The Nations Are Living Next Door

About half a million refugees have resettled across America over the past ten years. Some of our refugee neighbors are family in Christ who have endured persecution. Others do not know God, and the hardship they’ve endured – unspeakable as it is – pales in comparison to their eternal future if they remain separated from Christ.

The influx of refugees provides an astounding opportunity – especially for women – to reach the nations.

Many refugee women are homemakers and stay-at-home moms. While husbands work and children attend school, their isolation compounds their struggles. They grieve the deaths of loved ones, mourn homes left in ash heaps, and endure flashbacks of horror. As they suffer the loss of old relationships, they long for new ones.

When Christian women befriend refugee women, they build bridges across cultural barriers where “the harvest is plentiful, but the laborers are few” (Luke 10:2). Sisters, God has opened the door for us to reach the nations in our neighborhoods.

Seek Your Neighbors

Our Father loves with a pursuing and steadfast love. As his children, we are called to be imitators of him (Ephesians 5:1). Through seeking refugees, we demonstrate the love of the Savior who “came to seek and to save the lost” (Luke 19:10).

When we find refugee neighbors dwelling nearby, we can welcome them into our lives and invite ourselves into theirs. When I began visiting one Syrian woman to help her learn English while our children played together, it took only a couple months before she called me her sister and my family her family.

Many refugee women come from cultures that deeply value hospitality and community, so they are typically receptive to those who reach out their hands in friendship.

Of course, outreach to refugees is not all roses without thorns. There are language barriers to overcome and cultural differences to navigate – we will likely cause offense or find ourselves inconvenienced because of miscommunications. But God, can enable us to love our refugee neighbors – even when it’s difficult.

Show God’s Kindness

God’s compassion encompasses our eternal souls and our early circumstances. He cares when his image bearers suffer at the hands of evil. He walks alongside the widow, the orphan, and the stranger (Psalm 68:5).

When we devote ourselves to good works among the suffering, we testify to the kindness of God.

Sisters, we can serve refugee women in many ways. We can bring them along grocery shopping and help them redeem the WIC checks that they don’t know how to reach. We can keep them company during lonely evenings while their husbands work night shifts. We can deliver meals when they’re sick, soothe crying babies while they have appointments, and practice English over tea.

We don’t do these things just to be nice neighbors. We do them so that when they see our good works, they would turn and give glory to our Father (Matthew 5:16). Good works are always intended to point to our good God.

Share the Gospel

God desires that all would be saved. Just as he orchestrated Paul’s imprisonment to spread the gospel among the imperial guard (Philippians 1:12-13) and persecution to scatter proclaimers of the good news (Acts 8:1-8), he has used war and terrorism to bring unreached people to our doorsteps. I know women from countries where less than two percent of the population knows Christ, and where missionaries have suffered and died to share the gospel. And now, our sovereign God has brought them just a short drive away from those who have very good news to share.

Of course, language barriers make our sharing difficult. Though our neighbors’ conversational English might be fluent, words like sin, salvation, and Savior often aren’t familiar. We need wisdom from the Holy Spirit to simplify the language of the gospel while remaining faithful to its message. This is why building friendship is vital – we need vision for the long haul, so that we can keep sowing seeds and endeavor to proclaim the excellencies of Christ.

The Savior Our Neighbors Need

My Kurdish friends attended church with us a couple times. Neither the worship songs nor the preaching made sense. Yet it was not useless. They have repeatedly told me, “We are Muslim, but we like you Christians very much. You and your church as so good to us.” Christian welcome is tilling the soil so that words can eventually take root.

And God’s word will take root. It may not do so for every person or according to our timeline, but God will ensure that his word will not return to him void (Isaiah 55:10-11). The gospel is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes; we have only to unleash it (Romans 1:16}.

We may not be able to end wars or stop persecution, but we can care for those who have suffered from these evils.

We may not be able to raise the ceiling that allows refugees into our country, but we can welcome those already here into our homes. Christians may have different political perspectives about the refugee crisis, but we all share the same Savior – the same one our refugee neighbors desperately need to meet.

About the Author

This blog was shared with permission by Amy DiMarcangelo, author of A Hunger for More: Finding Satisfaction in Jesus When the Good Life Doesn’t Fill You. Amy writes about discipleship, mission, and books at her website, equippedformercy.com. She is a graduate student at Westminster Theological Seminary and lives in New Jersey with her husband and three children.

Written by:
David Crocker

David Crocker is the Founder of Operation Inasmuch. He was a pastor for 38 years prior to launching the Inasmuch ministry which has equipped more than 2,100 churches in 25 states and several other countries to mobilize their members in mercy ministry. David’s passion is seeing believers serving as the hands and feet of Jesus as a lifestyle.

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