As we remember the fourth and final Sunday of Advent and look towards its culminating event, Christmas, I think frequently about its origins. As the gospel accounts make clear, Jesus was born in Bethlehem (literally, "house of bread"), a town that we might today call a hole in the wall, a little village largely forgotten by the rest of the world.
Few people cared what happened in Bethlehem.
But this is precisely the point. Though Jesus was an alien and refugee, born in obscurity and forgotten and overlooked by the rest of the world, he was the one in whom God chose to make himself known. In Jesus, the poor and forgotten refugee, resided the greatest hope of all time. It's the ultimate irony, the greatest surprise. It's God's way of demonstrating to us that just when we think we have everything figured out, be it our views about immigration, aliens, refugees, or anything else, we really do not.
But isn't that what God is all about?
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