Aliens in the Land (November 8, 2025)
Author: Bobby Valentine | Filed under: Church, Contemporary Ethics, Deuteronomy, Discipleship, MissionThirty years ago, I had moved to Grenada, Mississippi to be closer to Memphis for graduate school. Grenada was a formative period in my life for many reasons (I have mentioned them before). It was in Grenada that one of my fundamental categories for understanding the People of God began to take shape. My understanding of God’s People – what we call “church” at times – is rooted first in the Hebrew Bible and second in the theme of “land” in the Bible.
That year, 1995, I read Walter Brueggemann’s book of that title, “The Land.” Hard to believe that could be 30 years ago. I want to quote a paragraph from page 7. Perhaps until reading this, I had not stopped to understand a fundamental biblical category of what it means to be God’s People and it speaks loudly to us in our American situation.
“They are the people of sojourn. ‘Sojourner’ is a technical word usually described as ‘resident alien.’ It means to be in a place, perhaps for an extended period of time, to live there and take some roots, but always to be an outsider, never belonging, always without rights, title, or voice in decisions that matter. Such a one is on turf, having nothing sure but trusting in words spoken that will lead to a place. The theme of ‘resident alien’ is not remote from contemporary experience. People in our time know what it means to live waiting always for the notice of transfer, or for notice of ‘urban redevelopment,’ or for any of the irresistible and unidentified forces of urban life devoted to displacement.”
That was first written in 1977. I read it almost 20 years later in 1995. And today 30 years later is, to my ears, jolting. This imagery showed up in Kingdom Come; A Gathered People and even in Embracing Creation.
God’s People, the real God’s people, are in a place, take some roots, always an outsider, never belonging, devoid of power. The stories of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob (i.e. ISRAEL!) are images of God’s people themselves.
Even when Israel enters the gift of the Land, they will always be tenants living by grace/hesed. The land is NOT Israel’s “property.” It is not actually MY land. Land granted status in the ancient world, not a bank account. To have Land was to be important, wealthy, powerful. God’s People were and are NONE of those things.
“The land must not be sold permanently, because the land is mine and you reside in my land as foreigners and strangers” (Leviticus 25.23).
Israel lives as ALIENS even within the promised Land. They dwell by grace/hesed in that which is not theirs.
They can use the Land.
They can tend the Land.
They cannot own the Land in the final analysis.
Leviticus 25 and other texts make this clear. The Land is GOD’S. Every year, God’s People come before the Lord and confess “My father was a lost/perishing refugee (אֹבֵ֣ד (‘obed) and you gave ...” (Deuteronomy 26.5-9). To state my “father” was such and such is to confess that that is what I currently AM. Deuteronomy 26 is a confession of identity.
It is not the powerful who will inherit the Land but the poor and the meek (cf. Psalm 37). Throughout the Bible, in the Torah, in the Deuteronomistic histories (Samuel-Kings), in the Prophets, in the Psalms those who are God’s People are defined by the status of Refugee, Alien, Sojourner wherever they find themselves: in Egypt, in Babylon, in the post-Exilic Persian province of Judea. This is just as true in the writings we call the New Testament as the Hebrew Bible (First Peter is essential here). “God has chosen the weak …” (1 Cor 1.27).
We sometimes hear it said before the “collection” on Sunday’s what we have is not really ours. We make this pious statement to encourage generous giving. But sometimes I wonder if we believe those words on Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, etc. Do we believe them when dealing with other “aliens”?
The fundamental disposition of God’s People though is just that – IT AIN’T OURS. We did not earn it. We did not get it. We did not work for it. It isn’t my food. It is not my wine. It is not my land I till. We are graced tenants or we are starving Aramite Refugees. In fact Yahweh tells us to “never forget” it.
The “marks of the church” is not a cappella singing. It is not the easily argued about things I grew up on. The fundamental identity, the mark, of God’s People is that we are Aliens, Refugees, Sojourners … it is only then that we come to realize that every breath we take, every move we make, every second we exist as the Graced People of Yahweh who gives us literally everything.
A Shabbat thought
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