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Liberal Christians Call for End to Immigration Hate Speech

Randy Hall

Staff Writer/Editor

(CNSNews.com) - As Thanksgiving approaches, a coalition of religious activists is asking Christians and "people of good will" in America to reject hate speech aimed at immigrants and to remember the needs of "the least of these" in our nation, many of whom are undocumented immigrants.

"We call on people of faith to stand with immigrants as fellow human beings deserving of God's love," said James Winkler, general secretary of the United Methodist Church, in a news release issued by the group Christians for Comprehensive Immigration Reform (CCIR).

Faith leaders should "advocate for effective immigration policies consistent with our history as a nation that respects the rule of law but welcomes immigrants who come in search of a better life," Winkler added.

"It is time for reasonable Americans and the faith community to rise up and clearly state that while we all desire to protect our borders and apply the rule of law, we will not embrace the nativist and discriminatory rhetoric articulated under the guise of border protection," said Rev. Samuel Rodriguez, president of the National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference.

"We can stop illegal immigration, protect our borders, protect our values and simultaneously protect the American dream only if we work within the framework of Judeo-Christian heritage," Rodriguez said.

The CCIR also released a report, "A House Divided: Why Americans of Faith Are Concerned About Undocumented Immigrants," which the news release said "documents the increasing prevalence of the un-Christian treatment of immigrants."

"Our values are being undermined and our communities divided in this increasingly bitter debate," the report states. "Like it or not, a battle for the soul of America has begun over the place of undocumented immigrants in our society, and people of good will cannot wish it away just because it is ugly or controversial."

The CCIR noted that their report "focuses on three areas of humanitarian and moral concern." The first of these is that "the tone of the national debate over immigration is being set by organizations deeply rooted in hate."

"Too many people, from the media to community leaders, have stood aside as pro-eugenics and other hateful sources have updated the tactics of Jim Crow for the more sophisticated media environment of the 21st century," the report reads.

"The result is a movement able to flood Congress with phone calls and a notable growth in hate groups nationally that is attributable to anti-immigrant sentiment," the document notes.

Second, "this hateful debate is not only playing out in Washington D.C., but at the state and local levels, communities are being ripped apart." Bloggers discuss "ridiculous accusations linking immigrants to scourges from leprosy to pedophilia, and counties pass stringently anti-immigrant ordinances."

Finally, as a result of this controversy, "we are witnessing the endangerment of Christian and American values of compassion and respect for the human dignity of every person as immigrant families are ripped apart and individual, undocumented immigrants are treated as less than human."

However, "the religious community is uniquely positioned to serve as a bridge across our differences on immigration and a source of healing and reconciliation," the group noted. "We as Christians are pledging to do more to unite our communities and restore the fabric of our society that this growing hate threatens to tear apart."

'Christian utopianism'

As Cybercast News Service previously reported, CCIR was formed last May to promote a "compassionate" approach to immigration policies.

But on Thursday, Roy Beck, founder and president of the anti-illegal immigration group NumbersUSA, said that he considers CCIR's proposals an example of "Christian utopianism."

"They seem to be saying that immigration laws are unchristian," Beck told Cybercast News Service. "It's unchristian to draw the line, to set limits, to say that some people can come in and some can't. We should have a world without borders."

"There's no question that the gospel is pretty radical, but that's just not the way the world works," he said. "Whenever we've had peaks of high immigration, the most vulnerable in our society have been the ones to suffer."

Jim Edwards, an adjunct fellow with the Hudson Institute, agreed, calling any comparison of illegal immigration with Jim Crow and the civil rights movement "strained" and "out of sync with American history."

"A more appropriate comparison would be between illegal immigration and an invasion," Edwards told Cybercast News Service.

Regarding CCIR, he said that "these people are advocates for mass amnesty and open borders, and they're off-base biblically if they're making any kind of claim that those should be the 'Christian' response to illegal immigration."

Instead, they should recall Isaiah's words: "Woe to those who call evil good and good evil," he said.

"The 'least of these among us' in the United States are the poorest Americans, the high school dropouts, those who are disabled, veterans, legal immigrants and our own high school and college kids who can't find summer jobs because they're being displaced by the foreigners coming into our country," he noted.

That group also includes "our own people who are being displaced from lower-skill jobs by immigrants - especially illegals - who are driving down our wages," Edwards said.

In the end, "what these open border people are advocating is the demise of the American dream for Americans," he added.

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Most Recent User Comments
eccm
11/27/2007 8:55 AM
I think Jim Edwards should heed his own words quoting Isaiah: "Woe to those who call evil good and good evil." He seems to be doing just that. Throughout the Old Testament God clearly tells His people to care for the foreigners in their midst. In the New Testament, Christ Jesus tells us to not only love our neighbors (which He refers to as the second greatest commandment), but to love our enemies as well (illegal or not). And taking care of the "least of these" applies to illegal immigrants when we as a country go out of our way to make it impossible for anyone but the rich to become citizens by charging hundreds of thousands of dollars for citizenship. I know none of my Irish, German or English ancestors could have afforded that. Or does that not matter because they were caucasian? I wholeheartedly agree that we need to strengthen our borders to prevent true terrorist from coming into our country, but doing so should not require decent people to suffer as well.
mdillon
11/16/2007 3:11 PM
unless you subscribe to the Latino-style diversity of HISPANIC-THIS, LATINO-THAT, CHICANO-THE-OTHER and MEXICAN-EVERYTHING

4) If indeed the pre-1965 country quota immigration system was wrong because it discriminated in favor of "white" Europeans, then why is it not now wrong to permit the current DE FACTO DISCRIMINATION THAT FAVORS LATINOS/MEXICANS?

5) where are the do-good christians standing up for OTHER races and ethnic groups? where are JJackson and ASharpton demanding FAIR immigration policies that provide all races and ethnic groups a chance at the AMERICAN DREAM?.... where are they?

6) What happened to JJackson who went to New Orleans last year to complain about BUSH's favoritism toward illegals as workers to rebuild the mostly black city of New Orleans? After arrival in NO, he only spoke about housing and other issues..... was he bought off by the (christian) Latino Lobby? spearheaded by the RACIST La Raza organization?


PLEASE SPARE ME THE CHRISTIAN TALK....
mdillon
11/16/2007 3:06 PM
1) it's interesting that the word "liberal" is part of the title, not just any Christian, but "Liberal" christian.... what's wrong with conservative christians who wish to respect the rule of law and especially the sovereign right of all Americans to decide who and how many of what kind of people will be favored to join our club?

2) why do you seem to imply that christians have an obligation to accept any and all who wish to come to the US, even for a noble reason? There are after all at least 3 billion more poor out there who would love to have the jobs that Mexicans leave behind in Mexico....

3) Mexicans are not in dire need of jobs, just better jobs, and they don't mind disrupting American society to achieve THEIR objectives.... with the help of two corrupt governments: the Mexican and US governments

4) What happened to DIVERSITY in this movement? when more than 50% of illegal aliens are Latinos? In anybody's book that is not diversity unless you subscribe to the new Latino
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