The first Advent in Palestine Reversals, resistance, and the ongoing complexity of hope

Kelley Nikondeha, 1969-

Book - 2022

"When we picture the first Advent, we see Mary and Joseph huddled by a manger. We picture Gabriel, magi, and shepherds tending their flocks. A shining star against a midnight sky. But this harmonized version has lifted the Advent story out of its context--those who experienced the first Advent had to travel through great darkness to reach the hope that shining star announced. Trusted scholar and community organizer Kelley Nikondeha takes us back, to where the landscape of Palestine is once again the geographic, socioeconomic, and political backdrop for the Advent story. Reading the Advent narratives of Luke and Matthew anew, in their original context, changes so much about how we see the true story of resistance, abusive rulers and sys...tems of oppression, and God coming to earth. In Luke, Rome and Caesar loom, and young Mary's strength and resolve shine brightly as we begin to truly understand what it meant for her to live in the tumultuous Galilee region. In Matthew, through Joseph's point of view, we see the brutality of Herod's rule and how the complexities of empire weighed heavily on the Holy Family. We bear witness to the economic hardship of Nazareth, Bethlehem, and the many villages in between--concerns about daily bread, crushing debt, land loss, and dispossession that ring a familiar echo to our modern ears. Throughout her explorations, Nikondeha features the stories of modern-day Palestinians, centering their voices to help us meet an Advent recognizable for today. This thought-provoking examination invites us into a season of discovery, one that is realistic and honest, and that still wonders at the goodness of God's grace"--

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Subjects
Genres
History
Published
Minneapolis, MN : Broadleaf Books [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Kelley Nikondeha, 1969- (author)
Physical Description
ix, 214 pages ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (page 209).
ISBN
9781506474793
  • Beginnings
  • 1. Silence and Suffering
  • The Maccabees
  • Israel | 1 and 2 Maccabees, Lamentations
  • 2. God's Peace Campaign
  • Zechariah
  • Jerusalem | Luke 1:5-25
  • 3. Formed by Galilee
  • Mary
  • Nazareth | Luke 1:26-38
  • 4. Mothers of Advent
  • Mary and Elizabeth
  • Ein Kerem | Luke 1:39-56
  • 5. A Hospitable Birth in a Hard Economy
  • Caesar's Census, Jesus's Birth
  • Bethlehem | Luke 2:1-7
  • 6. Visible and Invisible
  • Shepherds and Angels
  • Bethlehem | Luke 2:8-21
  • 7. Generations
  • Joseph
  • Bethlehem | Matthew 1:18-25
  • 8. Unexpected Hope
  • Herod, Magi, and a Star
  • Bethlehem | Matthew 2:1-12
  • 9. Even after God Arrived
  • The Holy Family, Mother Rachel, and the Slaughter of the Innocents
  • Bethlehem and Egypt | Matthew 2:13-18
  • 10. Homeland, but Not a Home
  • Holy Family, Return from Egypt
  • Nazareth | Matthew 2:19-23
  • Continuations
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • For Further Reading
  • About the Author
  • About the Cover Artist
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this humane treatise, Nikondeha (Defiant), codirector of the community development organization Communities of Hope, considers present-day Palestine in light of the birth narratives of Jesus in the Gospels of Luke and Matthew. "The first advent was about the arrival of God into a world of woe, and every advent since invites us to grapple with what Jesus's coming means to our fraught landscapes now," she contends. The author likens Ahed Tamimi, "a Palestinian icon of resistance" jailed when she was a young girl for slapping an Israeli soldier, to Jesus's mother Mary, who was an adolescent when she "saw soldiers... terrorizing her neighbors in the name of peacekeeping." Nikondeha argues that a close reading of Luke reveals Joseph and Mary were welcomed into a family compound, not turned away from an inn, illustrating that "hospitality is how people honor the humanity of one another on the underside of the empire." The author underscores this by telling of a tea vendor she met while visiting Bethlehem who welcomed her despite the financial strain brought upon him by the West Bank barrier. Nikondeha's exegesis is invigorating and inspired, as is her application of the New Testament's lessons to the present day. The result is an illuminating take on what the Gospels can teach modern Christians about conflict in contemporary Palestine. (Oct.)

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