“When you are harvesting in your field and you overlook a sheaf, do not go back to get it. Leave it for the foreigner, the fatherless and the widow, so that the Lord your God may bless you in all the work of your hands.”
Deuteronomy 24:19 (NIV)
The most ancient teaching of the Mosaic law, says that whoever helps strangers, foreigners, orphans and widows, will be blessed by God. This was taught from the earliest days and carried through to Jesus’ day, although the religious authorities seemed to forget those teachings, when Jesus reached out to foreigners, strangers, and gentiles.
God has always been in the business of calling strangers and foreigners to Himself. God once selected Ruth, a Moabite woman, a gentile, to be a part of the ancestry of Jesus. Rahab, a gentile and a harlot, became a believer and changed her life. She was also part of the ancestry of Jesus. God always has and always will call foreigners and those outside the tribes of Israel, to join His kingdom. Any person, whose heart turns to Him, is welcomed.
God is still faithful to His chosen people, Israel, because of His promise to Abraham, but He has other children called into His flock as well. We are God’s children, called to labor in our Father’s family business. It’s a business that goes into the highways and byways, finding the alienated, the foreigners and the poor in spirit, who God wants to reveal His goodness to. As in any family business, those who work for their father, cherish family relationships more than monetary profit.
When Jesus came into the world, He worked in His Father’s business, inviting foreigners, the the meek, those who mourn and peacemakers. Jesus reached out to His own people first, but when religious leaders rejected Him, He turned His attention to those living on the margins of society, like the despised tax collectors, gentiles, harlots, and lepers. He simply followed Mosaic law, by reaching out to anyone estranged by society.
Jesus started a revolution of dignity, targeting anyone treated as outcasts, by making them feel seen and loved. He gave them a sense of dignity that they never had before. He never formed opinions, based on someone’s political allegiance or ethnic background, but rather by looking in their heart.
Visiting a Nursing home each week has taught me to appreciate people as they are, even if their words are unfiltered, or if they lack soundness of mind, and barely have a working memory. In one way or another, they are all poor in spirit, souls that God is seeking.
Jesus came to bring dignity to people just as they are, which helps me to better appreciate Jon’s state of being-as he is. Instead of hoping he will return to how he used to be, I have learned to enjoy who he currently is. Jesus bestows dignity to people, in whatever mental, emotional or spiritual state they exist in.
I remember a resident at the Nursing home, named Tawana, who shared her faith in any conversation, always finding a way to express her gratitude to God. She survived brain surgery and the Nursing home was to be her temporary rehabilitation place. She was far from her home on the south side of Chicago, so visits by her family were rare. She was always cheerful, yet praying for the day she could leave and to go to an assisted living facility.
One day, while she was talking about Jesus, she said He told us to take one day at a time, and not to worry about tomorrow. A female resident who was sitting next to her at the table, asked “Really, did Jesus said that?”
Tawana assured her, always giving hope to the residents, despite knowing that living in a Medicaid facility was no vacation.
Tawana was an example of laboring in her Father’s business, and letting her light shine on the outcasts and poor in spirit. Her day finally came to leave, and go to an assisted living facility, close to her children and grandchildren. She was blessed to leave the Nursing Home and we were all blessed to have known her during her time there.
God uses us to labor in His family business, wherever we can be most fruitful. He places us where we are, for a reason and a season, because He knows what is best for His children and the family business of Heaven.
Lord, help us to have gratitude even in the places we don’t want to be in. Open our hearts to see the heart of strangers among us and to share hope with them. Amen










