Christmas Reflection: Holy Foreigners

Mexico–United States barrier at the border of Tijuana, Mexico and San Diego, USA. The crosses represent migrants who died in the crossing attempt. Some identified, some not. Surveillance tower in the background. © Tomas Castelazo, http://www.tomascastelazo.com / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 4.0

It seems that people around the world are drawing harder lines, taking harsher measures to separate people into groups; to establish who is “us” and who is “them”–and to claim security and power for “us” by putting “them” in their place.

So it seems a good time for Epiphany. A good time for this familiar story of the wise men from the East. Because beyond the adventure of the journey and the intrigue of the star and the preciousness of the baby gifts and the drama of Herod’s plotting—beyond everything that makes this such a great story—this text brings us into the heart of the Gospel. It demonstrates what God has been saying to God’s people throughout scripture.

The Hebrew scriptures make it clear that God wants us to include the “alien”–foreigners, immigrants, those who are different from us. People from different places, people with different customs and beliefs—we are to include them, to seek justice for them, to love them.

And that’s the precedent that is set from the beginning of the Gospel texts as well. At the center of this Epiphany story is God’s insistence that everyone is invited into the Divine story; no one is foreign to the grace of God.

The magi were foreigners who paid better attention to the signs of the Messiah than the Jewish scribes and scholars. Foreigners who were willing to travel hundreds of miles to worship the Jewish savior when the Jewish leaders just nine miles away in Jerusalem couldn’t be bothered. Foreigners to whom God came in a dream.

On Epiphany, we celebrate the full revelation of God. The story of the magi reminds us that this revelation often comes to—and through—those who are other. People who wear strange clothes and eat odd food and come from places that are not home to us.

As the world seems to be sliding dangerously away from this holy spirit of inclusion, we must stay grounded in this core teaching of scripture. We must remind each other of our calling and assure ourselves that we are not alone in this walk. In this work.

For all the Herods of the world, fearful that their power will be threatened by people who are different and unfamiliar; for all of the chief priests and teachers of the law, too involved in their own narrow world to realize the miracles so close at hand—For all of the forces that insist we close ranks and beef up security, there are those watching the heavens, those traveling to distant lands, those welcoming foreigners, those following stars and listening to dreams and living out the word of God.

Thankfully, there are more than three of us. Many, many more.

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