A rich resource at a critical time in history, Strangers in the Kingdom walks the fine line between praxis and theological reflection, weaving its content into a relevant whole. It is obvious that Das and Hamoud approach this conversation with experience, and because of that, they are able to move the conversation beyond simple platitudes, compassionate emotions and biblical proof texting. This is a theological treatise that needs to be read no matter where you stand in the socio-political positioning of the day. More importantly it is a book that places demands on you if you are truly going to follow Jesus.
Gary V. Nelson, PhD
President, Tyndale University College & Seminary,
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Forced displacement and homelessness is a physical reality for a growing number of humans and a spiritual reality for us all. When God pulled out all stops to show his solution, he didn’t write a book but was himself displaced, becoming flesh, running towards us, stretching wide his arms. The teachings of this book fly in the face of current fear-driven conclusions about migration and immigration. However, Das and Hamoud don’t ultimately write to change our minds or politics (though I’ll be absorbing and sharing its truths). It is written so more of us will follow Jesus Christ in fleshing out the heart of God for our world’s refugees. And, miracles of miracles, as we run towards the displaced and homeless we (and many of them) find the Displaced Deity, making his home in us. As he promised . . . Anyone who loves me will obey my teaching. My Father will love them, and we will come to them and make our home with them (John 14:23).
Paul Carline
Director, Inter-Cultural Ministries,
Canadian Baptists of Atlantic Canada
Rupen Das and Brent Hamoud, two highly qualified scholars with big hearts for ministry, especially serving vulnerable individuals, have provided this valuable resource for theological students and faculty in the twenty-first century. When you read this book, you are offered a comprehensive initiation to a ministry to the displaced.
We hope that we shall soon live in a world where no one is ever forced to flee their homes, villages, towns, and country . . . Alas! We seem to be far from this ideal situation. Until the dream comes true, anyone who has a heart and feels compelled to dedicate time to ministry among refugees, migrants and stateless people, now has available to them a carefully crafted guide. The reader is provided with rich information about “Strangers in the Kingdom,” historical landmarks, human-rights tools, with theological and missiological foundations.
Equally important is the series of case studies with which the authors engage the readers in the second part of the book. We are generously provided with several stories that leave us feeling at the same time sad, humbled, and empowered as to what we can do to serve children, women, elderly and men who were forced to lose contact with their roots in order to remain alive in God’s kingdom.
This is a book that leaves the reader with essential knowledge, information, and spiritual tools to serve and help those who migrate in order to escape death from the hands of ruthless fellow human beings, or to seek better living conditions after despairing. They endure living in difficult conditions with minimum means of subsistence threatened by illness and death due to malnutrition, harsh weather conditions, poor hygiene, and suffering from dependency and discrimination at all levels of existence.
Nabil Costa
Executive Director,
Lebanese Society for Educational and Social Development
One of every one hundred and thirteen people with whom we share the planet is a refugee, internally displaced, or a migrant on the move. Desperation may drive them to simply cross a border, climb into a small boat, or walk thousands of kilometers through foreign lands. The reaction in many northern countries has been to erect real or figurative walls to keep people out. Rupen Das and Brent Hamoud have made an outstanding contribution to those of us caught between harsh political rhetoric and the gospel teaching of compassion. The authors explain legal definitions of terms like refugee, statelessness, and internal displacement. They also examine the biblical teaching about aliens and strangers that were forced to live outside their ethnic groups and homelands. Each chapter begins with a case study that reminds us that we are dealing with real people. The analysis of the impact of loss of identity and not belonging is compelling and opens our missional understanding of welcoming the stranger.
Gordon King
Canadian Baptist Ministries
Former Member, Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada
In today’s world of increasing division and barriers, Rupen Das and Brent Hamoud provide a timely counter-narrative by suggesting that the church’s imperative to respond to the needs of “outsiders” comes from the very nature of who God is. By looking more deeply at the theological and personal significance of place and belonging, and illustrated by stories from those who have lived the experience, Strangers in the Kingdom reveals the importance of the church’s unique role in creating and participating in a place of genuine welcome where people are valued as those made in God’s image. Reflecting what I’ve seen in my work alongside the local church in Lebanon, the very act of welcoming is transformative and allows us the privilege of participating in the nature of a God who crosses divides and chooses to give of himself to welcome us in.
Kezia M’Clelland
Children in Emergencies Programme Specialist, Viva
Strangers in the Kingdom is a profound book that moves the reader deep into the stories and challenges of the displaced. The numbers of those displaced are increasing ever so exponentially, and tragically, each year. The complexities are many, but Strangers in the Kingdom reminds us that each life is precious and that God’s concern is for all peoples and all nations. The authors provide a refreshing depth of theological sense-making that can inspire us and challenge us as to reach out in compassion and dignity to refugees, migrants and the stateless. The book includes helpful examples of churches and communities welcoming and embracing those who may be strangers, demonstrating God’s grace and responding to the human need for belonging. The study questions included in each chapter can only encourage community learning and action. Strangers in the Kingdom is a book to thoroughly read and learn from and then keep close by as a comprehensive reference – a refreshing reminder that God gives guidance and strength to care for the poor and to do justice.
Will Postma
Executive Director, The Primate’s World Relief and Development Fund
A deeply relevant and timely toolkit that provides both theological and practical insights for the local church to understand and respond to the current crisis of forced migration, as well as with the backlash against migrants, which appears to be on the rise within many receiving communities. Through their reflection on both Old and New Testament texts, Rupen Das and Brent Hamoud make it clear that to walk with those who are newcomers, far from home, or stateless, is to touch a “fundamental aspect of God’s intention for creation.” Perhaps this book’s greatest contribution is to push towards a more profound understanding of the refugee experience, one that moves us away from a theoretical political analysis to a more intimate understanding of the pain of losing one’s place, one’s roots – essentially all that is familiar and what makes us who we are. Such a loss cannot simply be restored by living in a new “space,” but rather the church as a life-giving community is uniquely equipped to help nurture and restore the deep sense of loss experienced by the displaced. Will we heed God’s call to love our neighbor as ourselves, and to care for the foreigner in our midst? To do so, argue the authors, is perhaps to experience an essential part of God himself.
Nadia Khouri
Community Health Center Director, Beirut, Lebanon
In an era when wars and persecution have driven more people from their homes than at any other time since World War II, Rupen Das and Brent Hamoud provide a thoroughly engaging investigation to help Jesus-followers consider what responsibilities they have to assist those who have been displaced. Their rich encounters with “displaced sojourners” across the globe have clearly stirred creative turmoil in their own spirituality, and in the crucible of discomfort these courageous authors have wrestled with biblical, theological, and missiological questions earthed in the spectacle of gospel hope they have witnessed in unexpected ways and places.
All followers of Jesus seeking to welcome, serve and learn from displaced people will find this a useful resource enabling them to learn from their experiences and develop ongoing responses that might become even more prophetic in changing times.
Juliet Kilpin
Coordinator, Urban Expression
Peacemaker, Peaceful Borders
Strangers in the Kingdom is both personal and timely. Displacement is our generation’s collective tragedy and our reaction will serve to judge us long after we are gone. There have been two major reactions to displacement – fear and ignorance. Das and Hamoud’s experience and scholarship help educate and promote compassion for the millions of people who do not have a voice. The issue of displacement is not a “far away” event – refugees and asylum seekers are now our neighbors. It is our responsibility to understand them . . . and love them. I am thankful for the time and energy the authors have spent on this important effort. Indeed, it needs to be read by every Christian, particularly those in the West.
Shane Lakatos
Co-founder of Social Services for the Arab Community (SSFAC)
Toledo, Ohio, USA
Strangers in the Kingdom called hundreds of situations, histories and testimonies of people in need to my mind, brought tears to my eyes and put a fiery passion in my heart, to keep doing work for the love of those in need and, empowered by LOVE that GOD has given me, to involve more people in it!
This book is an eye opener and an instrument of God for helping us learn the correct terminology regarding who the refugees, displaced and migrants are. It is also an aid for understanding, in the theological, missiological and biblical terms, who the strangers are, whom God has called us to love and accept as our own people, motivating us to pray for compassion like his, and for God to open our eyes and let us see as he sees.
Rupen Das and Brent Hamoud did a great job writing this book and I am excited that you have decided to read it. Strangers in the Kingdom can change your perspective on life so that you can see people and the world today in the way Jesus sees them – so that the world and the lives of millions of people can be changed by his love and compassion. And my prayer for you, as you read this book, is that you will see that you are essential in this kingdom, the kingdom of God, as a voice for the voiceless.
Cesar Sotomayor
Austrian Baptist Aid
Ministering to Refugees, Migrants, and the Stateless
© 2017 by Rupen Das and Brent Hamoud
Published 2017 by Langham Global Library
An imprint of Langham Creative Projects
Langham Partnership
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Glimpses of Reality
Today, during the afternoon, while the Croatian Baptist Aid team was preparing vegetable packages for the refugees, they witnessed a death of a three-year-old baby. The baby from Syria died in the hands of her parents. Truly, those were very difficult moments not just for the family but for the whole camp as well. During our four days of work, we got close to the family because we were engaged in conversation and fellowship with them each day. This family suffered a great tragedy today; they lost their child after days of sickness and inefficient medical care. Due to the lack of help, this baby let go its last breath in this world today.
Could the doctors have reacted better? Could the organizations responsible for the camp have done something more to prevent this? How did all this [death of the baby] happen unnoticed by the eyes of the biggest inter-governmental organization in the world for refugees? Why is this [plight of the refugees in Greece] being ignored? Why do people in Europe hate us? Those were just some of the questions asked by the refugees.
Croatian Baptist Aid team in Greece. Email 11 November 2016.
Our refugee families began to feel that maybe they really could live here and feel at home. Suddenly they were able to picture themselves being a part of this community. To slightly change that African saying, “It takes a neighbourhood to welcome a refugee.” Because of the “warmth of the welcome,” something clicked.
That phrase comes from an interesting longitudinal study, the Refugee Resettlement Project, done by Dr Morton Beiser who is now with Ryerson University. He asked refugees, mostly the Vietnamese boat people, what had helped them integrate well, and they answered that it was the “warmth of the welcome.” Isn’t that interesting? Employment, housing, English classes – those things are important, but it was a personal, caring connection that was the key to successful integration.
Mary Jo Leddy, refugee advocate and founder of Romero House in Toronto, Canada. Taken from “A Kolbe Times Interview with Mary Jo Leddy,” Kolbe Times, 11 September 2016.