Letting Your Light Shine Before Men
Brother Nasser in Egypt is an evangelist who purposely
creates opportunities to share Christ with others. But sometimes the example of
his life shines brightly enough that opportunities come to him. Nasser lives in
a Muslim neighborhood, like most Christians, who are just a tiny minority of
the population in Egypt.
One cold January night, Nasser heard pebbles tapping against
his apartment window around 2 a.m. He opened the window and saw his neighbor, a
Muslim leader, standing outside. “I need help from you,” he said. “My wife is
very sick and I have to take her to the hospital.” The man asked if Nasser
could take them in his car. Nasser agreed cheerfully.
Nasser and his wife accompanied their neighbors to the
hospital and stayed with the couple for more than two hours until the woman was
admitted. On the ride home from the hospital, Nasser’s neighbor told him, “I
asked my cousin to come help me, but he wouldn’t. He told me that he had to
sleep because he had work early in the morning. But when I asked you if you
could help us, you just said you could.” Nasser responded, “Jesus Christ — this
is what he was teaching us to do, to stand with our friends when they need our
help.”
After the woman was released from the hospital, she needed
help getting injections in her hip every morning. Nasser’s neighbor again asked
him if he could help. “For me it was a good development in the relationship,”
said Nasser. “I couldn’t imagine he would ask me … a man, AND a Christian, to
give his wife an injection.”
Nasser continues to show love to his neighbor, but it isn’t
always easy, especially because of the man’s position as a Muslim leader. “We
began a friendship together, and people were watching us together,” said
Nasser. A cousin of the neighbor damaged Nasser’s car. Nasser’s family received
threats. “For example, if I’m in my car, they come up in front of me with their
car very slow, just to make me nervous. They want to make troubles for me from
time to time,” he said.
The relationship between the two men is still good, however.
“I have a burden in my heart to continue offering love to them because this is
the only thing that will affect their life,” said Nasser. “So I just continue
praying for them and continue loving them.”
Can we do the same for our enemies?