The Boston Archdiocese has condemned a Church’s controversial nativity display featuring an “ICE was here” sign in a Christmas manger scene that had Jesus, Mary and Joseph missing.
The anti-ICE nativity scene was placed outside the St. Susanna Catholic church in Dedham, Mass., a suburb outside Boston.
The display also had a sign with the contact number for a group that monitors immigration operations.

The Archdiocese of Boston blasted the display as “divisive political messaging” and called for it to be removed, saying it violated Catholic doctrine.
“The display should be removed, and the manger restored to its proper sacred purpose,” the Archdiocese said in a statement.
“The people of God have the right to expect that, when they come to church, they will encounter genuine opportunities for prayer and Catholic worship — not divisive political messaging, the Church’s norms prohibit the use of sacred objects for any purpose other than the devotion of God’s people,” the spokesman said.
Acting ICE director Todd Lyons slammed Josoma as an “activist reverend,” and said it could lead to assaults on ICE officers.
“The actions of the activist reverend, Stephen Josoma, are absolutely abhorrent and add to a dangerous narrative responsible for a more than 1,150% increase in assaults on ICE officers,” Lyons told Fox News Digital.
There have been over 250 attacks on ICE officers this year, along with an increase in doxxing, stalking and death threats.
Father Stephen Josoma, the pastor at St. Susanna’s, told Fox News Digital that the purpose of the nativity scene is to “try to see what would it be like if Christ was born into the context of the world today.”

Josoma defended the display as “religious art” and said it was intended to provoke “emotions in people.”
“It’s supposed to affect people deeply, it’s supposed to move people, it’s supposed to change people, so, if this evokes a strong reaction, it’s maybe good to take a look at that,” Josoma said.
This is not the first controversial nativity scene the pastor has erected in front of his church. In 2018, he placed Baby Jesus in a cage away from his parents to protest Trump’s immigration policies.
More than 5,400 children were separated from their parents at the U.S.-Mexico border during Trump’s first term.
The pastor has also erected nativity scenes that touched on gun control and climate change in years past.
“[Josoma] has become infamous for using his pulpit to advance his activist agenda and has now caught the attention of the Archdiocese of Boston, which has publicly condemned his most recent political stunt… I applaud the Catholic Church and the Archdiocese for taking a stand against such a dangerous and extremist narrative,” Lyons said.
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