Opinion YES, JESUS WAS A REFUGEE

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YES, JESUS WAS A REFUGEE​

This past week, the US State Department ordered World Relief and other organizations to “stop all work” related to paused federal grants, through which these organizations help refugees resettle in their first months in the country. This comes shortly on the heels of a last-minute order from the United States government that put those fleeing Taliban persecution in Afghanistan—including those who helped the US in the war against al-Qaeda—in precarious limbo.

The matter right now is not just the global backlash against refugees but the glee with which some anti-refugee figures celebrate their rejection and revile those who would remind them that Jesus of Nazareth was, in fact, a refugee.

But was he? And if so, why does that matter?

The question of whether Jesus was ever a refugee is straightforward and without any ambiguity. The United Nations currently defines a refugee as someone who “has been forced to flee his or her country because of persecution, war or violence.” This is consistent with the normal everyday usage of the word in English. Merriam-Webster, for instance, defines refugee as “one that flees,” especially “a person who flees to a foreign country or power to escape danger or persecution.”

The Gospel of Matthew records that King Herod—enraged by word from Eastern star-seekers that the Messiah had been born in Bethlehem—ordered every male child in the region under two years old to be murdered (Matt. 2:16). Joseph had been warned about this ahead of time by an angelic presence in a dream and was told to flee to Egypt (v. 13).

The Bible tells us that Joseph, Mary, and Jesus remained in Egypt until the death of Herod. Even then, though, Joseph was warned, once again in a dream, that the situation in Judea under Herod’s son Archelaus was still perilous, so he “withdrew to the district of Galilee” (vv. 19–23, ESV throughout).

What’s more, Matthew records that this flight into Egypt was part of an even greater prophetic solidarity between Jesus and his people, the people of Israel. The escape and refuge and return was, as Matthew says, “to fulfill what the Lord had spoken by the prophet, ‘Out of Egypt I called my son’” (v. 15).

That prophet was Hosea, to whom God used those words to talk about the Exodus of Israel from Egypt under Moses (Hos. 11:1). At that time, God told Pharaoh through Moses, “Israel is my firstborn son, and I say to you, ‘Let my son go that he may serve me” (Ex. 4:22–23).

Jesus, the ultimate embodiment of the storyline of Israel, reenacted and redeemed that story. Just as God saved Israel from starvation by their sojourn in Egypt, God preserved Jesus the Israelite there. Just as God directed the Hebrews when to escape from the persecuting king, so he did with the household of the Messiah. Just as God protected the Israelites in the wilderness and through the waters of Jordan into the land of promise, Jesus was sent from the Jordan River into the wilderness in the power of the Spirit (Matt. 3:13–4:11).

Between the Exodus generation and the birth of Jesus, there are a string of refugees. Jesus’ ancestor Rahab, a prostitute in Jericho, fled from her own people and sought refuge with the Israelites after she helped the armies of Joshua take the Promised Land (Josh. 2). Another ancestor, a widow named Ruth, left her home country of Moab to go with her mother-in-law, Naomi, to Bethlehem, where she survived by gleaning the remnants of crops (Ruth 1–2).

Ruth thought she would be denigrated by Boaz, an Israelite man, since she was a foreigner. Instead, he commended her for how she left her parents and her native land to come to a people that she had not known before (2:11), in order to care for her late husband’s mother. Boaz blessed Ruth in the name of “the Lord, the God of Israel, under whose wings” she had “come to take refuge” (v. 12).

Jesus’ forefather David fled from the murderously intended persecution of King Saul (1 Sam. 19:18), seeking refuge for a time even in the enemy territory of Gath (ch. 21) and then in the hills and caves (26:1–3) and in the land of the Philistines (chs. 27–29).

Such examples could be multiplied at dizzying length since, as the Bible puts it, “time would fail me to tell” of the names of those who were “destitute, afflicted, mistreated—of whom the world was not worthy—wandering about in deserts and mountains, and in dens and caves of the earth” (Heb. 11:32, 37–38).

This is the story to which Jesus in the fullness of time inhabited, the story into which he has called those of us who follow him.

So what does that tell us about refugee policy? At one level, it tells us not very much. No country can take every refugee, any more than any person or church can care for every widow or orphan. A country taking prudential measures to screen and vet refugees is wise and necessary for that country to maintain its duty to uphold justice and order (Rom. 13:1–5). Christians can and do differ on what the right way is to accomplish these goals.

But while Christians can disagree on the policy numbers of refugees that a country is able to welcome, we have no right to dissent from the Bible on what we are to think of refugees themselves or on the motivations with which we should approach responding to them. And that does affect policy in the long run.

The Bible does not give us a tax policy, but it does reshape the consciences of tax collectors so that they don’t abuse their power or extort (Luke 3:13–14). Consider what would happen with a society that honors graft, and in which tax policy is created solely to reward “friends” and to punish “enemies.” We would need no blueprint to know that such motivations would result in unjust policies.

A Christian working for the Internal Revenue Service should not impose some biblical “tax policy” on the rest of the nation, but that Christian should be shaped in mind and conscience to recognize the warning about those who “do not bring justice to the fatherless, and the widow’s cause does not come to them” (Isa. 1:23).

In a time of anti-refugee rhetoric around the world, much of it ugly and hateful, the key test for Christians will be what it often is: Who are the people who are invisible to us?

Those who aren’t refugees are tempted to think that this is an irrelevant situation to them. Think of how differently we process matters that intersect with us personally.

For example, I can think of people who have led the way in combatting the unjust marketing of opioids that result in widespread addiction. Many of these advocates speak up because they’ve seen the damage that has been done to someone close to them. It’s not that these people would have been pro-opioid addiction otherwise, but they might never have thought about it at all.

I know many who work against genocide around the world because in their family histories, they had relatives who died in the Holocaust or fled the Nazi regime. These people would not otherwise be pro-genocide, but they are especially aware of what could happen when consciences are not awake to such atrocities. Thus, they recognize what’s at work when, for instance, concentration camps are built for Uyghur people in China.

Most American Christians are not refugees. Many won’t know a refugee family in their community personally. These Christians might then simply ignore the plight of refugees. And yet no Christian conscience can allow their mistreatment to stand. We all do know a refugee family. As a matter of fact, we are part of one. If we are in Christ, his history is ours (1 Cor. 10:1–2).

Refugees are unpopular. Often, they are scapegoated and maligned. “So Jesus also suffered outside the gate in order to sanctify the people through his own blood,” the Book of Hebrews states. “Therefore let us go to him outside the camp and bear the reproach he endured. For here we have no lasting city, but we seek the city that is to come” (Heb. 13:12–14).

The Jesus who went outside of the camp—cursed and reviled and virtually alone—calls us to follow him wherever he goes, including there. And he calls us to pay attention to the people to whom he pays attention, for he hears the cries of those who are in peril even when no one else does (James 5:4).

We won’t always agree on how to design a national refugee policy, but we can’t say we haven’t been warned about what happens to us when we learn to harden our hearts to those in danger. We should be so shaped by the story of Christ that we catch ourselves when we hear ourselves saying, “Can anything good come out of Nazareth?” (John 1:46).

Yes, Jesus was a refugee. And he is still in their camp. We should be too.
 
I don't see why I should care if jesus was a refugee. What is the point of bringing this up?

Not this shit again. Herod's kingdom was a Roman client state dominated by Rome, and Egypt was a Roman province under direct control of the Emperor. Arguably the most important one due to supplying Italy with grain.

Going from Judea to Egypt was like crossing the border between US states, not going to another country.
See now you're talking about archeology, which can be viewed as a science. Science and history is something anti trumpers LOATHE

Expecting the atheist to comprehend anything in history before 2008 is really really asking a lot

These are the same people who hitler was a white nationalist, palestine exists, jesus was "palestinian" and that algae in the ocean not only created itself but somehow became a different species

These are stupid people
 
Cool story , Bro.

Also, I'm not Christian and the illegals are all going back.
 
Why is the left constantly whining about refugees, it's not even a thing
Because refugees are a convenient weapon of destruction to utilize against your enemies and useful at destroying western countries from within. It's very easy to declare war against an enemy that's dropping nuclear bombs in your country but it's 'heartless' to turn away hordes of fighting-aged male parasites that want to devour your resources and turn your countries into the same shitholes they 'escaped' from.
 
Okay, just to give benefit of the doubt

Jesus' family was seeking political refuge in Egypt from one backwater town that was fleeing from Herod. That's it. At best a few hundred families were moving out to Egypt. He was also still a legal resident of the Roman empire and part of the census, Herod's kingdom was part of the Roman empire he could just fuck with his people however he wanted as long as it doesn't usurp Roman authority.

This is incomparable to a totally separate country from the other side of the world sending thousands upon millions of unvetted refugees, many suspiciously being young adult men fit for fighting, to all parts of the country.
 
The author is Russell Moore. He was in charge of the Southern Baptist Convention’s policy arm in 2016. He was put in place in 2013 as the great liberal hope to transform the Southern Baptists into good BLM fighters for Obama. racial justice and social justice.
I guess we could said then the Southern Baptists aren't so naive about Obama, BLM, racial and social justice.
 
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Not the own he thinks this is.
 
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Yes, he was a refugee. And when the danger was over, he went back home. He didn't stay in his new country leeching welfare or scabbing. Because that's not a refugee, that's an economic migrant.
 
Why is the left constantly whining about refugees, it's not even a thing

It became a thing in the aftermath of World War II due to countries refusing to accept unlimited numbers of european jews before the war. Every western country was punished after the war with a series of refugee and political asylum laws which were immediately abused for vastly different purposes. But if those laws are ever seriously challenged in terms of repeal, the whole nazi thing will start coming up.
 
It became a thing in the aftermath of World War II due to countries refusing to accept unlimited numbers of european jews before the war. Every western country was punished after the war with a series of refugee and political asylum laws which were immediately abused for vastly different purposes. But if those laws are ever seriously challenged in terms of repeal, the whole nazi thing will start coming up.
Except most modern immigrants to the west are soldiers, not refugees
 
The difference was that Jesus and his family were decent people and then moved back to their homeland when shit cooled down unlike a lot of the current refugees who constantly stir up shit in a foreign country.

Also give the retarded of the week award to the author who wrote this garbage.
 
Let's not forget that thanks to the Three Magi, Joseph actually brought wealth and a skilled trade in.
 
Jesus' whole shtick was forgiveness in the face of adversity.
If He'd been born in a government funded hotel and worked at a Bethlehem food-hall, no one would give a shit what He said: It gives a sample size of 1 regarding what God is looking for in a messiah.
It follows that, if you look to the second coming, we should give God something to work with and kick out all the brownoids until they're having babies in cowsheds.

Deus Fucking Vult, niggers.
 
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Well also, jesus is the King of the Earth so...he wasn't a refugee, it's his property
Or at least King of the Jews, which is 80% of the rental & leasehold property.
 
This man is a charlatan.

The Bible did not advocate open borders, and that's why the author of this article has to deceive. Rahab could be compared to a political asylee after she betrayed Jericho to Israelites, Ruth to an economic migrant, and David as somebody in political exile. To equate all three of their circumstances to the flood of brown military-age males invading western countries in all but name is so deceitful, it's satanic.

Supporting national security, cultural integrity, a robust economy, and safer streets can also be Christian imperatives.
 
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