Friends,
Tomorrow, June 20, is “World Refugee Day,” an international day designated by the United Nations to honor people who have been forced to flee their native home due to conflict or persecution.
Consider the precarious nature of a refugee. Our history has shaped us so that much of our identity lies in the nation-state of our birth. Upon birth, we get “birth certificates” – official papers distributed by the state. We have “citizenship,” with all the consequent rights and protections, based on where we live. We apply for “passports” that offer us recognition as we travel abroad. Simply telling someone that we are “American,” or “Indonesian,” elicits presumptions about what we might be like, simply because of that identity.
A refugee is someone for whom that system of protection and identity has broken down. Last week, Kate Forer told us the story of how her family came to the US fleeing the Armenian genocide. After worship, I heard from several folks who had similar stories in their families – refugees who made their way to the US often with little more than hope to survive; refugees who arrived utterly dependent on a different country to recognize them, welcome them in some way, and to permit them to make a new life here. Since their “Civil Rights” have been taken away, the question becomes whether other countries would honor their “Human Rights.”
Being a refugee is one kind of challenge; responding to refugees is another. When the People of Israel left Egypt, they were landless, so everywhere they went posed a danger. If they passed a field of wild oats, could they harvest some for themselves, or would local folks consider that robbery? If they encountered a spring of fresh water, could they fill their water skins without being attacked? The stories of God providing manna from heaven and water from a rock are specifically tied to that period when the people of Israel were in between a situation in Egypt that they could bear no longer and their own land with their own fields and cisterns. The first challenge they faced was survival, and God provided for them.
The second challenge was equally difficult. It was the challenge of forgetfulness. As they were preparing to enter the Promised Land, God warned them, “When you have eaten your fill, take care that you do not forget the Lord, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of slavery. (Deuteronomy 6:10-12). “Forgetting the Lord” is an ethical and spiritual challenge for secure folks. When God commanded the people to leave the edges of their fields unharvested for the sake of the widows, orphans, and aliens, that command was always punctuated, with the reminder, “For you were once aliens in a foreign land.”
Much of the “Christian Nation” mythology that many advocate today mishandles remembering. When God commanded the People of Israel to remember, it was not “Remember you are special, not them.” It was “Remember, I blessed you, so you bless them.” World Refugee Day invites us to remember that when a people’s identity and consequent civil rights are broken, we still honor their inherent identity and human rights as God’s children.
So, allow me to make a plea. Since seeking refuge is a subset of immigration more broadly, I want to invite you to consider joining our October 2-4 trip to the US/Mexico border. We need informed and compassionate voices in our public conversation about immigration, and this trip offers us a way to join that conversation more fruitfully. You can find information here. And if you are interested in being part of the trip, I need to know by July 12, so please send me a note here. And please note that the Mission Commission has set aside money for anyone who is interested but would welcome financial assistance. I cannot think of a better way for us to observe World Refugee Day than to commit to learning more about the challenges facing those at our own borders.
See you in worship,
Mark of St. Mark
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