Fifteen years ago, the
relationship between Saudi Arabia, homeland of Islam, and the United
States was cool at best. Opportunities for Christians to live there
were limited and difficult.
Thirteen years ago,
with the violence of 9/11, connections were severed, travel
restricted, and hostility ensued. Persecution of Christians
increased, missionaries were forced out.
Nine years ago, King
Abdullah met with President Bush and began a massive scholarship fund
and opportunity for Saudi students to study in America.
Now, there are over one
hundred thousand Saudi Arabian students flooding into American
universities.
They are here. Talented
young men and, increasingly, women from a country known for birthing
some of the most radical Muslims in the world are being paid by their
government to come and study here. The scholarship fund makes efforts
to provide this opportunity not just for the wealthy, educated class,
but for a wide range of their citizens, from all socio-economic
levels. The same country that will not allow their women to drive
will allow them to earn bachelors and masters degrees from American
universities. Universities in Kentucky, Indiana, and Tennessee and
other states now have Saudi Arabian students in the hundreds
attending their classes, eating in their restaurants, living in their
cities.
The scholarship program
has been extended until 2020. Then, this window of opportunity may
close. The students will go home.
But what will they take with them?
Because Saudi Arabian
students are coming in such large numbers it is easy for them to
remain within their own ethnic communities. Language and cultural
barriers often prove to be hurdles too great for them to overcome,
even though they may long for a friendships with local people. A
Global Gates missionary recently sat down with a Saudi student who
admitted that even though he had been in America for two years, their
meeting was his first time sitting down to talk to an American. They
come to America on a scholarship program that lists “mutual
understanding” and “cultural exchange” as some of its key
priorities, but many will return to their homeland having never
entered an American home, never made an American friend, and even
more shocking, never heard the Good News of Jesus.
The home that they will
return to is hostile to the Gospel because it is the stronghold of
another faith, the land which all Muslims face when they pray. In
Saudi Arabia, it is illegal to build a church building and difficult
to do long term mission work. Martyrdom and persecution are serious
issues for anyone even considering Jesus. Some Saudis have even
reported that they were having dreams about how the Lord was working
among them; however, nearly one hundred percent of the students
coming from Saudi Arabia have never had a Gospel conversation with a
Christian.
This may be their only chance to meet Jesus.
They will return home
with a diploma and an interesting life experience... but they could
take with them so much more. They could return to their families with
a new life, faith of greater worth than gold, and news of salvation
by grace alone. They could... only if Christians in America are awake
enough to see the grand opportunity before them, bold enough to open
their mouths at such a strategic time and share, devoted enough to
enter with love into lives that have no access to the Gospel.
What if each of the over 100,000 Saudi students in America right now had the chance to hear?
Will you tell them?
For more information
about connecting with Saudi students near you please email
nycmeoutreach@globalgates.info
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