The Baby in the Manger and at the Border: What Paula White Gets Wrong
My pre-school-aged daughter made a compelling observation as she played with our nativity set a few years ago, rehearsing the Christmas story as it appears in her childrenâs storybook Bible. âDad,â she observed, her eyes fixed on the collection of wooden shepherds, animals, âwise men,â and the holy family of Mary, Joseph and Baby Jesus, âWeâre missing a figurine. We donât have the âmean king.ââ
Few peopleâeven those who, like our family, try to keep Jesus at the center of our Christmas celebrationsâspend much time reflecting on the most troubling part of the biblical narrative of Christâs birth. Iâve not yet encountered a crĂšche that included a King Herod figurine. We tend to conclude our Christmas pageants with the three Magi bowing down before Jesus. The curtain comes down, and we all go home to open gifts and enjoy a meal.
But thatâs not the end of the story. According to the Gospel of Matthew, as soon as the Magi leave to return to their country, Joseph is warned in a dream that the tyrannical King Herod would shortly begin a genocide of little boys in Bethlehem. Joseph got up in the middle of the night and escaped to Egypt with Mary and the newborn Jesus, out of Herodâs reach.
While mystical stars, shepherds and angels have little to do with our day-to-day lives, this part of the story is painfully pertinent to our headlines today. Jesus was a child refugee, part of a family that fled a credible fear of persecution by seeking asylum in a foreign land. As children and their parents have arrived at the U.S.-Mexico border in recent months with similar stories, many fleeing gang violence in Central America, how could followers of Jesus not respond with compassion?
According to Paula White, our response should be to double down on tough immigration policies. Why? Because, according to her, Jesusâ situation was fundamentally different than families arriving at the border today.
âHe did live in Egypt⊠but it was not illegal,â said White to CBN.
And then, much to the chagrin of many theologians, she went further: âIf he had broke the law then he would have been sinful and he would not have been our Messiah.”
Itâs a tidy argumentâbut it just doesnât work with the rest of the biblical witness. Various biblical examples of civil disobedience quickly make any such claim untenable. The Hebrew midwives are praised for defying the murderous decree of Pharaoh, who like Herod, ordered that Israelite infants be slaughtered. Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego refuse to worship an idol. The Apostle Paul, whose instruction to âbe subject to the governing authoritiesâ is sometimes cited as a basis for total obedience to civil laws, spent time in jail, having violated unjust laws. The Apostle Peter, when charged to stop preaching the gospel, insisted that âwe must obey God rather than human beingsââan attitude that led to his incarceration and martyrdom.
Most importantly, though, Jesus himself was repeatedly criticized for lawlessness. On one occasion, he healed a man born with a shriveled hand, infuriating the Jewish religious leaders who saw this as defying the Ten Commandments by breaking the Sabbath. It is one of few incidents in the gospels when Jesus is described as becoming angry, distressed by these leadersâ hardheartedness, putting their interpretation of the law ahead of compassion for the human suffering in front of them.
When Jesus later acknowledged that he was king (albeit, of a kingdom ânot of this worldâ), he was challenging Roman law, which acknowledged no ultimate authority but Caesar. Christ was condemned by the state as a criminal and executedâbut this act of love and compassion was certainly not a sin. It was the sacrifice that Christians believe saved us from our sins and what compels us to extend grace to others.
For those who follow Jesus today, we can insist that our government respond to the plight of vulnerable people in ways that both extend compassion and honor the law. And as a matter of fact, a U.S.-ratified treaty does allow those with a credible fear of persecution to request asylum at the border, even if they âenter or are present⊠without authorization, provided they present themselves without delay to the authorities and show good cause for their illegal entry or presence.â
Of course, not all will qualify. Some, even those with heartbreaking stories, may not meet the precise definition of a refugee under U.S. law. But we can still treat all with dignity, not separating families, norâexcept in the rare case that there is a compelling reason to believe they could pose a public safety riskâdetaining them. Churches, non-profit organizations and the extended families of these asylum-seekers are eager to help support them while they wait for their day in court. Whatâs more, such alternatives have been proven effectiveânot to mention significantly more affordableâin ensuring people show up for their hearings as required.
I donât know whether Jesusâ flight to Egypt was lawful or not. But I know that if my daughterâs life was at riskâwhether from a âmean kingâ or MS-13âIâd flee. Her life is far more precious than my respect for man-made laws. And Iâd pray, when I reached the other side of the border, to be met by compassion.
Matthew Soerens serves as the U.S. Director of Church Mobilization for World Relief and is the coauthor of Welcoming the Stranger: Justice, Compassion and Truth in the Immigration Debate (InterVarsity Press, 2018). Follow Matthew on Twitter.