American media seems to want this to become axiomatic: No matter how much you mistrust the media, it’s not enough. Consider this the Christmas Edition of a series of ongoing episodes that speak clearly about manipulation and outright ignorance propagated on-air in pursuit of a favored narrative — in this case, that Christianity originated with the Palestinians.
What? You may wonder how anyone came up with that narrative, but CNN featured it on Christmas morning. Our tireless Twitchy colleagues featured it yesterday, but it’s worth watching for either a laugh or a cry today:
“The story of Christmas is about a Palestinian Jew born into an occupied country, having to flee as refugees into Egypt.” – Father Edward Beck @FrEdwardBeck on @CNN a few minutes ago. @NY_Arch @CardinalDolan pic.twitter.com/EFVsU3i1p4
— Avi Kaner ابراهيم אבי (@AviKaner) December 25, 2023
BECK: I don’t think, Poppy, we get an answer for the why. But I think the message of Christmas is that God enters into it with us, and we’re not alone in it. What I’m so struck by is that the story of Christmas is about a Palestinian Jew. Now, how often do you find those words put together. A Palestinian Jew born into a time when his country was occupied, right? They can’t find a place for her to even give birth. His mother, they’re homeless. They eventually have to flee as refugees, into Egypt, no less. I mean, you can’t make up the parallels to our current world situation right now.
Ahem. That is most certainly not “the story of Christmas,” and apparently one can “make up the parallels to our current world situation.” Fr. Edward Beck certainly give it his best try, anyway.
However, this is utter nonsense, not least because ‘Palestine’ did not exist at that time. At all. One would think that a Catholic priest would know the history of the region better than that. That name didn’t even come into being until about a century after the death of Christ, when the Romans put down the last of the Judean rebellions and drove many of the Hebrews from the region. That took place in 132 AD (or Common Era, if you prefer), 99 years after the Crucifixion. At that time, the Romans renamed Judea as Syria Palestina after combining it with Galilee, a name retained until the empire began its long collapse and withdrew from the region in 390 AD.
But even after the Romans renamed the region Syria Palestina, Jews maintained a significant population within it, although many more dispersed to other parts of the region. Christians emerged as a dominant population initially, first after the acceptance and endorsement of the Romans under Constantine, and later after the Roman retreat in 390. The area became more Christianized over the next couple of centuries through evangelization and other cultural phenomena rather than conquest, but Jews remained in the former Judea, Samaria, and Galilee. The Arabs, fueled by Islam, didn’t come in significant numbers for another couple of centuries after that — and even then, they didn’t identify themselves as “Palestinians” under the Roman rubric, which would have been unthinkable to them at the time.
Furthermore, while Bethlehem is today in the West Bank where ‘Palestinians’ want a state, that’s not where Mary or Joseph originated or lived before Jesus’ birth. They came from Nazareth, which not only wasn’t part of a mythical Palestine at that time, it’s not even part of the proposed Palestine today. Nazareth is within Israel proper and will remain so, regardless of any “two-state” settlement. Therefore, even if one accepts a backward projection of a modern claim to a period where the claimants’ ancestors wouldn’t control for another six or seven centuries, it’s very clear that Jesus would not have been a “Palestinian” at all, especially as the term is defined now. He was a Nazarene, a Judean, a Hebrew, and an Israeli in modern terms, and so were Mary and Joseph. And while Jesus and the Holy Family did flee Bethlehem as refugees into Egypt, they returned to Nazareth rather than Bethlehem after the death of Herod … which is again part of Israel, not part of a proposed “Palestine.”
None of this “parallels” our current world situation. Jesus was born under an occupation, but that’s because the Romans had occupied the land of the Jews. Today, the Jews have control of their own historic lands, having literally bought it from the peoples that had colonized it in the succeeding centuries, especially the Arabs, and then defended it in several wars in which Arabs invaded Israel in attempts to conquer and destroy it. Mizrahi Jews — natives of the region — comprise a majority of its population, thanks in large part to the ethnic cleansing of Arab and Persian nations in the first half of the 20th century and immediate post-independence period in the second half.
This argument is even more foolish than the “Jesus was an illegal immigrant” argument, and only slightly less silly than a claim by CNN’s Christopher Lamb (also flagged by Twitchy) that Jesus would have been born “in Gaza under rubble” today. Bethlehem was the city of David, the place where the prophets foretold that the Messiah would be born — and Bethlehem is nearly a hundred miles from the Gaza border. (Lamb had the good sense to delete his tweet after getting roundly criticized for it.)
The real message of Christmas has nothing do with any of these political questions. It has nothing to do with national or international relations. The real message of Christmas has to do with Christ bridging the gulf between the Lord and fallen humanity, and the forgiveness of sins and extension of the grace necessary for each of us to live in God’s eternal love. Anyone who claims otherwise is selling something … and these days, that’s usually a progressive media narrative meant to distract from reality.
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