial obligations, tax laws... The list goes on, yet
rarely does this list view them from a religious aspect. That was the
desire of Dr Danny Carroll, and that is my desire as well.
I grew up under the impression that immigration was good, as long as it is legal. However, I also grew up with the idea that illegal immigrants should immediately be evicted, without thought to the personal responsibility I have as a Christian. I viewed them as a bane on society. Merely a sponge that drags society down this hole where it cannot redeem itself. I got it, they should 'pay their way', 'do the right thing', 'their money goes to bring their families here', 'they're just using us for free healthcare'. I gotta be honest, wouldn't I do the same thing for my family if I was in that situation?! Wouldn't YOU?! We judge them because we were born here, because we grew up American, yet 99.9% of us are from immigrant families in the past, whether we've been here 20 years or 400 years, we still came from immigrants. Yet, we've lost that identity over time. Let's face it, almost all of our families crossed border, got off a boat, hitched a ride, whatever it took to get to America.
But, what if we changed our mindset to something biblically based? What if we shifted our perspective from man-centric to God-centric? Think about how many closed countries there are. If you're not sure, here is a link to Voice of the Martyrs that shows a map designating such places. Now, think about how many of these countries have people living within the US. Think about how many foreigners live in America that could be sent out to reach people within closed countries that we Americans cannot go, whether it's within their own country or using their national citizenship to enter another country!
Instead of looking at them as a burden, as a gardener, as a cook... I want to challenge us to look at them as people who are looking for a ray of hope. People who have emotions, feelings, cares, needs, and desires. People who, above all, need the Lord. Acts 1:8 doesn't just exist outside our country, it's now WITHIN our country. We are the uttermost part, and God continues to bring the 'unreached' to the reached, yet we sit back and demand a piece of paper as if that is more important than the human soul. Jesus was willing to cross cultural bounds to speak with a Samaritan woman (Jn 4), and a Syrophoenician woman (Mk 7). The Old Testament contains immigrant stories like Ruth the Moabitess (Ruth 1), Rahab the harlot (Joshua 2) who chose to live with a new people and believe their God.
God used immigration to bless all the nations of the earth - Abraham in Gen. 12. Daniel and Joseph were forcibly moved either through human trafficking (slave labor) or a conquest of war (taken back to Babylon); yet God blessed them, and so many people through them, continuing up to today. It is time we put down our ethnocentric walls and start seeing them for who they are! Stop demanding a piece of paper and start giving them water so that they may never thirst again (Jn 4)! Give them the way to eternal hope instead of a boot in the rear, a dirty look, feelings of shame and embarrassment... See them as God would see them, lost and dying and in need of a Savior.
I grew up under the impression that immigration was good, as long as it is legal. However, I also grew up with the idea that illegal immigrants should immediately be evicted, without thought to the personal responsibility I have as a Christian. I viewed them as a bane on society. Merely a sponge that drags society down this hole where it cannot redeem itself. I got it, they should 'pay their way', 'do the right thing', 'their money goes to bring their families here', 'they're just using us for free healthcare'. I gotta be honest, wouldn't I do the same thing for my family if I was in that situation?! Wouldn't YOU?! We judge them because we were born here, because we grew up American, yet 99.9% of us are from immigrant families in the past, whether we've been here 20 years or 400 years, we still came from immigrants. Yet, we've lost that identity over time. Let's face it, almost all of our families crossed border, got off a boat, hitched a ride, whatever it took to get to America.
But, what if we changed our mindset to something biblically based? What if we shifted our perspective from man-centric to God-centric? Think about how many closed countries there are. If you're not sure, here is a link to Voice of the Martyrs that shows a map designating such places. Now, think about how many of these countries have people living within the US. Think about how many foreigners live in America that could be sent out to reach people within closed countries that we Americans cannot go, whether it's within their own country or using their national citizenship to enter another country!
Instead of looking at them as a burden, as a gardener, as a cook... I want to challenge us to look at them as people who are looking for a ray of hope. People who have emotions, feelings, cares, needs, and desires. People who, above all, need the Lord. Acts 1:8 doesn't just exist outside our country, it's now WITHIN our country. We are the uttermost part, and God continues to bring the 'unreached' to the reached, yet we sit back and demand a piece of paper as if that is more important than the human soul. Jesus was willing to cross cultural bounds to speak with a Samaritan woman (Jn 4), and a Syrophoenician woman (Mk 7). The Old Testament contains immigrant stories like Ruth the Moabitess (Ruth 1), Rahab the harlot (Joshua 2) who chose to live with a new people and believe their God.
God used immigration to bless all the nations of the earth - Abraham in Gen. 12. Daniel and Joseph were forcibly moved either through human trafficking (slave labor) or a conquest of war (taken back to Babylon); yet God blessed them, and so many people through them, continuing up to today. It is time we put down our ethnocentric walls and start seeing them for who they are! Stop demanding a piece of paper and start giving them water so that they may never thirst again (Jn 4)! Give them the way to eternal hope instead of a boot in the rear, a dirty look, feelings of shame and embarrassment... See them as God would see them, lost and dying and in need of a Savior.