Our mission is to use soccer to help restore, unify and empower refugees and people of all nations in our community to thrive in relationship with Jesus and each other.

Who We Are

The vision for All Nations Soccer started in 2017 in Jacksonville, FL through a local Burmese refugee soccer team who believed there were many more refugees in our city who would want to be in a soccer ministry community if the game they love was made accessible to them. Cost, location and game times were huge barriers to soccer being available to the immigrant community. This Burmese team had personally experienced players getting out of gangs and off drugs and into a thriving new life through starting a relationship with Jesus. While they were extremely passionate about soccer their goal went beyond the game—they had a message of hope to share: that we can all find freedom from difficulties in our past and be restored, unified and empowered in a new life with Jesus. Over time, we worked together and gathered a core group of team captains, referees, and board members from Burma, Eritrea, Iraq, Paraguay, N. Ireland, Nepal, Rwanda, Sudan, and the USA who collectively shaped our soccer ministry vision. This team decided that the ministry would provide faith-based soccer programs that share the love and good news of Jesus with refugees and people of all nations in our community, thus giving us our name, All Nations Soccer (ANS), and in January, 2018 we launched our first league season with 8 teams and players representing 25 nations.

Today, ANS, operates year-around serving over 2,000 players from over 100 nations playing on over 60 teams. We are blown away by the diversity, need and incredible opportunity we have to serve and build life changing relationships with people literally from all over the world trying to start a new life here. Over 30% of our players come from the top 50 nations considered most unreached and highly persecuted. We get to share the good news of Jesus at over 350 games yearly and be a bridge to the local church as we serve together. It is truly a privilege providing a soccer ministry community and pathway for these players to grow up with us from youth through adulthood and participate in our core ministry programs.

Camps - serving 100+ refugee youth through free and public camps throughout the year

Academy - serving 50 underserved ESL middle and high schoolers through weekly soccer training, school support, meals, college prep, leadership development, and Bible study

League - serving 60+ teams in spring and fall outdoor and summer indoor Futsal for men, women and youth

Missions - providing local mission serve days to over 500 volunteers yearly and developing mission trip partners to send out players and others in the ANS community internationally.

ANS welcomes players of all beliefs and backgrounds and is a safe place to explore belief in God, while forging healthy community through playing soccer. Our goals for ANS are:

  • help refugees and people of all nations in our community discover Jesus through soccer

  • help restore refugees from the persecution and devastation they’ve experienced

  • forge unity by breaking down racial hostility

  • mobilize local churches to do local missions

  • create awareness for local refugee aid

  • build bridges for refugee employment opportunities

  • empower young adults to follow Jesus, positively impact our city and be leaders in their families

To accomplish this ANS looks to meaningfully partner with local churches, refugee agencies, businesses, schools and other charities in the city to collaboratively support uplifting refugees in our community.

We are so grateful we’ve been able to serve local players from these 100 different nations so far:

Afghanistan, Albania, Antigua & Barbuda, Argentina, Bahamas, Bahrain, Belgium, Belize, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Botswana, Brazil, Cambodia, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Colombia, Costa Rica, Croatia, Cuba, Ecuador, Egypt, El Salvador, England, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Estonia, Ethiopia, Democratic Republic of Congo, Dominican Republic, Fiji, France, Georgia, Germany, Ghana, Grenada, Guatemala, Guinea, Guyana, Haiti, Honduras, Hungary, India, Iran, Iraq, Ireland, Italy, Ivory Coast, Jamaica, Japan, Jordan, Kenya, Lebanon, Liberia, Libya, Madagascar, Mexico, Morocco, Myanmar, Nepal, Netherlands, Nicaragua, Nigeria, Northern Ireland, Panama, Palestine, Paraguay, Peru, Philippines, Poland, Puerto Rico, Republic of Congo, Romania, Russia, Rwanda, Saint Lucia, Samoa, Saudi Arabia, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Singapore, South Africa, South Korea, South Sudan, Spain, Sudan, Syria, Tanzania, Thailand, Togo, Trinidad & Tobago, Tunisia, Turkey, Uganda, Ukraine, USA, Venezuela, Vietnam, Yemen, Zambia, Zimbabwe

Why Soccer?

Soccer is growing in the USA, but it has long since been the world’s sport. In 2022, 5 billion people around the world, or over half (63%) of the global population, found a way to watch the World Cup. It’s no surprise the World Atlas ranks soccer as the #1 sport played in the world and soccer is known as the world’s game.

This makes soccer an incredible tool to connect with people from all nations. A consistent question we get from incoming refugees and those already here is “Where can I play soccer?”. This is the primary reason we utilize soccer to build relationships with refugees and the international community in our city.

Soccer provides a unifying environment that breaks down cultural barriers and creates friendships. It’s common for newly settling refugees to isolate to their own groups, but soccer is a platform that encourages healthy integration and the opportunity to build cross-cultural mutually beneficial relational networks in our community, as we all have something to learn from each other. Soccer gives us a way to go an meet people where they are at doing something we all love. No matter your language, background, or beliefs a soccer ball rolls the same and forms a bonding connection between those who play the game together!

What’s a Refugee?

In 2022 the UNHCR reported that 35.3 million refugees were uprooted from their homes by conflict and persecution. 114,300 refugees were resettled around world. That’s fewer than 0.5% of refugees worldwide who get the opportunity to resettle. Most spend the rest of their lives in refugee camps.

What is a refugee exactly? A refugee is a person who has fled or is forced from their country because of war, natural disaster or persecution due to their race, ethnicity, or religious or political beliefs. Most refugees begin their journey literally running for their lives in whatever way they can travel. Those fortunate enough end up in neighborhoods near you usually without you knowing they arrived could use your help to find a way to start their life over in the U.S.

Once refugees flee their homes they gather in refugee camps in neighboring countries and wait… anywhere from 2 years to the rest of their lives, to return home or be resettled. The camps are impoverished, crude and often overpopulated, but attempt to provide rationed food, basic shelter, healthcare and youth education. Refugees are unable to work or earn any wages during this time. They remain in these harsh living conditions until the conflict in their home nation resolves and they can return, or when another country grants permission for them to legally resettle there and become citizens.

Refugees have very little choice in the resettlement system. Refugees usually cannot proactively apply for resettlement. Even refugees selected for resettlement cannot choose to which country they will be resettled. The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) interviews and selects all refugees that get the opportunity to resettle. Only those who can prove they are escaping persecution and pass multiple security screenings after generally a 2-3 year process are eligible for resettlement into a receiving country. 

Since 1975, The United States has held a tradition of offering refuge to those fleeing persecution and war. In 1980, Congress passed the Refugee Act which incorporated the United Nations definition of 'refugee' and standardized the resettlement services for all refugees admitted into the U.S. The President, in consultation with Congress, annually determines how many and which refugees will be given sanctuary in the U.S. The UNHCR selects refugees who match U.S. specific selection criteria and the U.S. Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) further interviews them. The Department of Homeland Security, FBI, Department of Defense and multiple intelligence agencies work together to screen biometric and biographic data, photographs, and other background information. Any refugee who is deemed to pose a threat to our national security is denied.

Refugees that make it through this intensive process travel from across the globe with few belongings, a difficult past, and high hopes for a new future. Incoming, refugees are assigned to a refugee resettlement agency by the Bureau of Population, Refugees & Migration (PRM). As a refugee walks off the plane, they begin a very difficult journey of cross-cultural adaptation. Resettlement agencies are given government finances to help resettle a refugee by providing initial housing, furniture, clothing, work opportunities, healthcare, education and immigration services. However, time is essential to try and help refugees be self-sufficient because their financial aid stops after 90 days and the U.S. requires their travel loan to be fully repaid, including their airfare. It is up to the community, local church and charities to step into the gap!

For the last 40 years the U.S. has been a humanitarian world leader in accepting about 70-90,000 refugees per year. The US had an all-time low resettling only 12,000 refugees in 2020 but plans to resettle 125,000 in 2024. Jacksonville, FL and Raleigh – Durham, NC are key resettlement cities resettling on average 300-500 refugees annually with plans to greatly increase in 2024.

To date, refugees have had an amazing impact on the United States culturally and economically. In 2019 the approximate US population of 2.4 million resettled refugees generated an average household income of $71.400, paid more than $25 billion in taxes, made up 13% of all entrepreneurs, and generating more than $5.1 billion in business income.

Refugees arriving to the U.S. can be of any educational background. Some are highly educated doctors, lawyers and professionals, while others are unable to read or write in their own language. Some refugees come from wealthy backgrounds, while others have lived much of their lives in poverty.  The one factor all refugees have in common is that they have all been persecuted and hope for a different future and new community to belong and contribute to.

Our Values

To RESTORE refugees from the devastation and loss they came from and help them thrive in creating a new life and to restore people of all nations in their relationship with God.

To UNIFY refugees with people of all nations in our city by using the game of soccer and the love of Jesus to breakdown racial hostility and forge healthy community for all.

To EMPOWER refugees and people of all nations with the character and values to thrive in their families and workplaces, positively impact our community, help raise up the next generation and live on mission.