Finding healing in the Middle East

by Guest Author on July 18, 2018 in Great Commission

By Sami, Go Now missionary and Texas A&M University student

I've wanted to do work in the Middle East since my freshman year of college. I went on a Go Now trip that summer in Phoenix, Arizona, doing refugee work, and I fell in love with Arabs and their culture. This summer I’m here, I was most excited to be here for an extended amount of time. But when I got here, it didn't look like the fairytale I'd created in my mind with bright colors and camels everywhere. It's very hot, far worse than it was in Arizona. And it makes me angry that I'm not allowed to look men in the eyes; that makes me feel weak, inferior and defenseless. So I hunkered down for the first couple weeks until one night I gave in and admitted I was not happy here.

I realized my desire for the Middle East was not pure.

When I left for college, I was running away from my broken family. Subconsciously, it was easy to turn my back on them and the idea of moving across the ocean meant I wouldn't have to see them often. I simultaneously truly felt Father giving me a passion for unreached people, and the Middle East fit well into that description.

But being in this culture has shown me the gift and the beauty that family can be. The idea of moving from family to a unknown, foreign place sounds horrendous to me now. Father used this culture to show me that my desire to do good here was also partially motivated by my desire to run away, but Father is one of full redemption and wants to make us whole, even if it's a painful process.

It’s painful because my mother left when I was little and I’ve recently learned that running away doesn’t fix anything, it just allows time to pass and scars to form. In having to dig up repressed emotions and scabbed wounds, Father has shown me it’s best to not leave them that way. He’s had to take me on a journey in order to bring those emotions to surface and teach me to fully trust, to live fully redeemed and complete in Him. This has also allowed me to understand my mother a little because I almost did what she did to me.

So I'm not for or against long-term life in the Middle East now. All that matters is that I'm near to Father and doing what He has for me.

Texas Baptists is a movement of God’s people to share Christ and show love by strengthening churches and ministers, engaging culture and connecting the nations to Jesus.

The ministry of the convention is made possible by giving through the Texas Baptists Cooperative Program, Mary Hill Davis Offering® for Texas Missions, Texas Baptists Worldwide and Texas Baptist Missions Foundation. Thank you for your faithful and generous support.

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