Welcoming
the Foreigner
I noticed when I read
the texts for today that they all have something to do with the way foreigners
are treated. While I was thinking about the texts, I remembered in my teens
years reading a book called The Ugly
American, a novel by Eugene Burdick and William J Lederer. I’ve always been
fascinated with other cultures and languages and the way things are done in
other places. So, I was appalled to read how some people treated and thought
about other people.
For example, in the
first paragraphs of the novel, Louis Sears is an ambassador to a small Asian
country. He observes the women bringing their produce and fish to market. “Strange
little monkeys,” he calls them. He has not bothered to learn the language or
culture, because he always considers himself better than the local people. There
is no need to sink to their level.
Yet, such attitudes are
still around. In the church, we might call ourselves Ugly Christians. We judge
and reject and refuse to understand those who are foreign, different in any way
from what we consider “normal”. We assume they are too different to be loved by
God.
Yet, we also frequently
read the charge from God to care for the widows and orphans and foreign
residents. In today’s reading from 1 Kings, Solomon prays to God and urges God
to accept the worship of foreigners who hear of God’s name and are impressed by
God’s power and glory. He implores God to hear the prayers of such foreigners
and respond to them.
We are familiar with the
rejection by Jews of all Gentiles, and so we are amazed to learn that these
foreigners are welcome among the Jews and included in Solomon’s prayers.
The Centurion learns
that Jesus is coming, and he sends messengers to tell him that he doesn’t need
to come all the way to his home. The Centurion understands power and command.
He knows that if he says, ‘do it’, it will happen. In the same way, Jesus has
only to say ‘do it’ and it will happen.
Jesus is amazed by this
statement. Up to this point, all the healings have been hands on, with people
coming to him, for him to touch them. No Jewish person has thought that the
healing could be done simply by Jesus’ command. The Centurion, a Gentile, has
figured him out! And of course, the servant is healed instantly.
Paul’s letter begins
with a tone of scolding. “I am astounded that you fell for that rot! How
quickly you have forgotten what I taught you! Did you forget that I received
the gospel from divine sources and not from some trumped-up human fool? Have
you so easily traded in grace for a lesser gospel?”
In order for non-Jews to
accept and understand the power of the resurrection, the rules for living and
the theology would need to match the context of those he was trying to reach. Paul
made it clear that Jesus welcomes all people, and that cultural rules are not
important.
As we as Americans and
as Christians wrestle with how to welcome – or even if we should welcome –
these modern foreigners, we do well to remember that God calls us to recognize
they are God’s children, all of them.
In our Wednesday morning
study of Islam, we have learned a few things, just barely touching the surface
of the depth and riches of the religion. We have learned that we all claim Abraham
as our father. We have learned that our God is one, and there are no other
gods. We have learned that to do God’s will is the best way to live. And we
have learned that there are variations in Islam, just as there are variations
in Christianity. How well do we welcome Muslims?
As we wrestle in our
minds and hearts and courts and legislative bodies about who can use which
public restroom, we do well to set aside fear and consider the hearts of those
who are different from what we call the “norm”. Do we remember a time, not so
long ago, when the color of our skin determined the restroom we would or could
not use? If we put ourselves in their place, live in their bodies for a little
while, walk in their shoes, can we offer these foreigners a bit of hospitality,
a bit of welcome?
n to us. Can we get to
know and understand them, and welcome them as they
are?
US Army Major Glenn Battschinger
arrived in Afghanistan in 2010. As he and other soldiers moved in and out of the
base, they were always surrounded by swarms of Afghan children and teens.
He was reminded of his
two sons, who were both Eagle Scouts. He understood that these Afghan children
would benefit from scouting as much as he and his family had. They needed
attention and something constructive to do.
So, he gathered some
boys in the village and began to teach them the basics of scouting, beginning
with the Boy Scout oath. That one troop has grown to dozens of troops serving
more than 10,000 boys and 1,500 girls, in part due to a grant provided by the
US Department of Defense.
Major Battschinger has
moved on to new assignments, but he still hears from some of the boys in his
troop, and says that’s extremely rewarding. “I merely played a hand in
introducing something good that would help develop leaders for tomorrow.” He welcomed
the foreigner and helped them, just as the Centurion had helped the Jews in his
neighborhood.
This week, be aware of
the ways in which you welcome or push away some people, even if it’s just people
you see on TV. Are you an ugly Christian? Or do you seek often to welcome and
include all?
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