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January 17, Wednesday

UPDATED Today’s AMI QT Devotional, provided by Pastor Ryun Chang (AMI Teaching Pastor), was first posted on January 6, 2017.

Devotional Thoughts for This Morning

“What Life is like for Those Human Beings Who Have Crossed the Border Illegally” 

Heb. 11:13b-14, 16 (NIV)

And they admitted that they were aliens and strangers on earth.  14 People who say such things show that they are looking for a country of their own. . . 16 They were longing for a better country—a heavenly one.

In February of 2016, just before my greyhound bus left for Bakersfield from Los Angeles, I was told that my connection bus, which would have taken me to the small city where I was scheduled to preach the next day, was cancelled. I quickly called the host pastor, who was returning from a conference in Nevada, to see if he could pick me up.  Fortunately, I only waited an hour before the pastor, along with his congregant (“Hugo”) whom I met the year before during my first visit there, arrived to collect me.  

Later, we dropped off Hugo at his weather-beaten, single-story house; he seemed eager to get home, mostly because his wife just had their second child.

In my ensuing conversation with the host pastor, I was surprised to find out that Hugo, who speaks English well and doesn’t have many Hispanic features, was originally from Mexico. And I also learned that Hugo and his wife, after having crossed the border illegally nearly 20 years ago, have lived here ever since. Constantly living in fear of deportation, the only jobs Hugo can find consist of backbreaking farm work that pay just enough to fund a small mortgage and put food on the table. I also discovered that many in this community are in the same predicament: always anxious, suspicious of new people, and stuck in dead-end jobs. I’m not exactly a bleeding-heart liberal, but my heart went out for them all. 

So, what do you, as a theological conservative who does not support illegal immigration, say to them from the pulpit (which I did the next day)?  I didn’t tell them to go home because this is, in effect, their home.  There are border patrol agents whose job is to enforce immigration laws and we shouldn’t stand in their ways; but my call as a minister of the gospel is wholly different.  Whenever I get to share God’s Word before Hispanic congregations in America, I remind them of this: “We have all have made mistakes, but God forgives us in Christ.  If God has so convicted you, you can return home and share the gospel with your families and friends most of whom are steeped in syncretistic Catholicism.  And whenever you feel fearful, ‘Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God.  And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus’” (Phi. 4:7-8).     

Now, there is one scriptural teaching that Hugo needs no reminder of; in fact, he may be way ahead of us: “He made his home . . . like a stranger in a foreign country. . .. For he was looking forward to the city with foundations, whose architect and builder is God” (Heb. 11:10).  But, for us, because life in America is so comfortable, we live as if this is our destination.  May we, like Hugo, “admit[] that [we] are aliens and strangers on earth” (v. 13).  Let us then live and serve the Lord accordingly all the while “longing for a better country—a heavenly one” (v. 16). 

Hugo was always attentive whenever I taught.  His pastor was counting on him to step up to leadership and he seemed excited about the opportunity.  So, I prayed for him, calling upon the Lord to prepare Hugo for fruitful labor that would bring true hope in Christ to those who live with fear in his community.   

Prayer: Lord, while we may pity those who face a bleak future, doing difficult work to make a living, perhaps it’s us who are to be pitied, since we see life in America as heaven and death as an interruption.  Please heal our spiritual blindness so that we may live for God wholeheartedly.  Amen.

Bible Reading for Today: Proverbs 3


Lunch Break Study 

Read 1 Peter 2:11-2 (NIV): Dear friends, I urge you, as aliens and strangers in the world, to abstain from sinful desires, which wage war against your soul. 12 Live such good lives among the pagans that, though they accuse you of doing wrong, they may see your good deeds and glorify God on the day he visits us. 

Questions to Consider

1. According to Peter, in what sense are we to be aliens and strangers in the world?  

2. As aliens and strangers, what proactive things does Peter command us to do?

3. Most of us don’t think much about the plights of illegal aliens.  Now, while there are some in this group, like in a larger society, who are difficult to embrace (e.g., criminals), most of them came here illegally for the same reason most of our ancestors came legally—to provide a better life for their children.  As aliens in this world, what would it mean to live such good lives among them?

Notes

1. We are to distinguish ourselves from the ways of the world: unethical manners in which businesses are conducted, immoral ways in which pleasures are pursued, heartless treatment of those who are deemed expendable and unimportant.   

2. While retreating from the ways of the world, we are also told to move forward to distinguish ourselves as aliens and strangers in the world, living good lives among the unbelievers and producing good deeds that would glorify God.  

3. Let’s suppose that you hired a person as a day-laborer, whom you guessed to be an illegal alien, to work in your yard.  In that context, living such good lives would mean paying him a fair wage.  What do you think (James 5:1-6)?


Evening Reflection

We began the morning devotional talking about the fears of illegal aliens, especially those who have lived in the States for a long time.  Let’s not kid ourselves—we ourselves have plenty of fears of being found out.  Perhaps you’ve heard of the impostor syndrome—it’s when people believe their achievements are fraudulent, which causes  them to fear that one day, others might learn of their incompetence.  What fears do you secretly harbor?  I invite you to go to the Lord right now for a fast and long-lasting relief; and don’t be afraid to be vulnerable with those who are trustworthy and truly care about you.  Pray.

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