An Advent wreath, traditionally lit in the four weeks leading up to Christmas.
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Sean Gallup/Getty Images
LOS ANGELES — As the season of Advent begins, many Christians turn toward quiet reflection and preparation for Christmas. But in several Southern California congregations with large immigrant communities, that sacred anticipation is shadowed by a looming sense of fear.
For worshippers like Mike, an Iranian asylum-seeker who attends a West Los Angeles church, the weeks leading up to Christmas feel less like a spiritual refuge and more like a time of apprehension. He asked that only the anglicized version of his Farsi name be used because he fears speaking publicly could affect his immigration case. He fled Iran after converting to Christianity.
“I kept this secret, my faith as a secret, for like 12 years,” he said.
Mike arrived in Los Angeles 18 months ago and says he has tried to build a life rooted in community and respect for his new home. But a series of immigration enforcement actions in the region — including the June arrests of two men outside a nearby church with a large Iranian membership — has shaken him.
“Even church is not safe because it’s a public place,” he said. “They can get there and catch you.”
The Department of Homeland Security says enforcement actions at churches require secondary approval and are expected to be rare. Still, the concern is real inside Mike’s congregation, where church leaders asked that the name of the church not be published.
A significant number of Iranian parishioners worship there, and the pastor often invites them to pray in Farsi during services. Lately, fewer take her up on the offer.
“It’s part of the heartbreak of these days,” the pastor said. “They feel like they have to be apprehensive about it — not even wanting to speak in their own language here.”
She said the fear is especially painful during Advent, a season she describes as a time to prepare to “give thanks for this God we have who wants to be with us.”
Room at the inn, despite fears
East of Los Angeles, at Baldwin Park United Methodist Church, Pastor Toña Rios unzips a red tent pitched in the middle of the sanctuary. For years, the church took in newly arrived immigrants, providing a place to sleep while they looked for work and housing.
The tent remains as a reminder of that welcome — and of the fears many congregants now carry. Rios estimates that about 80% of her church members are immigrants and says many don’t have legal status.
“A lot of them say, ‘Don’t open the door. Just close the door,'” she said.
Rios urges a different posture, especially during Advent. She uses the tent to help her congregation imagine being the ones who offer shelter, not shut others out.
“It is very hard,” she said. “But Jesus is going to be born in our heart. That’s why we need to be prepared.”
For longtime church member Royi Lopez, the sense of vulnerability goes beyond immigration status. Lopez is a U.S. citizen but says she often feels targeted because she is Latina. Many of her relatives are undocumented, and she worries constantly about them.
“What if on my way to church, they catch us?” she said. “On a daily basis, we’re scared of going to the school, to work, to church, to even the grocery store.”
Lopez says that during Advent, these fears remind her of the Christmas story itself — of Mary and Joseph searching for somewhere to stay, turned away again and again until somebody finally took them in.
“Even though so many doors were closed, somebody opened a door,” she said.
That theme of welcome runs through the hymn chosen for every Sunday of Advent at Baldwin Park United Methodist Church, “All Earth is Hopeful.” Its lyrics speak of a world longing for liberation, where people labor to “see how God’s truth and justice set everybody free.”
