Good morning, my brothers! Today’s article is written (and read) by one of my closest friends and a hero of mine, Sam Ibrahim. Sam left the religious persecution of Egypt and Saudi Arabia in the late 1970s and came to America (legally). He loves this country as much as anyone I know, and in fact, has written a book, which is linked after the article. Below is his love letter to our great country and its Christian heritage on this, our 250th birthday. It is worth the read. Let’s go! A 4-minute, 28-second read.

Listen to the audio version here:

As America approaches the celebration of its 250th anniversary, I find myself reflecting on nearly five decades of calling America home. I do so with deep gratitude — gratitude to God for the providence that brought me here, and gratitude to America for the life it made possible.

Long before I ever set foot on American soil, America lived in my imagination. Growing up in the Middle East, I did not merely see America as a distant country on a map; it was a luminous idea, a world apart, something almost too magnificent to be real.

 As a young child, I followed the Apollo missions and the moon landing, marveling at what seemed almost unimaginable: man stepping beyond the boundaries of Earth itself. I understood, even then, that this was no ordinary nation. I saw the rise of great cities, the power of innovation, and the richness of a land whose fertile soil produced abundance.

 Even from a distance, America stood apart, dynamic, bold, and unmistakably exceptional.

 From afar, it appeared almost mythical. A land where freedom was not whispered, but lived. Where opportunity was not reserved for the privileged but extended to those willing to work for it. Where justice, though imperfect, was pursued with seriousness and conviction. Where God Almighty was real and revered, where churches were full and vibrant, and the family stood as the cornerstone of society.

 For a child in those years, America was the land where the impossible became ordinary, where a person could speak freely, dream boldly, and rise as high as their effort and God’s grace would allow. It was a dream that burned quietly but persistently, year after year, as I came of age in a world that often felt constrained by forces beyond my control.

 In the late 1970s, by what I can only describe as the grace and provision of Almighty God, that childhood dream became a living, breathing reality. The moment I arrived on America’s shores, I felt something I had no precise word for, a kind of sacred arrival, as though a long journey of the soul had finally found its destination.

 I found America full of kind, courageous people, a nation where opportunity seemed to exist around every corner. There was the freedom to worship God, or not; the freedom to build, to succeed, to fail, and to try again without surrendering hope. I immediately fell in love with America, with its flag, its national anthem, its founding principles, its traditions, and, most importantly, its people.

 I had been granted passage into the greatest experiment in human governance and human dignity the world had ever witnessed — an experiment not grounded in utopian illusion, but in enduring truths about man, liberty, and moral order. I arrived not as a conqueror, not as a critic, but as one who came to belong, to give, to build, and to be built in return. From that first day, I understood that America would ask something of me: effort, loyalty, responsibility, and gratitude. And I was willing — eager, even — to give it everything I had.

 What I found in America exceeded even my most extravagant childhood imaginings, not because it was a perfect land, for no such land exists on this earth, but because it was something rarer and more precious: a fair land. A powerful land. A self-correcting land.

America showed me a nation capable of looking honestly at its own failures and choosing, again and again, to do better.

 I saw institutions that, when they bent, bent back toward justice. I saw a press that asked hard questions. I saw courts that answered to no king. I saw citizens who understood that freedom is not a gift from government, but a birthright from God, held in trust and guarded with care. America is not, and never claimed to be, a nation of saints. But it is a nation with a conscience, and a conscience, when it is alive and active, has the power to redeem.

 From where I stood, first as an outsider looking in, and then as a grateful citizen, I could see something that perhaps those born here sometimes take for granted: the extraordinary reach of America’s light. When tyrants have risen, America has often stood in the breach. When people have cried out for freedom, America’s founding ideals have given their voices a language.

The American military has kept sea lanes open and borders secure. American ingenuity has fed the hungry, healed the sick, and connected the world. American generosity has poured out across the earth in times of disaster and despair.

 But perhaps most powerfully of all, the American idea itself, the radical proposition that all people are endowed by their Creator with inalienable rights, has served as the North Star for freedom movements on every continent. America does not shine its light perfectly or without stumbling. But it shines. And a world without that light would be a far darker place.

 Happy Birthday, America — My Home

 Two hundred and fifty years. A quarter of a millennium of a republic that was told it could not last. And yet here America stands,  tested by civil war, by world wars, by economic calamities and cultural upheavals, the flag still flying, the people still free.

America, I congratulate you.

 Not with the empty congratulations of a stranger, but with the deep, personal gratitude of one who arrived at your shores as a dreaming immigrant and found a home more generous than he had dared to imagine. You gave me the opportunity, dignity, the freedom to worship God, to speak my mind, to build a life, and to offer it to the next generation. You gave me citizenship, and I have tried, every day since, to be worthy of it.

 The greatest honor bestowed upon me, second only to being called a Christian, a husband, and a father, is the privilege of being called an American.

 America is worth fighting for. Not because it is perfect, but because it is good, and because the principles upon which it was founded are true. The same God who guided the Founders and sustained her through every trial is able to carry America forward if her people will trust Him and do their part.

 Happy 250th birthday, America. You are my home. You are my gratitude. You are my hope. May God bless you, guide you, protect you, and make you, again and always, a light to the nations.

 -Samuel Ibrahim

Samuel Ibrahim is the author of the recently released book, The Vigilant Americans, a wake-up call for Americans based on his experience growing up in the Middle East and experiencing great religious persecution for his Christian faith. Order this important work today and join the fight for this great country and our Judeo-Christian heritage.

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