One of the fun things I have benefited from moving and living in Round Rock, Texas is the incredible diversity of this area's population. Part of the reason for that is Round Rock is in Texas and so many migrants/immigrants whether legal or not have always found their way to Texas. When I was growing up in Odessa, there were primarily three different cultures: Black, White, and Hispanic. Then Texas got adventuresome and progressive.
Where Texas had been known for oil, oil related work, dry land and irrigated farming, with associated up and downs following the fortunes of oil, now the Texas economy has a wider foot print. Manufacturing and technology have made our region a virtual United Nations which is good for all of us. Why, you ask?
For the Christian, the neighbor next door can be from anywhere in the world and if one wants the experience of overseas missions, get a block party together. No matter what you prepare and serve it won't match the cost of a round trip ticket to SE Asia. Sharing Jesus and being Jesus to an immigrant costs you nothing.
Or you could give the gift of hospitality. You can truly welcome the neighbor from across the street or from around the world. Last fall when I had my cataract surgery, we used "Uber" to get into Austin and I met men from around the world supplementing their income/making it their income. I received the gift of sight from my Doctor but the rides in and back were gifts of sight as well. The only unpleasant driver was a Caucasian know-it-all born and raised in Round Rock.
Courtesy, respect and openness to others costs us nothing. It steals nothing from us or diminishes us in any way. However, courtesy, respect, and openness enrich us in intangible ways. The Viking Cruise commercials on PBS suggest that such experiences outside of "our little world" can make us kinder.
I say all this because I am troubled by the toxicity injected into our recent national conversation. Such venom reminds and reveals the stretch marks of less tolerant times in the nation's history. A dark underbelly of intolerance has been a chronic feature of this nation formed and created to be that great beacon of light set on a hill. It is the founding fathers who dreamed of a different kind of governance where all people were equal. However, even from the beginning, that dream was compromised by not addressing the issue of slavery. Since that time, waves of immigrants have been greeted with less than open arms but over time, we grew together. However, even with those detours, the hope of equality has not dimmed.
The troubling exclusive perspective of "like me--good!" "Not like me---bad!" raises all kinds of issues. The very notion of "taking back" the country is uncharacteristically naive and very xenophobic in the extreme. The xenophobia actually sees people not structures as the problem and minimizes the real causes of the feeling "I" have been stolen from/deprived/got the short stick. Taking back is the rally cry of a person who feels something has been taken from them. Immigrants are a good target until you begin to step back and look at the real picture.
What is the real picture? I believe it is that as a country we have achieved the success we possess because of our capacity to mobilize immigrants who want to buy into our national promises and vision. They demonstrate that every day by showing up at diverse jobs which span the spectrum from manual labor to skills as physicians, scientists, and emerging technologies.
Perhaps no other person than Ronald Reagan has spoken more eloquently:
https://nowthisnews.com/videos/politics/ronald-reagans-final-presidential-speech-was-for-immigrants
Tuesday, February 25, 2020
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