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Arizona's Immigration Legislation Undermines Christian Values

Posted: 04/25/2012 2:47 pm

by Jim Wallis and Rev. Max Rodas

Today, the Supreme Court is hearing a case about the constitutionality of Arizona's anti-immigrant legislation, SB 1070. It will be months before the case is decided but a broad spectrum of the Christian community already has their minds made up. 

This legislation is not just ethically bankrupt but undermines basic Christian values and American ideals. The court will decide whether it is legal, but it is already clear it isn't moral.  

We are both evangelical Christians. One of us is white and one of us Hispanic. It is our common faith commitment, not the color of our skin, that unite us on the need for comprehensive immigration reform and in opposition to patchwork punitive legislation like we have seen in states like Arizona and Alabama. 

At the core of our Christian commitment is to love our neighbors and to speak out for and defend vulnerable and marginalized people. The Bible shows a special concern for those it refers to as "the stranger," what today we would call an immigrant. Because immigrants are often vulnerable to exploitation or discrimination, Christians should go out of their way to show both empathy and kindness to them as well as speak out for justice on their behalf.    

SB 1070 violates all of these principles and as a result families, churches and communities are being ripped apart. The goal of the legislation is to make life unbearable for undocumented people in an attempt to get them to "self-deport." Legislation intentionally designed to increase the suffering of any of God's children is unconscionable. It encourages mistrust and racial profiling through making anyone with brown skin or an accent automatically a suspect. And, it hurts Christian ministries that believe they should help those in need whether or not the needy can show their papers.

 We have a broken immigration system that is in desperate need for reform at the federal level. But, patchwork solutions on the state level that are based on enforcement without reform is the wrong way to go about it. Last week in Cleveland, more than 400 Latino Christians from 20 different congregations united for a voter registration drive and civic engagement campaign in the hope of getting national politicians to pay attention to the plight of Latino families and communities. 

Latino voters will be courted by politicians of both parties because they are an important demographic for anyone seeking the highest office in the land. But, candidates would do well to remember that many more Christians, regardless of racial or ethnic background, will be listening for both how candidates discuss immigration and what those candidates propose to do about it. 

We are writing together to say immigration is not just a Latino issue -- it is a Christian and a moral issue. On a national level, Christian groups united this week to hold a 48-hour vigil in front of the Supreme Court. There were mainline Protestants, Evangelicals, Catholics and Christians of all shapes and colors. They came together because they realize that the fate of all Americans is wrapped up into the fate of today's immigrants, documented or not. 

Enthusiasm levels for presidential candidates in this year's election are likely to be low. Many voters are sick and tired of the promises from partisan politics. While the current climate in D.C. is frustrating, it also opens up the opportunity to make this election more about issues than personalities. Activists and advocates with access to digital media and new means of online organizing have a greater opportunity than ever before to affect the priorities that are raised during this election.  

We are a nation of immigrants and our diversity is a strength, not a weakness. There are deeper values and commitments that bind us together than our ethnic background or country of origin. We are brought together by the dream of building a country where liberty and justice for all is not just a phrase but a reality. 

Jim Wallis is the author of Rediscovering Values: A Guide for Economic and Moral Recovery, and CEO of Sojourners. Follow Jim on Twitter @JimWallis.

Rev. Max Rodas is Founder and Executive Director of Proyecto Luz, an HIV/ AIDS, faith-based initiative on the West Side of Cleveland the Executive Director of Nueva Luz Urban Resource Center, a larger umbrella organization addressing the root causes of systemic poverty and health inequities.

 
 
 

Follow Jim Wallis on Twitter: www.twitter.com/jimwallis

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by Jim Wallis and Rev. Max Rodas Today, the Supreme Court is hearing a case about the constitutionality of Arizona's anti-immigrant legislation, SB 1070. It will be months before the case is decided ...
by Jim Wallis and Rev. Max Rodas Today, the Supreme Court is hearing a case about the constitutionality of Arizona's anti-immigrant legislation, SB 1070. It will be months before the case is decided ...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
desert warrior
Unu lingvo neniam sufiĉas
09:07 PM on 04/29/2012
This legislation would make some sense if the US had a national ID, as most other countries do. However there is no law that requires US citizens to carry proof of citizenship. I refuse to carry my passport or naturalization certificate, and would also refuse to surrender said document until such a time as the US requires one to have a citizenship credential.
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modeforjoe
We had the experience, but we missed the meaning
08:54 PM on 04/29/2012
There you go again. Picking a local and admittedly grievous issue; but local. Always silence from you on what suffering our foreign policy causes. What savagery our mercenary marines and navy and army robots do at the direction of their evil masters. To hurt those near to us seems to matter to you. How about when we hurt many, many more thousands of miles away. Is there no advantage for you in decrying that?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Alois SaintMartin
aloistmartinsequinox.blogspot.com
07:36 PM on 04/29/2012
But now we got weapons
Of the chemical dust
If fire them we're forced to
Then fire them we must
One push of the button
And a shot the world wide
And you never ask questions
When God's on your side.

In a many dark hour
I've been thinkin' about this
That Jesus Christ
Was betrayed by a kiss
But I can't think for you
You'll have to decide
Whether Trayvon Martin
Had God on his side.
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Pubdestroyer
Just your average comedic intellectual who is curr
07:27 PM on 04/29/2012
Oh, come on! With the Pope doing everything he can to deny woman equal rights of men in THAT church, you have the nerve to even bring this up?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
realitytrumpsbull
Two 'alves of coconut!
05:10 PM on 04/29/2012
I think I already posted on this thread, but if not, here goes: Religionists, in my view, need to get the 'big update'. Ok, we're discussing Arizona, in this example. What does the name of that state even mean? 'Arid zone', or, 'really dry place, where nothing grows unless you pour water(and money) on it'. Ok, so now you want to 'mob' in what, 1/2 million people from Mexico? I say 'no'. I also say that we have a secular form of government in this country, on purpose, and that 'be fruitful, and multiply, ye multitudes' stuff is sadly out of date. This here be 2012, arrr, brave new world with 7 billion people in it, and this country, among others, needs to get our stuff 'in one sock', policy-wise, so you don't have people trying to run around and engineer this over here, that over there, and try to present the larger voting public with a fait accompli at some future date, that's right, all 50 states, not just Arizona, need to have public/government resources available to address the larger issue of population growth. Why? Well, what's a water table survey from AZ give you back, aren't they already just about on some kind of pipeline? Then, on to social hate and discontent related to cross-border crime, culture clashes, and other 'fun' that's resulted as a byproduct of really shoddy planning.
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06:37 PM on 04/29/2012
Not that I am not with you on population control: Arizona does have enough ground water and Colorado river water to support a popuation 3 times its current size according to the USGS.
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Pubdestroyer
Just your average comedic intellectual who is curr
07:28 PM on 04/29/2012
Yes. If YOU want your children and grandchildren to live shoulder-to-shoulder as in Japan. Do you want that for your progeny?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lenguss
03:43 PM on 04/29/2012
Arisona is just trying to enfore existing laws. You don't like it? Stop whining; change the laws.
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Pubdestroyer
Just your average comedic intellectual who is curr
07:29 PM on 04/29/2012
I like that! Arisona. Other than that, I'll dismiss the rest of your snark.
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09:25 PM on 04/29/2012
Hubris likes short phrases. Peace lenguss. Smile.
03:42 PM on 04/29/2012
Uh, hello people talking about laws... Joseph and Mary fled to Egypt because King Herod decreed all infants should be killed. His decree was law, so Joseph and Mary broke the law by crossing the border into Egypt... where they weren't citizens... Had they not broken the law, no Jesus.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tazscanner
05:33 PM on 04/29/2012
Uhh, just one problem. It wasn't illegal for them to go to egypt, they broke no law.
03:40 PM on 04/29/2012
Unless you are a native American everyone of you is an immigrant. You should think about that very carefully.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Carl Caroli
I just don't understand people
05:01 PM on 04/29/2012
Actually, I contend that everyone here is an immigrant. It's most likely even native americans are immigrants.
06:00 PM on 04/29/2012
True, everyone we call indigenous to the Americas is descended from those who crossed the Bearing Straits early in humanity's prehistory. But they've been here so long that I still think they deserve the honor of being called indigenous, and way more respect as first nations people than we give them. A lot of the "illegals" are people who are "indigenous" to this continent - it is ironic for us late arrival WASPs to be so hateful to them and insist they "go back where they belong" when their people have been on this continent longer than ours.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
desert warrior
Unu lingvo neniam sufiĉas
09:10 PM on 04/29/2012
True! Most of us are either immigrants or descendants of immigrants; the "true" Americans are natives, who's ancestors made their way across the Bearing sea, according to anthropologists.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Patrick Kearns
03:35 PM on 04/29/2012
Dear Rev. Jim,

you are wrong.

It is not an issue of kindness to "the stranger" (a.k.a illegal immigrant). Cutting through the emotions and political correctness, the illegal immigrant is knowingly, and freely, breaking the law. Deporting him to his home vs. imprisoning him for a crime is not punitive.

What is also wrong Rev. is the view of many evangelist that the U.S. borders should be open and a flood of illegal immigrants should be allowed in. While that pleases your view of "I am my brothers keeper", you are not asking for charity, you are demanding it - passively, but demanding. You force your beliefs on the U.S. public and your flock, leaving them your mess of "compassion" to fund and clean up. This is not a Rev. preaching charity to his flock. This is coersion demanding it.
09:19 PM on 04/29/2012
I agree, Patrick. Our nation has the right to enforce and control our borders. We should always welcome legal immigrants - and if we can make legal immigration easier, so much the better. But sneaking into this country is a crime. Period

Furthermore, Wallis has lost all credibility after making the Occupy movement sound like some great and holy work (try telling that to all the rape victims at these encampments) and after insulting people involved with the Tea Party. I don't take spiritual pointers from him.
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AntithiChrist
Rhymes with Grist
02:47 PM on 04/29/2012
"At the core of our Christian commitment is to love our neighbors and to speak out for and defend vulnerable and marginalized people. "

Since when? I thought that was a Buddhist idea.

With a few notable exceptions, mainstream American-style Christianity is more in line with the GWB core belief "You're either with us or you're against us."

The Love Thy Neighbor rhetoric is about as meaningful to modern Christian reality as saying "Peace on Earth, Good Will to Men" a few times every Christmas.
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02:06 PM on 04/29/2012
christian values you teach now are not the christian values that have existed historically. the inquisition was an example of christian values, the wholesale conversion of indigenous people to the new and improved god of the christians represent christian values. 'all y'all' can change your minds again.

nope, i'd feel a little safer w a less self interested set of values.....i like your rhetoric but christianity has SOME shared values w basic human rights, but they're not the same....
01:00 PM on 04/29/2012
Come on, people! Those laws are obviously undermining the core values of Christianity. Don't let your country become the new Sodoma because of their hatred towards foreigners. Regardless of citizenship status, the NT teach us to receive in our homes to those from far lands; in doing so, many even received angels inadvertently. For doing this, in the end many will be called to the Kingdom not knowing when they did this; because they did good to the least of these. Anyone who call themselves Christian can't be in favor of this laws.
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Willie12345
12:51 PM on 04/29/2012
Nonsense. Keeping those that would steal from American citizens and our own aged out of the country is the right thing to do. Our support systems should protect our old folks, disabled and vets.
12:34 PM on 04/29/2012
Romans 13.

We have a duty to obey man's law as well. If you don't like it, change it. Just because you FEEL like it is wrong, does not make it so. Enforce our nation's laws as that is what we were founded on.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SIMPLICIMUSS
Kampf gegen Dummheit !
01:37 PM on 04/29/2012
Rep. Alcee Hastings DFL, " Rules?, What Rules ? We make them up as we go along !! "
06:09 PM on 04/29/2012
People are working to change the laws, but in the meantime, we can be more humane about how they are enforced. Right now children who are US citizens (but have parents who are not) can come home from school to find their parents have been disappeared, and be taken into the custodial foster care of strangers with no opportunity to be reassured by their parents. If the children are not yet in school they can be torn from their parents arms as their parents are forcibly arrested. Infants who are not yet weaned have been taken from their mothers, and have nearly died as a consequence. This is not ethical by any measure.
12:21 PM on 04/29/2012
Mr. Wallis wants me to believe he is defending the victims of an illegal immigration law .
What about the true victims of illegal immigration. 400,000 deported, 250,000 crimes against
humanity, 1000 homicides. Thats 1000 people who suffered the ultimate consequences of illegal
immigration. What about their civil rights? Where is his compassion and consideration for the real
victims, or the future victims. How much inconvenience should one tolerate to save a life?
One would think Wallis would encourage the people to cooperate with law enforcement.
Not hinder them.