Jesus Was a Refugee
Jesus the refugee child in the Gospel of Matthew
“Jesus Was a Refugee” was originally published on The Jesus Blog. It is republished here with permission.—Ed.
The unstoppable force of refugees fleeing to Europe has in various places hit the immovable object of an attitude that there is no room at the inn. Spaces are filled. Migrants should be kept out, in order to preserve jobs, health and welfare services. In an environment of austerity, where economic cuts have hit people hard, this cold-heartedness in part derives from a deep sense of insecurity.
At this time it is worth remembering that Jesus of Nazareth is in the Bible presented exactly as one that would be rejected by such European countries: a refugee child.
In the Gospel of Matthew, Jesus’ (adoptive) father, Joseph, and mother, Mary, live in Bethlehem, a town in Judaea near Jerusalem. It is assumed to be their home village. Certain magoi (“wise men”/astrologers) come from “the East” to Herod, the Roman client king of Judaea, looking to honor a new ruler they have determined by a “star,” and Jesus is identified as the one. All this is bad news to Herod, and Herod acts in a pre-emptive strike against the people of Bethlehem and its environs. He kills all boys under two years of age in an atrocity that is traditionally known as “the massacre of the innocents” (Matthew 2.16–18).
But Joseph has been warned beforehand in a dream of Herod’s intentions to kill little Jesus, and the family flees to Egypt. It is not until Herod is dead that Joseph and Mary dare return, and then they avoid Judaea: Joseph “was afraid to go there” (Matthew 2.22) because Herod’s son is in charge. Instead they find a new place of refuge, in Nazareth of Galilee, far from Bethlehem.
Jesus’ earliest years were then, according to the Gospel of Matthew, spent as a refugee in a foreign land, and then as a displaced person in a village a long way from his family’s original home.
Scholars of the historical Jesus can be suspicious of this account, as also with the other nativity account in the Gospel of Luke 1–2. It is clearly constructed with allusions to Jesus as a kind of Moses figure: just as Moses was under threat from an evil Pharaoh who killed children (Exodus 1–2), so was Jesus. But while resonances with the scriptural precedent are intended, there is no real need for the author to invent the idea of Jesus being a refugee child somewhere in Egypt to have him being Moses-like. There is a quote, “Out of Egypt I called my son” (Hosea 11.1), in Matthew 2.15, but the “son” concerned is historical Israel, not Moses and not the Messiah, and it sits uncomfortably with the story. The author of Matthew did not need to build a myth out of such a text.
It seems not then unlikely to me that Jesus’ family, with a lineage traced to the great king David (Matthew 1; Luke 3.23–38; Romans 1.3; 15.12), opted to flee from Bethlehem, long-standing residence of the kingly line and their original home. In many traditional societies, such locations of clans are maintained, even with social disruptions. Archaeology has shown how Herod built a palace complex at Herodium, including his future mausoleum, nicely overlooking the town of Bethlehem. It was as if Herod was breathing down Bethlehem’s neck.
The first-century Jewish historian Josephus portrays Herod as paranoid about any possible threat to his rule. He killed his own sons and had few qualms about killing anyone else’s. As Augustus quipped, “I would rather be Herod’s pig than his son” (Macrobius, Saturnalia 2:4; since pigs are not butchered by Jews).
We know also that Jews fled from troubles in Judaea of many kinds in the third–first centuries B.C.E., and that Egypt was one of the places they went to as refugees. Josephus comments on the problematic revolutionaries (and their children) that fled there after the First Jewish Revolt (66–70 C.E.; Jewish War 7: 407–419), but they were following a well-worn path.
Many epitaphs and inscriptions, as well as historical sources, testify to a thriving Jewish expatriate community in Egypt made up of earlier refugees that could be joined by others. However, just like today, new refugees were not welcome. A letter of the emperor Claudius, written in 41 C.E., states that Jews in Alexandria lived in “a city not their own” in which they were “not to bring in or invite Jews who sail down to Alexandria from Syria[-Palaestina]” (P. London 1912; CPJ I:151).
Visit the historical Jesus study page in Bible History Daily to read more free articles on Jesus.
A remembrance of Jesus’ family in Egypt is preserved in Matariya, in the suburbs of Cairo at Heliopolis, a spot understood to be a stopping place on the holy family’s flight, and it is probably the most important site in the world for anyone wishing to contemplate Joseph, Mary and Jesus as refugees.
For new refugees, as anywhere, life would have been very hard. The first-century Jewish philosopher Philo of Alexandria tells us of the consequences of poverty, which could result in enslavement (Special Laws 2.82). Presumably, Jewish charity and voluntary giving through the synagogue would have helped a struggling refugee family, but they would also have been reliant on the kindness of strangers.
The legacy of being a refugee and a newcomer to a place far from home is something that I think informed Jesus’ teaching. When he set off on his mission, he took up the life of a displaced person with “nowhere to lay his head” (Matthew 8.20; Luke 9.58). He asked those who acted for him to go out without a bag or a change of clothing, essentially to walk along the road like destitute refugees who had suddenly fled, relying on the generosity and hospitality of ordinary people whose villages they entered (Mark 6.8–11; Matthew 10.9–11; Luke 9.3). It was the villagers’ welcome or not to such poor wanderers that showed what side they were on: “And if any place will not receive you and refuse to hear you, shake off the dust on your feet when you leave, for a testimony to them” (Mark 6.11).
“Jesus Was a Refugee” by Joan E. Taylor was first republished in Bible History Daily on May 12, 2016.
Joan E. Taylor is Professor of Christian Origins and Second Temple Judaism at King’s College London. Her research interests include the New Testament and other early Christian texts; the historical figures of Jesus of Nazareth, John the Baptist, Mary Magdalene and other New Testament persons; Second Temple Judaism; and women and gender within early Judaism and Christianity. Dr. Taylor has received various awards and fellowships, including the Irene Levi-Sala Award in Israel’s archaeology for her book Christians and the Holy Places (Oxford: Clarendon, 1993, rev. 2003).
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Mary and Joseph didn’t live in Bethlehem. They travelled there for a census.
The article did not , even slightly enumerate any reason as to why The Baby Jesus could not have left Judea to Egypt.No contemporary mention of journeys to Egypt and why it would have been possible or impossible for the holy family to travel to Egypt.
The family did go to Egypt.
The author of the article is incorrect in saying that the prophecy in Hosea refers only to Israel and not to Jesus also. It is a dual prophecy.
The article did not , even slightly enumerate any reason as to why The Baby Jesus could not have left Judea to Egypt.No contemporary mention of journeys to Egypt and why it would have been possible or impossible for the holy family to travel to Egypt.
The family was told by God in a dream to go to Egypt temporarily for safety. They were not planning on living there permanently, nor did God want them to.
They were not refuges, and attempting to use the story of the Savior as an example as to why we should allow everybody who wants to come to our country for any reason, is disingenuous.
Christians fleeing persecution should be allowed in. Extreme vetting on every person wanting to come here is an absolute must. But welcoming everybody that shows up at the door without a good reason to come here, and without vetting, and without the desire to truly make this their home and make it better by their presence, and putting them on the public dole for the rest of their lives.. is insanity.
Fleeing persecution from the church of our lord ..his own who esteemed him not .
Today jesus would still be rejected by the church especially today.
The family was told by God in a dream to go to Egypt temporarily for safety. They were not planning on living there permanently, nor did God want them to.
They were not refuges, and attempting to use the story of the Savior as an example as to why we should allow everybody who wants to come to our country for any reason, is disingenuous.
Christians fleeing persecution should be allowed in. Extreme vetting on every person wanting to come here is an absolute must. But welcoming everybody that shows up at the door without a good reason to come here, and without vetting, and without the desire to truly make this their home and make it better by their presence, and putting them on the public dole for the rest of their lives.. is insanity.
You may hate it but …you will never take the bleeding heart from jesus . Jesus was not accepted by his own he was rejected by the church and today he would still be rejected by his own
You may hate it but …you will never take the bleeding heart from jesus . Jesus was not accepted by his own he was rejected by the church and today he would still be rejected by his own
What side would jesus be on ..is the side of those who have no place ..
What side would jesus be on ..is the side of those who have no place ..
Yes and No. Remember that both Judea and Egypt were provinces (states) of the Roman Empire. Joseph, Mary, and baby Joshua (in Greek: Jesus) were POLITICAL refugees fleeing the government of the Province of Judea to the Province of Aegyptus. This is no different than those leaving California for Arizona. However, they were not ECONOMIC refugees coming from OUTSIDE the Roman Empire like those coming from Mexico and the rest of Central America to these United States.