Sunday, October 29, 2017

TRADING PLACES

[1]According to a 2016 Forbes article precisely 42 slots on The Forbes 400 belong to naturalized citizens who immigrated to America. That's 10.5% of the list, a huge over performance considering that naturalized citizens make up only 6% of the U.S. population.  For all the political bombast about immigrants being an economic drain or a security threat, the pace of economic hyper success among immigrants is increasing.  The combined net worth of those 42 immigrant fortunes is $248 billion.  According to the Kauffman Foundation, immigrants are nearly twice as likely to start a new business as native-born Americans.  The Partnership for a New American Economy, a nonpartisan group formed by Forbes 400 members Murdoch and Michael Bloomberg, reports that immigrants started 28% of all new businesses in the U.S. in 2011, employed one out of every ten American workers at privately owned businesses and generated $775 billion in revenue.  Some of these businesses are small, of course, like restaurants and auto repair shops.[2] 
Yet statistics do not tell the story of immigration.  People do.  Since its inception, this nation has been continually infused with the energy of newcomers.  The very act of immigrating is entrepreneurial, a self-selected risk taken in an effort to better one's circumstances.  It's a mind-set.  “You leave everything you have and get on a plane,” says Forbes 400 member Shahid Khan. “You can handle change. You can handle risk. And you want to prove yourself.”  Yet their assimilation has seldom been smooth.  The challenges immigrants face today are not new, only the stories are.
By and large immigrants often fall into two baskets. Some have enough privilege to live anywhere, but see America as the place of greater opportunity.  Many come to escape injustices against humanity: ethnic genocide, religious persecution, war, famine, crime, and political unrest, or they are drawn by the lure of better employment opportunities, sometimes with devastating effects.  Yet the goal is often the same, hope of a better life, for themselves and their families and they are willing to sacrifice an awful lot up to obtain their dream.
Now I’m not going to pretend that there are any easy answers to the long standing debate on immigration.  This issue has existed throughout all of human history.  What I do know is, no matter how high you build a wall, hope will scale it, burrow under it, or find some other way around it.  I know, no matter how many times we develop laws that restrict or deport a person who has tasted the fruits of hope, they will find a way back.  So what do we do about it? I believe the starting point for any human reform begins with each one of us as individuals and we have scripture as our starting point. 
We tend to think of the escape from Egypt and the wandering in the wilderness as the content of the book of Exodus, yet the larger theme concerns the forming of a people into the people of God.  Included are an explanation about the proper way to worship and revere God, civil and criminal laws, and other exhortations about how to live in right covenant relationship.  Fundamental to the behaviors expected of the people of Israel is the idea that ‘as God acts toward them they are to act toward one another.’  Today’s reading singles out the treatment of the alien, the widow and the orphan, who represent the most vulnerable people & groups in society.
In our gospel reading Jesus is, once again, tested by the scholars with the question, “Teacher, which commandment is the greatest?"  You know the answer, love God with everything you have and are, AND your neighbor as yourself.  How do we love an unseen God?  We need to love our neighbor.  How do we love our sometimes inconvenient neighbor, by loving ourselves with a healthy self-love, and so we have to ask ourselves, who is my neighbor?
The book of Exodus answers this question, ALL people are our neighbors, including those most in need, the immigrant to our country, the elderly who have lost their voice and status in the community, and the orphan, especially those who find themselves aging out of foster care with nowhere to turn.  We are to treat all people with dignity and respect, as God has treated us, rescued us from our modern day slavery, and forgiven us.  In other words, imitate God by doing unto others what God has done for you.[3]  Pope Francis in his apostolic exhortation, the Joy of the Gospel states: “Being Church means being God’s people, in accordance with the great plan of his fatherly love.  This means that we are to be God’s leaven in the midst of humanity.  It means proclaiming and bringing God’s salvation into our world, which often goes astray and needs to be encouraged, given hope and strengthened on the way.  The Church must be a place of mercy freely given, where everyone can feel welcomed, loved, forgiven and encouraged to live the good life of the Gospel.” (EG 114)
Do you want real reform?  The only way is to embrace God’s plan.  We know it works.  St. Paul in his praise for the Thessalonians lived faith is one such example.  It’s a faith that has gone forth, transmitted from one person to another, from Thessalonica to other cities and nations.  Transmitted by being a living example to others, maintaining joy and hope even in the midst of suffering.  I’ve heard this said so many times, “I succeeded by my hard work, by the investment of my own blood, sweat and tears.  Everyone else should do the same so that they will respect and cherish what they have, just like me.”  Remember the two baskets that immigrants generally fall into?  I usually hear this from the folks who now fall into the basket of the some who have enough privilege to choose, from those who have either forgotten their gifted breaks in life or those who now expect more sacrifice from others than themselves, because they’ve already paid their dues.
St. Francis de Sales gives us some practical advice on how we can begin to reform our world.  He says, Put others in your place and yourself in theirs, and then treat the other the way you would like to be treated.  That’s how we love God, neighbor, and self.

[1] New American Bible, Saint Joseph Edition © 1986.  Scriptures:  Is 45:1, 4-6; 1 Thes1:1-5b; Mt 22:15-21
[2] 6 Immigrant Stories That Will Make You Believe In The American Dream Again, Forbes October 25, 2016.
[3] Living the Word, by Laurie Brink, O.P. and Paul Colloton, O.S.F.S © 2016 World Library Publication, Franklin Park, IL

No comments:

Post a Comment