i am adopted - ptr. vetty gutierrez - 10am morning service
TRANSCRIPT
I AM ADOPTED
I AM ADOPTED
I AM ADOPTED
EPHESIANS 5:1–21
1 Follow God’s example, therefore, as dearly loved children 2 and walk in the way of love, just as Christ loved us and gave Himself up for us as a fragrant offering and sacrifice to God.
EPHESIANS 5:1–213 But among you there must not be even a hint of sexual immorality, or of any kind of impurity, or of greed, because these are improper for God’s holy people. 4 Nor should there be obscenity, foolish talk or coarse joking, which are out of place, but rather thanksgiving.
EPHESIANS 5:1–215 For of this you can be sure: No immoral, impure or greedy person—such a person is an idolater—has any inheritance in the kingdom of Christ and of God. 6 Let no one deceive you with empty words, for because of such things God’s wrath comes on those who are disobedient.
EPHESIANS 5:1–217 Therefore do not be partners with them.8 For you were once darkness, but now you are light in the Lord. Live as children of light 9 (for the fruit of the light consists in all goodness, righteousness and truth) 10 and find out what pleases the Lord.
EPHESIANS 5:1–2111 Have nothing to do with the fruitless deeds of darkness, but rather expose them. 12 It is shameful even to mention what the disobedient do in secret. 13 But everything exposed by the light becomes visible—and everything that is illuminated becomes a light.
EPHESIANS 5:1–2114 This is why it is said: “Wake up, sleeper,rise from the dead, and Christ will shine on you.”15 Be very careful, then, how you live—not as unwise but as wise, 16 making the most of every opportunity, because the days are evil.
EPHESIANS 5:1–2117 Therefore do not be foolish, but understand what the Lord’s will is. 18 Do not get drunk on wine, which leads to debauchery. Instead, be filled with the Spirit, 19 speaking to one another with psalms, hymns, and songs from the Spirit. Sing and make music from your heart to the Lord,
EPHESIANS 5:1–21
20 always giving thanks to God the Father for everything, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ.21 Submit to one another out of reverence for Christ.
TWO LISTS
DO NOT:
1. Do not engage in sexual immorality or impurity.
EPHESIANS 5:3
3 But among you there must not be even a hint of sexual immorality, or of any kind of impurity, or of greed, because these are improper for God’s holy people.
2. Do not engage in covetousness.
EPHESIANS 5:3
3 But among you there must not be even a hint of sexual immorality, or of any kind of impurity, or of greed, because these are improper for God’s holy people.
3. Do not participate in filthiness, foolish talk, or crude
humor.
EPHESIANS 5:4
4 Nor should there be obscenity, foolish talk or coarse joking, which are out of place, but rather thanksgiving.
4. Do not associate with sinful behavior.
EPHESIANS 5:5-75 For of this you can be sure: No immoral, impure or greedy person—such a person is an idolater—has any inheritance in the kingdom of Christ and of God. 6 Let no one deceive you with empty words, for because of such things God’s wrath comes on those who are disobedient.7 Therefore do not be partners with them.
5. Do not take part in works of darkness, but expose them.
EPHESIANS 5:8-138 For you were once darkness, but now you are light in the Lord. Live as children of light 9 (for the fruit of the light consists in all goodness, righteousness and truth) 10 and find out what pleases the Lord.
EPHESIANS 5:8-1311 Have nothing to do with the fruitless deeds of darkness, but rather expose them. 12 It is shameful even to mention what the disobedient do in secret. 13 But everything exposed by the light becomes visible—and everything that is illuminated becomes a light.
D.L. Moody was fond of saying,
“Character is what you are in the
dark.”
6. Do not get drunk.
EPHESIANS 5:18
18 Do not get drunk on wine, which leads to debauchery. Instead, be filled with the Spirit,
DO:
1. Imitate God.
EPHESIANS 5:1
1 Follow God’s example, therefore, as dearly loved children
2. Walk in love.
EPHESIANS 5:2
2 and walk in the way of love, just as Christ loved us and gave Himself up for us as a fragrant offering and sacrifice to God.
3. Walk as children of light.
EPHESIANS 5:8b
8b Live as children of light
4. Discern what pleases God.
EPHESIANS 5:10
10 and find out what pleases the Lord.
5. Walk as wise.
EPHESIANS 5:15
15 Be very careful, then, how you live—not as unwise but as wise,
6. Make the best use of time.
EPHESIANS 5:16
16 making the most of every opportunity, because the days are evil.
7. Be filled with the spirit.
EPHESIANS 5:18b
18b Instead, be filled with the Spirit,
8. Sing in passionate worship to God.
EPHESIANS 5:19
19 speaking to one another with psalms, hymns, and songs from the Spirit. Sing and make music from your heart to the Lord,
9. Give thanks.
EPHESIANS 5:20
20 always giving thanks to God the Father for everything, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ.
10. Submit to one another out of reverence for God.
EPHESIANS 5:21
21 Submit to one another out of reverence for Christ.
ADOPTED BY GOD THE FATHER
EPHESIANS 5:1
1 “Therefore, be imitators of God, as beloved children.”
EPHESIANS 5:20
20 always giving thanks to God the Father for everything, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ.
Ephesians 5:20 - that God is our Father
Here’s our identity: if you’re a Christian, God’s our Father, and we
are His beloved children.
Ephesians 1:5 - At the beginning of the book, it was mentioned that
we’d been adopted. WE HAD BEEN ADOPTED.
Eight times in Ephesians, he talks about God as our Father, explicitly and overtly. This is how the Lord
Jesus taught us to pray: “Our Father who art in heaven”.
FCC, if you’re a Christian, your relationship with God is a
relationship with God as Father.
Jesus changed the way the world sees God. Jesus shows us the
father-heart of God and He reveals to us that we can be adopted into
God’s family.
God’s heart is a father’s heart. God’s heart is an adoptive heart.
I want you to see salvation as adoption.
If you’re a Christian, He picked you. He picked you to be His son or
daughter. He adopted you into His family. You now bear the family
name of “Christian.”
You now receive all the inheritance rights of the Father and that
includes the totality of the kingdom of God.
God is a Father and Christians are adopted into His family.
The view of God in the Bible is absolutely different than the view of
God in culture.
“Be imitators of God as dearly loved children of God.”
ADOPTED WITH NEW IDENTITY
Do you know what happens to a kid who gets adopted? Their whole identity changes. First thing that
changes is their legal status, their last name. Their identity literally,
completely changes.
When you are adopted into the family of God by God the Father,
your identity changes. That’s why we bear the family name
“Christian”.
EPHESIANS 5:6
6 Let no one deceive you with empty words, for because of such things God’s wrath comes on those who are disobedient.
As a non-Christian, your identity is “sons of disobedience under the
wrath of God.”
EPHESIANS 5:8
8 For you were once darkness, but now you are light in the Lord. Live as children of light
Ephesians 5:8 — Your new identity is what? “Children of light”
“Dearly loved children”
Before you were a Christian, God was angry. And now that you’re a
Christian, He is not.
Before you were a Christian, there was punishment awaiting you. Now
that you’re a Christian, there is none.
The punishment already went to Jesus; the wrath already went to
Jesus. Your big Brother took care of everything. Everything’s changed.
Here’s what He says: “You’re now children of the light.” That means that
God’s grace is shining upon you. God’s affection is always set before
you.
And once He’s signed the adoption papers by sealing you with the Holy Spirit, He will never leave you nor forsake you. He will never disown
you. You are His child forever.
ADOPTED INTO A FAMILY BY JESUS, OUR BIG BROTHER
EPHESIANS 5:2
2 and walk in the way of love, just as Christ loved us and gave Himself up for us as a fragrant offering and sacrifice to God.
HEBREWS 2:17
17 For this reason He had to be made like them, fully human in every way, in order that He might become a merciful and faithful high priest in service to God, and that He might make atonement for the sins of the people.
HEBREWS 2:11
11 Both the One who makes people holy and those who are made holy are of the same family. So Jesus is not ashamed to call them brothers and sisters.
ROMANS 8:29
29 For those God foreknew He also predestined to be conformed to the image of His Son, that He might be the firstborn among many brothers and sisters.
Jesus is our first-born big Brother. Our big Brother died so that we could be adopted into the family of God. He rose, conquering sin and death, and
He reconciles all of the sons and daughters back to their loving Father.
Whatever inheritance we receive—the Holy Spirit, eternal life, forgiveness of sin, the kingdom of God—all of these things are the possession of Jesus, the firstborn, and He shares them
with the family of God.
The church family is where you meet your brothers and sisters.
But when people met God the Father and they were adopted into the
family by Jesus, the big Brother, everything was so radically altered.
They just decided, “Our spiritual family is more important than our physical family. Our family of new birth exceeds our family of birth.”
ADOPTED TO WORSHIP
EPHESIANS 5:18–21
18 Do not get drunk on wine, which leads to debauchery. Instead, be filled with the Spirit, 19 speaking to one another with psalms, hymns, and songs from the Spirit. Sing and make music from your heart to the Lord,
EPHESIANS 5:1–21
20 always giving thanks to God the Father for everything, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ.21 Submit to one another out of reverence for Christ.
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
The Rohingya And The Port Of Last Resortby Patricia Evangelista
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
We know our place in the world. We are the port of last resort, and have little to offer the Rohingya beyond a separate peace. Yet I write this with pride, in the hope that there will always be a cluster of islands southwest of the Pacific, where no ship in need is called unwanted.
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
THE UNWANTED
A Rohingya migrant eats food dropped by a Thai army helicopter after he jumped to collect the supplies at sea from a boat drifting in Thai waters off the southern island of Koh Lipe in the Andaman sea on May 14, 2015.
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
They said there were knives and ropes. They said there were riots over scraps. They said they were stabbed and beaten, and that there were days when their throats were so parched they drank their own urine. Some of them were hanged, others thrown overboard.
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
There was a risk of mass casualties, said aid groups. Drifting boats were turning into floating coffins. Ship decks were little more than a confusion of shoulders, ribs, and bony elbows. Rohingya refugees waved signs as navies towed rickety boats out to sea. The crisis had become a game of human Ping-Pong, with lives in play as countries took turns slamming the paddle.
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
There was a standoff, until early last week, when news broke that the Philippines had offered shelter to 3,000 boat people. “The Philippines,” wrote The Telegraph, “has offered refuge to the thousands of migrants who have been stranded for months on boats after being repeatedly rejected and towed back to sea by Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia.”
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
THE UNWANTED
A Rohingya migrant eats food dropped by a Thai army helicopter after he jumped to collect the supplies at sea from a boat drifting in Thai waters off the southern island of Koh Lipe in the Andaman sea on May 14, 2015.
Justice Secretary Leila de Lima announced that refugees “cannot always be expected to obtain travel documents particularly where the agent of persecution is the state.” The United Nations High Commission on Refugees saluted the country’s "strong humanitarian tradition.” Post after repost streamed down timelines, prefaced with messages shared by aid workers and international protection officers and the occasional old friend from Australia.
This is how it’s done, they said. Look at the Philippines. Look at what they’ve done.
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
THE UNWANTED
A Rohingya migrant eats food dropped by a Thai army helicopter after he jumped to collect the supplies at sea from a boat drifting in Thai waters off the southern island of Koh Lipe in the Andaman sea on May 14, 2015.
I suspect I am one of many who were initially confused, not so much by the reports, but by the general air of surprise and congratulatory glee that greeted the government announcement. An earlier report that the country would push back the boat people – a misinterpretation later corrected by the government – was received with doubt by news editors and roundly protested on social media. Many of us assumed we would welcome the Rohingya. It was just a question of when.
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
THE UNWANTED
A Rohingya migrant eats food dropped by a Thai army helicopter after he jumped to collect the supplies at sea from a boat drifting in Thai waters off the southern island of Koh Lipe in the Andaman sea on May 14, 2015.
There are some truths I know. The drowning season will begin in June. The bribes will appear before the campaigns roll. The malls will fill in the sweaty noon, the clowns will dance with the corrupt, and the ports will open for refugees, wherever they are from.
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
The people nobody wantedThey are the Muslims of Northern Rakhine state, more than a million strong, born in Myanmar with family going back generations. They call themselves the Rohingya.
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
Myanmar denies them even their name. They have, instead, been called Bengalis, identified by Myanmar as natives of a Bangladesh that disclaims them, marked as foreigners and illegal immigrants, subject to abuse and deportation.
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
The Rohingya have been called the most persecuted in the world, a Muslim minority whose mosques were burned by nationalists seeking ”to protect Buddhism” Most have been denied citizenship and evicted from their homes.
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
Although they have been discriminated for decades, ethnic violence came to a head in 2012 when thousands of Arakan men, “armed with machetes, swords, homemade guns, Molotov cocktails, and other weapons descended upon and attacked Muslim villages,” torching villages and killing residents.
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
It was, as Human Rights Watch called it, “a coordinated campaign to forcibly relocate or remove the state’s Muslims.”An estimated 140,000 fled into refugee camps, where conditions are difficult and food is scarce. Although they have not been permitted to leave, The Economist reported that in the first three months of 2015,
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
25,000 Rohingya, including those living on the borders of Bangladesh, bought their way into boats in an attempt to reach friendlier shores. At least 300 have died. Some of those boats drifted into the waters of Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand – and forced the crisis that is now testing the convictions of the international community.
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
One boat in particular, abandoned by captain and crew, packed with swollen-eyed passengers, drifted into Thailand waters after an interception off Langkawi and Penang islands by Malaysian authorities. Passengers said they had been at sea for over three months. The ship, said The New York Times, “flew a tattered black flag on a bamboo mast,” with the words, “We are Myanmar Rohingya.”
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
The Thai navy repaired their engine, gave them provisions, and pronounced them ready to travel. Thailand's Lt. Cmdr. Veerapong Nakprasit said the navy had trained the passengers “to navigate on their own,” adding that it was “so they can reach their dream destination.” For the Rohingya, the dream has become anywhere but home.
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
In pursuit of the dreamIn 2014, according to the UNHCR, 9 Rohingya migrants were allowed into the Philippines "to be free from fear that they're going to be sold again.""They were allowed to come into the Philippines while their processing took place, and regained a few kilos, regained their health, regained some dignity, and proceeded onwards to reach their resettlement countries," said Bernard Kerblat, country representative of the UNHCR.
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
The Philippines was a temporary home, where the Rohingya stayed 5 months “to recover.”"What was needed at that time,” said Kerblat, “is to find a sovereign state ready to accept them even for a short time."
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
THE UNWANTED
A Rohingya migrant eats food dropped by a Thai army helicopter after he jumped to collect the supplies at sea from a boat drifting in Thai waters off the southern island of Koh Lipe in the Andaman sea on May 14, 2015.
This is the Republic of the Philippines, pearl of the orient, cradle of the brave, ringed by fire and drowned by storm, where the disaster season begins in July, lasts until Christmas, then staggers into a rehabilitation period that ends when the next typhoon decimates another province.
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
THE UNWANTED
A Rohingya migrant eats food dropped by a Thai army helicopter after he jumped to collect the supplies at sea from a boat drifting in Thai waters off the southern island of Koh Lipe in the Andaman sea on May 14, 2015.
Welcome to the last country outside the Vatican without divorce, the third most dangerous country for journalists, whose airport was celebrated for rising to fourth worst instead of first, whose road traffic maintains its place as the ninth worst in the world. This is where a doctor can be jailed for removing a fetus to save a mother's life, where most live under the poverty line, and where it is possible, if you know where to go, to buy unmarked abortifacients in the back alleys leading to the Church of the Black Nazarene.
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
THE UNWANTED
A Rohingya migrant eats food dropped by a Thai army helicopter after he jumped to collect the supplies at sea from a boat drifting in Thai waters off the southern island of Koh Lipe in the Andaman sea on May 14, 2015.
And yet, according to the UN, it is also the country that in 2012 became “the first country in the Asia-Pacific region to establish a procedure to protect both refugees and stateless people." Of the many and varied ways we define ourselves, we are also a people who will open our ports to the very desperate.
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
THE UNWANTED
A Rohingya migrant eats food dropped by a Thai army helicopter after he jumped to collect the supplies at sea from a boat drifting in Thai waters off the southern island of Koh Lipe in the Andaman sea on May 14, 2015.
It is not the first time. On September 8, 1937, a steamship named Gneisenau carrying German Jews escaping the Holocaust arrived in Manila, and was given official welcome by the Quezon government. World War II did not just bring in more Jews, but also Chinese refugees and residents of the British colony of Hong Kong. The Philippines remained open to refugees until December 8, 1941 – the day the Japanese arrived with their bayonets and burned cities to the ground.
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
THE UNWANTED
A Rohingya migrant eats food dropped by a Thai army helicopter after he jumped to collect the supplies at sea from a boat drifting in Thai waters off the southern island of Koh Lipe in the Andaman sea on May 14, 2015.
"We would not be alive today if not for the Philippines,” said 84-year-old Lotte Hershefield. “We would've been destroyed in the crematorium."In 1949, the International Refugee Organization made an appeal to the international community for safe refuge on behalf of thousands of White Russians whose lives were endangered by civil war after the Bolshevik Revolution. Only one country offered protection – the Philippines, whose government granted temporary shelter to an estimated 6,000 Russians in the former naval base of Tubabao Island in Guiuan, Eastern Samar.
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
THE UNWANTED
A Rohingya migrant eats food dropped by a Thai army helicopter after he jumped to collect the supplies at sea from a boat drifting in Thai waters off the southern island of Koh Lipe in the Andaman sea on May 14, 2015.
In 1975, the mounting massacres by the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia as well as threats from Vietnam’s new communist government sent thousands of refugees into exile. Many were provided with food, shelter and education by the Philippine Refugee Processing Center.In the 20 years the center was in service, over 400,000 Indochina refugees passed through its doors.
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
THE UNWANTED
A Rohingya migrant eats food dropped by a Thai army helicopter after he jumped to collect the supplies at sea from a boat drifting in Thai waters off the southern island of Koh Lipe in the Andaman sea on May 14, 2015.
'We will take him home'I write this in an attempt to understand, if only for
myself, what seems to be a national impulse in a country that can barely support its own. It is a compulsion we have rarely questioned, but is now thrown into sharp relief by the crisis in the Andaman Sea.
There is no easy explanation. It may be little more than the practicality of living in an archipelago with porous borders. Or it could be another inheritance from the American occupation, much the same as free speech, secular governance and a great and abiding love for imported spam.
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
THE UNWANTED
A Rohingya migrant eats food dropped by a Thai army helicopter after he jumped to collect the supplies at sea from a boat drifting in Thai waters off the southern island of Koh Lipe in the Andaman sea on May 14, 2015.
And yet it’s difficult to believe all this is nothing more than a result of habit and circumstance. It is the same impulse that has a barber who lost his shop in a typhoon offering jobs to the two barbers who lost their homes. It is an impulse that lives in the aftermath of disaster – the widow and her children surviving on looted goods dropped off by tattooed men, the father wrapping the corpse of his neighbor’s daughter just after he lost his wife, the displaced mother insisting on feeding journalists out of her meager store.
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
THE UNWANTED
A Rohingya migrant eats food dropped by a Thai army helicopter after he jumped to collect the supplies at sea from a boat drifting in Thai waters off the southern island of Koh Lipe in the Andaman sea on May 14, 2015.
In 2012, after Typhoon Pablo ripped through Compostela Valley, I was sent to New Bataan to cover the survivors. It was 5 days after the storm, and the evacuation center smelled of sweat and corpses. I remember a woman in her late fifties, a grandmother who had travelled 8 hours by jeep with her miner husband. They had come for their daughter, and were told she was dead. Their two grandchildren had survived.
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
THE UNWANTED
A Rohingya migrant eats food dropped by a Thai army helicopter after he jumped to collect the supplies at sea from a boat drifting in Thai waters off the southern island of Koh Lipe in the Andaman sea on May 14, 2015.
They were all going home, she said, to the house near the mines where the children would be raised as their own.
Her husband walked in, trailing a 9-year-old boy. The boy was an orphan, said the miner, and had been snatched by a neighbor from the flashfloods in time to see his parents and older brother drown.
If no one claimed the boy, said the old man, they would bring him home.
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
THE UNWANTED
A Rohingya migrant eats food dropped by a Thai army helicopter after he jumped to collect the supplies at sea from a boat drifting in Thai waters off the southern island of Koh Lipe in the Andaman sea on May 14, 2015.
The port of last resortToday, Malaysia, Indonesia and Thailand
have committed to the rescue of what may be thousands of refugees still at sea. Indonesia and Malaysia have already offered temporary refuge. A number of countries, including the United States, have promised resettlement assistance.
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
THE UNWANTED
A Rohingya migrant eats food dropped by a Thai army helicopter after he jumped to collect the supplies at sea from a boat drifting in Thai waters off the southern island of Koh Lipe in the Andaman sea on May 14, 2015.
“It may be conceivable,” said the UNHCR’s Kerblat, “that the reiteration of the government of the Philippines to uphold their commitment to asylum may have contributed to encourage other member states to positively reconsider their position.” HRW Deputy Director for Asia Phelim Kine offered the same thought, calling the Philippines’ initial offer of asylum “leadership by example.”
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
THE UNWANTED
A Rohingya migrant eats food dropped by a Thai army helicopter after he jumped to collect the supplies at sea from a boat drifting in Thai waters off the southern island of Koh Lipe in the Andaman sea on May 14, 2015.
I’d like to believe the Philippines had some influence in the sudden reversal of positions, but I'm also well aware it could have just as well been a function of timing and circumstance. Aceh’s fishermen were rescuing boat people even before Indonesia officially allowed the Rohingya to disembark. Thailand and Malaysia, before their crackdown on refugees, have themselves given shelter to tens of thousands of Rohingya refugees.
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
THE UNWANTED
A Rohingya migrant eats food dropped by a Thai army helicopter after he jumped to collect the supplies at sea from a boat drifting in Thai waters off the southern island of Koh Lipe in the Andaman sea on May 14, 2015.
The truth is that we’re not all that different. It is only that we took a stand, at a time when everyone else had decided they had done enough.
I suspect it is at these moments when we are at our best, when we realize there is no one left to stand but us. I don’t believe there's any irony in a Catholic country welcoming Rohingya migrants, in much the same way as there was no surprise when Jews and Protestants sailed into our ports. Muslim South is just as vehement in their demand we offer aid, promising land and protection to the Rohingya.
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
THE UNWANTED
A Rohingya migrant eats food dropped by a Thai army helicopter after he jumped to collect the supplies at sea from a boat drifting in Thai waters off the southern island of Koh Lipe in the Andaman sea on May 14, 2015.
This is not about religion, as much as it is about memory and necessity and pride. We know what it is to live as underdogs. We have fought losing wars, have marched unarmed and singing towards a tyrant’s loaded cannons, and still stood cheering as our pound-for-pound national hero lost what may be recorded as the most monotonous boxing match in sports history.
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
THE UNWANTED
A Rohingya migrant eats food dropped by a Thai army helicopter after he jumped to collect the supplies at sea from a boat drifting in Thai waters off the southern island of Koh Lipe in the Andaman sea on May 14, 2015.
Many of us recognize the reckless courage it took for the Rohingya to smuggle their children into tilting boats. It is the same sacrifice we’ve seen in millions of our own, who have risked abuse overseas for the sake of future and family. We know what it is to beg. We've stood at the receiving end of charity and contempt. Maybe this is why so many of us will look past political cost and practical consideration to the reality of bone and muscle and beating heart.
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
THE UNWANTED
A Rohingya migrant eats food dropped by a Thai army helicopter after he jumped to collect the supplies at sea from a boat drifting in Thai waters off the southern island of Koh Lipe in the Andaman sea on May 14, 2015.
I don't have the answers. All I know is that if the cost of generosity is high, the price of our refusal will be much higher still.
The crisis is not over, but the Rohingya are now welcome in the countries they sought. Thousands have been rescued and are now under the care of Malaysia and Indonesia. The Philippines, many miles distant, will have little need to prepare its coasts. The Rohingya's imagined future has never been this country – a nation big on dreams and short on reality, torn by conflict, wracked by disaster, whose own people look to the distance for greener pastures.
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
THE UNWANTED
A Rohingya migrant eats food dropped by a Thai army helicopter after he jumped to collect the supplies at sea from a boat drifting in Thai waters off the southern island of Koh Lipe in the Andaman sea on May 14, 2015.
We know what we are. We are the port of last resort, and have little to offer beyond a separate peace. Yet I write this with pride, in the hope that there will always be a cluster of islands southwest of the Pacific, where no ship in need is called unwanted.
In a family, everybody’s got to do their part. We need everybody to do their part—giving, praying, serving so that we can have a great family.
THE UNWANTED
A Rohingya migrant eats food dropped by a Thai army helicopter after he jumped to collect the supplies at sea from a boat drifting in Thai waters off the southern island of Koh Lipe in the Andaman sea on May 14, 2015.
There are many days – when the thousands stand sweating at midmorning waiting for trains that do not come, when another toddler dies of piss-poor conditions in Zamboanga, when a chinless senator howls about the Muslim scourge, when another scandal and another charge and another whistle-blower takes over the headlines – when there is cause to be ashamed of who we are.
It is not today. Today, it is a grand and marvelous thing to be born a Filipino. – Rappler.com