Inside the Empire: Why the Holy Family Were Never Refugees cover art

Inside the Empire: Why the Holy Family Were Never Refugees

Inside the Empire: Why the Holy Family Were Never Refugees

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Today, I want to talk about a claim that shows up every Christmas season, especially online: the idea that Jesus, Mary, and Joseph were refugees — that they were undocumented migrants escaping a hostile government, and that the Nativity somehow maps onto modern U.S. immigration politics. It’s an idea repeated so often that it feels unquestionable. But once you look at the world they actually lived in, the analogy collapses instantly.

To understand the Flight into Egypt, you have to understand Rome. Not Rome as a distant city, but Rome as a system — the political world the Holy Family lived inside. Rome wasn’t divided into separate nations with visas and passports and immigration systems. It was a unified empire, more like the continental United States than anything else. Judea and Egypt weren’t foreign countries. They were Roman jurisdictions. Moving between them was internal movement, not crossing a border.

That’s the first thing modern people miss. The Holy Family didn’t leave their country. They didn’t enter a foreign state. They didn’t become stateless or undocumented. They were Roman subjects everywhere they went, protected by the same imperial authority that governed the entire region.

Now yes, Rome had borders — real borders, violent borders. When people tried to enter the empire from the outside, Rome enforced those boundaries with an iron fist. Caesar’s armies blocked outsiders, pushed back tribes, and made sure that entry into the empire happened only on Rome’s terms. In that sense, Caesar actually behaved more like a modern head of state than people realize. He controlled who entered the empire. He didn’t control internal movement.

And that’s exactly where the analogy to modern refugee policy breaks. When Joseph took Mary and the infant Jesus to Egypt after receiving the angel’s warning, they didn’t present themselves at a checkpoint. They didn’t apply for refuge. They didn’t cross into a sovereign foreign nation. They simply went from one part of Rome to another part of Rome.

If you want a modern parallel, you don’t look at asylum seekers crossing into the U.S. You look at internal displacement inside the U.S. itself. Think of the Dust Bowl migrants who fled drought and famine by heading west. Think of the Great Migration, when Black Americans fled Jim Crow violence and resettled in northern cities. Think of families uprooted by hurricanes and moving across state lines for safety. These were dramatic, traumatic movements — but they weren’t refugee movements. They were internal migrations.

And that is exactly where the Holy Family fits. Their flight was driven by danger, but it didn’t change their political or legal status. They weren’t outsiders. They weren’t undocumented. They weren’t in violation of any law. They were moving within their own world.

So why do we keep reframing the Nativity as a refugee story? Because it serves a modern narrative. It gives people a moral shorthand. It lets contemporary political debates borrow the emotional power of a sacred story. But the history doesn’t support the analogy, and neither does the geography.

This isn’t about rejecting compassion or undermining anyone’s convictions. It’s about accuracy. The Holy Family’s flight isn’t an ancient version of modern asylum. It’s an internal relocation under threat, inside the same empire.

As we hear the familiar Christmas commentary this year, we can appreciate the moral impulse behind the analogy — but we should also acknowledge the reality. Jesus, Mary, and Joseph were not refugees. They were Roman subjects reacting to a local threat, not crossing a foreign border into a foreign country. Their story is dramatic, moving, and sacred — but it isn’t a blueprint for modern immigration policy.

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