by Emily
Brewer
In
October, I gathered at the border fence in Nogales with a thousand
others--Christians, Jews, Muslims, Unitarians, Native Americans, European
Americans, Latin Americans, documented and undocumented. On both sides of that
rust-colored wall, we sang and prayed and shouted: “Tear it down!” We shouted
and sang and protested because we are told time and time again that this wall,
these policies of exclusion, this violence that has marked the US southern
border will make us safe. It is not true.
We
know what is true: that this wall is an “open wound” in the desert, a visible
scar that continues to hurt the earth and her people. What is true is that the
land and the communities along the border wall, while wounded, continue to
resist these policies of exclusion by surviving. What is true is that, were we
awaiting the birth of the Christ child in our context today, in 2016, we would
be waiting along that wall for a child born to undocumented parents, a child
born in the desert to parents who were fleeing violence
in their home, a child born into a world still desperate for renewal.
We also know that this is true: climate
change forces more and more people to migrate to new lands in search of food
and other resources. What is true is that if we do not change our hearts and
minds and policies toward climate change and toward immigrants, renewal cannot
come and we will miss the birth of the one whom we await, the one who brings
renewal.
Prayer:
As we await
the Christ child on this holy night, we are not silent. We sing and pray and
shout in joyous expectation with the earth and all her creatures of the one who
will come--the undocumented, Brown, Jewish baby—
who will bring down the mighty from
their seats of power,
who will fill the hungry with good
things,
who will tear down all walls of
division and hatred,
who will renew the earth and her
people from the wounds we have inflicted if we will let him, if we will help
him.
O
come, Emmanuel.
Emily
Brewer is the director of the Presbyterian
Peace Fellowship. She is a graduate of Union Theological Seminary in New
York (2015) and Maryville College (2009). She lives in Brooklyn, NY but will
always consider East Tennessee home.
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