Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Missing: Baby Jesus. Last seen on a pile of rubble

Pastor tries to stay upbeat after Nativity statue is stolen from Los Feliz church.

- By Noah Goldberg

The Rev. Keith Mozingo is struggling to keep up his yuletide spirits after the baby Jesus that topped his politicall­y charged Nativity scene in Los Feliz was stolen.

Mozingo, who preaches at Founders Metropolit­an Community Church on Prospect Avenue, had set up the display featuring statues of baby Jesus, Mary and Joseph perched atop a pile of rubble. Bearing a sign that read “Palestine Israel Ukraine Sudan,” the scene was designed to remind parishione­rs and passersby of the wars going on in the world.

But a few days ago, Mozingo realized his Jesus had been pilfered.

“Y’all pray... Jesus got kidnapped,” Mozingo posted on Facebook, Eastsider L.A. first reported.

Though the prayers have not yet been answered with a returned baby Jesus, even Mozingo recognized the humor in the situation.

Afteraneig­hborreport­ed that the baby statue had been seen near the church, the pastor went door to door to tell neighbors that Jesus was still missing.

“My first reaction was, he wasn’t even out there 24 hours before he was taken. They had to climb in the rubble to get him and there was rubble on top of him. … I was really aggravated,” Mozingo said in an interview.

The motive behind the theft is not clear, but Mozingo is known for using Nativity scenes to make pointed comments about

current affairs.

In 2019, he placed the Holy Family in cages, portraying Jesus, Mary and Joseph as detained immigrants

to protest treatment of migrants at the southern border.

“People say, ‘You’re just making a political statement, keep politics out of church,’ ” Mozingo said. “But this is not a political statement. It’s a humanitari­an voice.”

Another year, Mozingo said, Jesus was represente­d by a 2-liter Coke bottle wrapped in swaddling clothes, while Mary was a drag queen and Joseph was a trans man.

Mozingo, while waiting for the return of the baby, ordered a new Jesus on EBay.

And thankfully, it arrived before Christmas. But to avoid it being stolen a second time, Mozingo plans to secure Jesus to the rubble.

“I will chain the new Jesus down,” he said. “There is humor in it.”

 ?? A PEDESTRIAN Photograph­s by Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? walks past a Nativity scene from which a baby Jesus figure was stolen outside Founders Metropolit­an Community Church in Los Feliz. The display reminded passersby about wars around the globe.
A PEDESTRIAN Photograph­s by Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times walks past a Nativity scene from which a baby Jesus figure was stolen outside Founders Metropolit­an Community Church in Los Feliz. The display reminded passersby about wars around the globe.
 ?? ?? TIM CONNOLLY observes the display. The Rev. Keith Mozingo is known for using Nativity scenes to make pointed comments about current affairs.
TIM CONNOLLY observes the display. The Rev. Keith Mozingo is known for using Nativity scenes to make pointed comments about current affairs.
 ?? ?? “THIS IS NOT a political statement,” Mozingo said about the display. “It’s a humanitari­an voice.”
“THIS IS NOT a political statement,” Mozingo said about the display. “It’s a humanitari­an voice.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States