Christmas may be several weeks away, but there are Christmas-y
things all over. There are pictures of lighted houses in the snow, decorated
trees, reindeer, and some guy dressed in a red suit and hat. There are even
images of fully-staffed manger scenes, even though Mary and Joseph haven't even
gotten to Bethlehem if they've even started on that journey. It's all in the
spirit of getting ready for a special day in the Christian faith, although
snowmen, reindeer, and the red-suited dude aren't part of the true story of
Christmas.
I also see images of Mary and Joseph traveling to Bethlehem to
pay the taxes required of them. Mary is riding on a donkey because she is heavily
pregnant. Joseph holds the donkey's halter to ensure the animal doesn't stumble
or jostle its precious cargo too severely. It's been drawn, painted, sculpted,
and carved probably a hundred thousand ways, but it all brings the same message
– the Savior is coming. It's a message we, along with our ancestors and our
successors, need to be reminded of year after year.
One thing I notice this year is the increasing number of images
showing modern-day Josephs and Marys, some pregnant, some with small children. Several
years ago, one of the first I saw showed a painting of a young pair of homeless
people in front of a bodega in what appeared to be a tough neighborhood. The
female was pregnant, and both were dressed in shirts, tattered jeans, and thin jackets.
In the background, there was a sign saying "Motel," but the boy and
girl appeared too poor to take advantage of it for shelter. It was the first
time I'd really seen or thought of the journey to Bethlehem in terms of immigrants,
homeless people, or even people other than the Middle Eastern Jewish couple I'd
been raised to identify with on the journey to Bethlehem.
Since seeing that image, I've seen other representations
that show people of different races, cultures, and ethnicities. They all
represented poor people, marginalized, forced to travel without the benefit of
modern transportation, prepared accommodations, and anything a credit card
would cover. They were people taken out of the context of their everyday life.
They were put in situations they were almost unequipped to handle. Like Mary
and Joseph, they needed shelter and a safe place for a baby to be born. To the
homeless and the undocumented, it is a lot to ask for.
Our Education
for Ministry (EfM) seminar group is reading a book called Reading the
Bible from the Margins by Miguel A. De La Torre. Its main
point is that the Bible was written for cultures other than the Eurocentric,
Caucasian, middle- and upper-classes. The message of Jesus was given not to
just one group, the Jewish nation, but to Samaritans, Romans, and Greeks, and
spread outward from Jerusalem to the Mediterranean area and beyond. We live in
a much wider world with many different eyes reading the same texts. We have to
learn to read the Bible through different lenses of other cultures and groups
who have different experiences from our own.
It's a shock to get such a message since most
of us have learned to read the Bible one way, from a patriarchal, Caucasian,
Christian point of view. Like the new images of alternative holy families and
journeys to Bethlehem, it is something we must learn to do even to begin to
recreate the Kingdom of God on earth as Jesus told us to do. Granted, even
Jesus tried to see things one way when a Syrophoenician woman approached him to
help her daughter (Mark 7:25-30). Jesus told her that he had come for the Jews,
and her reply was simple. "Sir, even the dogs under the table eat the
children's crumbs (v. 28)." Jesus acknowledged the truth of the statement,
and the woman's daughter was healed. A shift in viewpoint was all it took.
Jesus looked at the situation through new lenses.
Granted, it takes effort to learn to do what
Jesus did, namely, look at things differently. It involves things such as
actually seeing the homeless on the street, not just passing by and ignoring
them as if they did not exist. It is reading the Bible through the eyes of the
impoverished, marginalized, and the stranger, those with little or no power or
voice in a culture that ignores their existence. It requires putting oneself in
a different box than the comfortable one they are used to. It is reading the
hope in the message, not the self-congratulation or reading the words and
ignoring their meaning.
Sometimes we must be pushed to get out of our
comfort zones and try something new or learn something different. We still have
nativity stories happening around us, even if the result isn't the coming of the
Savior of the world. That happened once, and that should be enough. We have the
plan laid out for us if we just open our eyes and recognize it. Maybe this
Advent, we should look for Marys and Josephs, Marias and Josés, Mariias and
Yosips, and all the others who seek shelter, safety, and a place where they can
be part of a community of equals. Jesus would appreciate that. It would be a
birthday gift greater than the gold, frankincense, and myrrh that came at
Epiphany.
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