January 5, 2025 ~ Epiphany
Rev. Beckie Sweet
Five months ago, when I started the planning for today’s Epiphany worship service, I selected the title, “Follow that Star!” based on my memory of police dramas from my childhood. You see, in many of those dramas, when trying to catch a suspected criminal, the police heroes would shout, “Follow that Car!” In “The Untouchables,” Elliot Ness, played by Robert Stack, would use that phrase to cue a police chase. In “Dragnet” it was Sergeant Joe Friday, played by Harry Morgan. Since that stage in my life, I have imagined the Wise Ones hopping onto their camels and shouting, “Follow that Star!”
But since engaging in that worship planning so many months ago, the world has changed. Our nation has changed. Our community has changed. Our hopes and fears have changed. Interestingly, I uncovered a brief article written in 2004 in reference to today’s gospel text which is titled, “Called to Loving Disobedience.” No credit is given to an author. The article begins,
One thing that stands out in this story is the disobedience of the magi. We are told very little about these figures except that in their attempt to find the child born, “King of the Jews,” they receive an audience with the great King Herod. In fact, it is Herod who points their search in the right direction, with instructions to come back with details. The orders are very clear. Yet, after their experience with the Christ, Matthew tells us that they went “home by another road,” blatantly disregarding the orders of the king. Their journey to the messiah led them to loving disobedience of even the most powerful one.
This story traditionally marks the season of Epiphany, the manifestation of Christ to the Wise Ones. Yet, it urges us to probe deeper into the epiphanies in our own lives, and discern, like the magi, what roads God calls us to. It asks what powers we must say NO to because of Christ’s manifestation to us: Consumerism? War? Dissensions that fuel only anger and hatred? These things call to us today just as Herod called to the Wise Ones long ago. Yet, as Christ becomes manifest to his modern seekers, we, too, are asked to choose different roads: selflessness, peace, and love. The story of the magi is not just a story of long ago; it is a story of today.
And remembering Matthew’s sequence of events, just after today’s text we read that Joseph was also warned in a dream to take Mary and the Child and flee to Egypt. They became refugees because Herod, in a fit of violent insecurity, was about to order the death of all infants in an effort to do away with the newborn “King of the Jews!”
This week, our United Methodist Council of Bishops published a Pastoral Letter Addressing the Plight of Migrants, Immigrants, and Refugees in the US, which I was asked to share with you today. It is written by Bishop Tracy Smith Malone, the president of the Council of Bishops.
Pastoral Letter Addressing the Plight of Migrants,
Immigrants and Refugees in the US
Epiphany 2025
Jesus said, “When you welcome the stranger, you welcome me….” Matthew 25:35
At no time has the church in the US had a greater opportunity to welcome Jesus among us as he
journeys with migrants, immigrants, and refugees than today. We your bishops are clear that the
situation these beloved of God face as the Trump Administration comes to power threatens their
humanity, livelihood, and basic human rights.
For decades, a broken immigration system in the U.S. has kept migrants, immigrants and
refugees in this country living in the shadows of society in a state of perpetual fear. They have
come to the U.S. under forced circumstances fleeing extreme poverty, hunger, political and
religious persecution, war, cartel and gang violence, and the severe impact of climate change.
Some are actively recruited by large U.S. companies who need their labor. Yet migrants,
immigrants and refugees help to sustain the U.S. economy, serve our families caring for our
children and our elderly, cleaning our homes, landscaping our properties, building our roads and the houses we live in, and cultivating and picking the crops that feed our families. They are our neighbors, our friends, and members and pastors of our churches.
Deplorably, racist, xenophobic, nationalistic, and anti-migrant hate speech has become standard
rhetoric for many US politicians, including President-elect Donald Trump. He has stated that
under his administration he will order the mass deportation of the 11 million undocumented
migrants who live and work in the U.S. He has threatened to use military and law enforcement
at all levels for this mass deportation. If allowed, this mass deportation of migrants will cause
further racial profiling, the separation of families, the undermining of communities and
congregations, the weakening of the economy of this country and its democratic systems of law
and justice. President-elect Trump has also threatened to end birth-right citizenship, dismantle
Refugee resettlement in this country and further strip away the possibility of the U.S. welcoming
Asylum Seekers onto this land.
We are living in a dark time that more than ever calls us to be the light of Christ, people of faith
who take our baptismal vow to “resist evil in all its forms,” with utmost seriousness.
As United Methodists we have firmly declared through our Social Principles that we are called
to actively welcome the migrant, immigrant, and refugee among us.
- Affirming the dignity, worth and rights of migrants, immigrants and refugees.
- Recognizing that displaced people are particularly vulnerable as their in-between status
often provides them with few protections and benefits, leaving them open to exploitation,
violence and abuse.
- Urging one another to welcome migrants, refugees, and immigrants into our
congregations, providing concrete support, to them including help with navigating restrictive and often lengthy immigration policies, and assistance with securing food,
housing, education, employment and other kinds of support.
- Opposing all laws and policies that attempt to criminalize, dehumanize or punish
displaced individuals and families based on their status as migrants, immigrants or
refugees.
- Decrying attempts to detain displaced people and hold them in inhumane and unsanitary
conditions.
- Challenging policies that call for the separation of families, especially parents and minor
children.
- Opposing the existence of for-profit detention centers that are used for the purpose of
detaining migrants, immigrants, and refugees including minor children.
(Social Principles of The United Methodist Church, The Political Community Basic Rights and
Freedoms, Section G. Migrants, Immigrants and Refugees)
We your bishops call upon the people of The United Methodist Church to pray for migrants,
immigrants, and refugees among us and to welcome them with the fullness of Christian love,
remembering that as we welcome these, our brothers, and sisters, we welcome Jesus our Lord.
Bishop Tracy Smith Malone
President – Council of Bishops of The United Methodist Church
May we be instruments of Christ’s love and compassion as this year continues. Amen.