I have been enjoying the Bible Search on-line tool  from the American Bible Society, which allows me to search for a word  in nine versions at once, then expand particular verses so that I can  see what other translations do with it.
I recently  searched for the word, alien, this way. I discovered that that  word seems to be more common in the NIV than in other versions, which  may use stranger, sojourner, foreigner, and outsider. I take it  that each of these words refers to the same thing, namely a  non-Israelite living in, or passing through, Israel. The Blueletter  Bible indicates that the transliterated Hebrew word is ger.
I  wish to quote some of those passages, using the ESV, which allows such extensive  quotation on-line.
Exodus 22:21  gives the Israelites the approach that they were to use in dealing with  aliens among them: 21 "You  shall not wrong a  sojourner or oppress him, for you were sojourners in  the land of Egypt. . . ." Exodus 23:9,  Deuteronomy  10:19 and Leviticus  19:33-34 say the same thing. The Leviticus passage indicates that  the Jews were to love aliens. I checked, and all nine versions  use love. This is all the more remarkable, considering that, for  the last part of their sojourn, the Israelites were slaves in Egypt. The  command sounds a lot like the Golden Rule.  
Leviticus  17:10-16 demonstrates that there were guidelines for aliens, too.  This passage says that they were, even though non-Jewish, expected to  obey the restrictions on eating blood. There are other passages about  the law and aliens. However, my main emphasis is on how the Israelites  were to be generous to them.
The Jews were commanded to  harvest their crops in such a manner that some would be left for the  poor and aliens to pick up, in Leviticus  19:9-10. This is how Ruth, a non-Jew,  got food for herself and her mother-in-law.
Do these  laws of the ancient Jews have validity for today? Perhaps, perhaps not.  But they indicate that some of us might consider whether our indignation  at illegal aliens has Biblical justification. Perhaps there are implications for Israeli-Palestinian relations.
Thanks  for reading.
 
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