I’m so very grateful that my niece shared a Facebook
post by Fr. James Martin. It is a very
thoughtful piece, that speaks especially to Christians on the issue of
tolerance. It’s a little longer than I
normally post, but worth the read. You
can find Fr. Martin’s Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/FrJamesMartin/
Evening meditation: Your Internally Displaced, Homeless,
Refugee, Poor, Low-Class, Jewish, Palestinian, Uneducated, Possibly Illiterate,
Dark- Skinned Savior
Remember that the person whose birth we celebrate at
Christmas was born to an internally displaced couple, that is, people who were
forced to be on the move within their own country. At the time of the boy's
birth, perhaps for a few days or weeks, Mary and Joseph were also homeless.
With no place to stay, they found shelter in either a stable or a cave. Soon,
they would become full-fledged refugees, that is, people crossing the border of
another country, in this case Egypt, out of fear of, in this case, violence.
Remember that when we're talking about IDs, Mary and Joseph had none. And when
we're talking about borders, Mary and Joseph crossed one. Twice, actually. On
their way into Egypt and then when they returned to Galilee. Overall, they knew
what it was like to be seeking shelter far from home.
The boy was a Jew. As were Mary and Joseph. As was the boy's
entire extended family. As, by the way, were all the apostles. They lived in
what was called Palestine by the Romans, who occupied the territory. So Mary,
Joseph and Jesus all knew political oppression.
They knew poverty, too. Joseph's trade was, most likely in
the eyes of those at the time, seen as "low class." The Greek used by
the Gospels to describe his profession is "tekton," which is more
accurately translated not as carpenter, but craftsman, handyman, or even day
laborer. The occupation probably didn't garner much respect, and was seen as
ranking below the peasantry, since the "tekton" didn't have the
benefit of a plot of land.
The family was from a minuscule town. Nazareth was both poor
and small, with only about 200 to 400 inhabitants in Jesus's time. Jesus's
hometown, in other words, could have likely fit into your local church. The
Apostle Nathanael mocks it when he hears where Jesus is from. "Can
anything good come from Nazareth?," he says. Some scholars believe this was
a saying popular at the time, perhaps a common put down Jesus's place of
origin, and Jesus.
While Jesus may been able to read (many scholars believe
that when he quoted Scripture, he was not reading it, but doing it from
memory--in his oral culture) it is almost certain that neither Mary or Joseph
could. None of the three could be considered "educated." Indeed, most
scholars believe Jesus was probably illiterate.
Jesus also would have looked nothing like what we see on 99%
Christmas cards, or 99% of Christmas creches, or 99% of Christmas movies. Nor
would Mary and Joseph. Nor would Elizabeth, Zechariah, Anna, Simeon, John the
Baptist, or any figures from the stories of his birth.
It's impossible to know exactly what they looked like, but
they were surely much darker skinned than what we see in 99% of portraits. A
few years ago, scientists reconstructed the face of a man from around Jesus's
time, using remains of several people from first-century Palestine (seen here).
Somewhat ridiculously, the reconstruction was touted as the "Face of
Jesus," which is like digging up skulls from a Mount Vernon graveyard from
around the time of George Washington, using them as the basis for
reconstruction, and saying, this is the "Face of George Washington."
But it's not so ridiculous in that the facial reconstruction
reminds us what people of Jesus's time and his family's ethnicity looked like
in general. And, again, it is much closer to the look of people in the modern
Middle Eastern than modern Europe or the United States. He certainly wasn't
white.
So to recap:
Internally displaced.
Homeless for a time.
Full-fledged refugee.
Poor.
Low-class occupation.
Jewish.
Palestinian.
Uneducated.
Possibly illiterate.
Dark skinned.
Homeless for a time.
Full-fledged refugee.
Poor.
Low-class occupation.
Jewish.
Palestinian.
Uneducated.
Possibly illiterate.
Dark skinned.
In other words, a lot of the categories people tend to
demonize today. So when discussions about anyone from any of those categories
come up, and you wonder about the Christian thing to do, remember who Jesus
Christ really was.
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