Friday, November 20, 2015

From Cups to Refugees

It's funny how quickly things change, but still remain the same at the same time.  It's one of life's great paradoxes.  Two weeks ago, evangelical Christians thrust themselves into the spotlight once again.  Maybe some would say they were forced into the spotlight and if you remember correctly, what forced them into the spotlight was a red cup sold by Starbucks.  Those darn cups!  How dare they not put the entire Gospel message on their cups so that everyone will know just how merry every Christmas should be!  But, then again, they are a company that is about selling coffee not the Gospel. 

Then we switched gears when Syrian refugees were trying to come into our country because the President said we should welcome at least 10,000 of them.  Evangelicals reacted again with some saying that there is no way we should welcome Syrian refugees because of what happened in Paris.  Then some said we should only let Christian refugees and exclude the Muslim refugees. 

It seems more and more that evangelicals are being defined for what they are against rather than who they for.  Also, we are becoming more and more dependent on the outside world to proclaim the message of Christ for us that we become upset when they don't (even though they were never meant to do it in the first place).  The Starbucks cup incident was an incident that should never have happened.  Who cares if Starbucks has a red, blue, orange, apricot, or yellow cup at Christmas time?  We also like to make it a point to say Merry Christmas to any unsuspecting employee of a chain store who has to say, "Happy Holidays" to us.  Have we ever stopped to think that there are some employees who don't want to say, "Happy Holidays," but are doing it because they need the job and they will be fired if they don't?  Also, is saying Merry Christmas bringing someone closer to Christ?  What I have observed through this incident is that we have become lazy followers of Jesus.  We want others to do the work for us.  If this is not true, then why do we get so upset when places like Starbucks don't put Merry Christmas on a cup?  We are not called to be lazy, but to be ambassadors.  Paul said in Acts 20:24, "But I do not account my life of any value nor as precious to myself, if only I may finish my course and the ministry that I received from the Lord Jesus, to testify to the gospel of the grace of God."  Paul did not consider living life apart from Christ or doing anything other than testifying to the Gospel worth anything.  Paul worked hard at testifying to the Gospel that had saved his life and changed his life.  He did not rely on gimmicks, cups, or retail stores to testify; he testified himself through his life and words. 

The refugee crisis is not as easy to deal with.  There is a legitimate concern about letting refugees in because terrorists could pose as refugees to sneak into this country.  But, on the other hand, these are people who need help.  They are running for their lives while living in fear that they may never have a place to call home ever again.  Imagine that.  Imagine if you never had a place to call home ever again.  Imagine if you had to live your life on the run with your children, hoping and praying that somebody would help you.  I'm not saying that we should open our borders or close them.  I am saying that we need to think long and hard about how we can help people who desperately need it.  Also, how are Muslims going to know Christ if we say to them at our borders, "Christians only please.  Muslims, you are on your own."  That's what Jesus did right?  Peter told the Gentiles to go home didn't he?  Actually, Peter did not treat the Gentiles like he should have and Paul rebuked him for it. 

We cannot live in fear and the way some Christians are responding to the refugee crisis is out of fear, understandable fear, but fear nonetheless.  Psalm 27:1 says, "The Lord is my light and my salvation, whom shall I fear?"  Do you know who wrote that Psalm?  King David.  Did you know that King David spent his time as a refugee, running for his life from King Saul who wanted to kill him?  David spent time among the Philistines, a people not his own.  He sought refuge there because Saul and his army were trying to kill him. 

The Sons of Korah wrote in Psalm 46:1, "God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in time of trouble."  Did you catch that?  God is our refuge.  Do you know what that means?  We are refugees!  God wants to be our place of refuge, and He wants to be the place of refuge for those Syrians who are running for their lives.  He wants to be a place of refuge for Syrians Muslims that some Christians don't want to let in this country. 

I am not trying to oversimplify the issue, but I am calling us to think a little bit deeper about it.  We are called to be different.  We are called to live lives of trust in the Almighty God who loves us and cares for us.  And, guess what?  He loves and cares for those refugees too. 


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