Every year, this small bird flies more than 71.000 kilometers either going or coming zigzagging routes between Greenland and Antarctica. It is considered the longest regular animal migration route, hence so impressive to see the tremendous effort made by this little artic tern for its survival!
Similar phenomenon happens amongst human beings. People from different parts of the world leave behind their land in search for better working and livelihood conditions. Curiously however, we don’t seem to admire the emigration of humans as much as we admire the emigration of animals.
We live in a very selfish society where the different is faced as a serious threat to the own individualism. We accept the foreigners as long as it is for our own benefit and not for theirs, we treat them with inferiority and we pay them smaller wages. Nevertheless, the Word of God teaches us to love our neighbor as ourselves and specifically treat the foreigner with acceptance, opportunity and support.
To look at everyone as brothers and sisters, as if they where from our own family, helps us change our rejection for reception and allow us to interact with all without fear and prejudices in an environment of sincerity and brotherhood.
In certain occasion Jesus said: “Look at the birds of the air; they do not sow or reap or store away in barns, and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not much more valuable than they?” (Matthew 6:26 NIV) Lets look at the artic tern to understand that the emigrants are also part of our own family.
- Where would you emigrate to if you had to?
- How many foreign friends do you really have?
(House for all nations, Isaiah 56:7 / All one in Jesus Christ Galatians 3:28)
This is a challenging topic and I am asking myself why this word immigrate. Our we not brothers and sisters in Christ. Well to answer your question. I have friends who are so called immigrants.
ReplyDeleteReading this article made me think of, and count the many lovely foreign friends that I have. They are welcome. However I do have concern about the dreadful mess that beautiful Cape Town is being subjected to. Who are the guilty parties - immigrants or our own citizens? Maybe before criticizing we need to "take the plank out of our own eyes before seeing the Splinter in another' :
ReplyDeleteDear blog readers, thank you for your comments! Nowadays this is a challenging topic, nevertheless, the church must always be a welcoming place. The church is not a temple building, the churdh is a group of people, the body of Christ. May the Lord help us to welcome everyone.
DeleteYes, Church should remain well-coming and be the hope of the world in these challenging times. Church should continue creating spheres and spaces for all humanity to be embraced without any limitations based on the physical demarcations that the world created. We should always see all people in the image of God and be welcomed in different spaces of life in all different communities. Above all one day we will be done with this mortal world that created the physical boundaries.
ReplyDeleteYou have raised a very sensitive and important subject for the church to discuss. I had a privilege of visiting several countries in Africa and abroad. My husband and I served in Tanzania for five years, in all these countries I was welcomed and felt at home. I was there legally...It is sensitive because most of the people who migrate to South Africa don't have legal papers. As a church what do we do in that situation? No government will allow such. In Tanzania we were made to carry our papers wherever we go.....I have no problem with those who migrate to other countries legally. We have to welcome them because they are documented at our SA Home Affairs and they will be known by their embasies and high commsions of their countries...
ReplyDeleteVery intersting message. Indeed as christians we have obligation to treat others the way we want them to treat us...Especially in the church and more so in the Army. We don't know what tomorrow holds for us...
ReplyDeleteThank you Major 🙏 continue to do God's work
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for bringing to us this serious matter, worrying also because it is painful to know that sometimes we are valued depending on what we give in return and sometimes who we seek to love or welcome does not allow itself to be loved or welcomed. God blesses
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