More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Jim Wallis

Jim Wallis

Posted: March 4, 2010 01:26 PM

100304_090501-016-immigrationThe window is closing on comprehensive immigration reform. At least that's what the politicians in Washington are saying. They're afraid of more demagoguery. They're afraid of upcoming elections. They're afraid of the politics of fear. But I am more and more troubled by how little they seem concerned about the worsening plight of many of America's most vulnerable families -- about how families are being broken up by the U.S. government, forcibly separating children from their parents. And for the media, immigration reform is just another looming political conflict to report, more of the gamesmanship of Washington to cover.

As always, the real stories of real people get lost in the win/lose politics of the nation's capital. Yes, the nation is going through some tremendous challenges right now. And we all know that Congress is hesitant to tackle tough issues before mid-term elections. But while politicians can write off one more piece of legislation on a packed agenda, they won't be able to write off, or ignore, a movement rooted in our faith communities. If our political leaders won't make room for the "strangers" among us, we will -- because Jesus commands us to do so.

Significant social change does not begin with Congress, and it doesn't happen overnight; it usually takes a movement, and it always takes courage. Sojourners has been convening, educating, and mobilizing Christians nationwide through our Christians for Comprehensive Immigration Reform campaign for the past three years, and we are proud to be in good company with the growing interfaith movement fighting for dignity and justice for immigrants.

On March 21, 2010, tens of thousands of supporters of immigration reform will join together in Washington, D.C. for the "March for America: Change Takes Courage." In the faith community, we have amended the tagline to read "Change Takes Courage and Faith" because courage truly does come from our faith.

Changes to our immigration system will simply not happen without both courage and faith. For many of us, faith is a catalyst to action that can solve the really big issues -- and this is one of the biggest ones we face now. People of faith will look beyond the political calculations and see this for the moral and family crisis it is. It will take people of faith to knock down the doors of Congress and bring the stories of immigrant friends, neighbors, and family members as evidence of the injustices that are experienced on a daily basis. Finally, we need faith in a God who is larger than we can imagine, the God who cries as we humans build border walls to separate ourselves from our brothers and sisters on the other side, the God of justice who isn't persuaded by the political timetables of Washington, D.C.

It's time to stop playing politics with something that should have been dealt with long ago. The situation will only get worse for both citizens and immigrants if we don't resolve it now. That's why Sojourners is launching Voices of Immigration, a new campaign aimed at highlighting stories of immigration in our country and exposing the flaws in the current system. As people who believe that everyone is made in the image of God, we want to restore the human element to the conversation around immigration reform, including subsequent legislative and policy decisions. Each day next week a new story will be highlighted on God's Politics with additional ones posted throughout March on CCIR's Web site.

It is our hope that bringing to light the human face of the social, political, and economic problems caused by the current system will demonstrate the urgent need for immigration reform. I hope these stories will inspire you to join us in fighting to fix a broken system that harms us all. We must boldly declare that it is morally wrong to keep families apart, and that it is morally right to fix the broken system so that immigrants are treated with respect and mercy. At this crucial turning point, we must take the call of our scriptures seriously and act prophetically for justice. If Washington fails to make room for the strangers in our midst, we need to make it clear to Washington that we will do it ourselves.

portrait-jim-wallisJim Wallis is the author of Rediscovering Values: On Wall Street, Main Street, and Your Street -- A Moral Compass for the New Economy, CEO of Sojourners and blogs at www.godspolitics.com.

+Click here to take action for comprehensive immigration reform

 
 
 

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

 
 
  • Comments
  • 68
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3  Next ›  Last »  (3 total)
07:17 PM on 03/06/2010
One problem is that Mexico's largest source of income: $25 Billion, tied with oil revenue are remittances from it's citizens working in the U.S. The argument that Americans won't do these jobs is a lie. http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/2010/0223/In-quest-for-jobs-more-Americans-join-ranks-of-day-laborers I'm sure the U.S. Chamber of Commerce is very happy about this, instead of having to outsource jobs, they just bring in undocumented, very exploitable workers who they pay no benefits to.
The Government provides them with everything.
04:26 PM on 03/06/2010
Who is "we" as in "If Washington fails to make room for the strangers in our midst, we need...' ? Politicians know what is going to happen to them if they support amnesty for illegals.
02:05 PM on 03/06/2010
I live in a small town in North Georgia that can represent the canary in the coal mine on the immigration issue. This country's failure to enforce our immigration laws has forever altered my hometown:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/07/16/AR2006071600665.html

This link to the our police department's outstanding warrants is indicative of the changes our town has experienced:

http://daltonpdblog.typepad.com/ACTIVEWARRANTS022310.pdf
12:33 PM on 03/06/2010
You don't fix a broken border protection problem by absolving the criminals

You don't fix a weak political will to enforce our employment laws by absolving the criminals.
12:31 PM on 03/06/2010
As an immigrant who came here LEGALLY and waited for a green card and then ultimately became a citizen i can give you the answer - YOU DON'T REWARD BREAKING THE LAW.

A green card is an incredible privilege - one that is not GIVEN to criminals.

Citizenship is an incredible honor and a blessing - one that is not GIVEN to criminals.
relevancematters
You're so full of what's right, you can't see what
10:59 AM on 03/06/2010
It's trite, I know, but you have to wonder what the local Egyptians thought of that little Nazarene family that snuck across their border in the dead of night and squatted in their country for a number of years, availing themselves of the local resources and using the border as protection from "supposed" persecution in their own country. Probably brought a lot of their Jewish relatives with them, too.

I don't recall reading that they went after those illegal immigrants with torches and pitchforks.
Gasparilla
buy your local newspaper
12:30 PM on 03/06/2010
Of course, we know the bible is literally true, right?
08:43 PM on 03/06/2010
And the population of the world then was what?

But I bet they wish they had gone after them with torches and pitchforks now.
Gasparilla
buy your local newspaper
10:42 AM on 03/06/2010
Just how exactly is the system "broken"? The only thing broken is enforcement of the law. The only thing another amnesty like 1986 will get us is far more illegals, like that one did. The message is just get here, cross the border illegally or overstay the return date on your visa, and we won't enforce the law and lots of people will write columns about how unfairly you've been treated. And no family needs to be separated. The parents are free to take their children to the country they left. The same people who proclaim how broken the system is are the very ones who fight any efforts to control the borders and verify that people are here legally. Not to mention the hypocrites who ignore the environmental damage done by an increasing population and yet wonder why so many species of birds and animals are in decline.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
10:36 AM on 03/06/2010
If this is even proposed, we need a revolution in this country.
07:50 PM on 03/05/2010
i just want to say to all those people who are parents and post on their comments the illegals have no rights and are criminals don't be surprise to see your kid be the next murder like those kids from Patchogue NY you think your making immigrants feel bad but in the end you are just putting hate in kids hearts.
04:41 PM on 03/05/2010
Apparently these “Christian Activists” fail to see the difference between welcoming the legal, law abiding Stranger and welcoming the law-breaking Illegal Immigrant. Have they forgotten Christianity expects and equal dose of responsibility and accountability for every exhortation of love thy neighbor?

Conversely, I am unaware of any place in the Bible where God says go forth and commit crimes - identity theft, fraud, illegal entry. Nor have I found a passage that says the ends justify the means.

It says in the Bible that “If your brother sins, rebuke him, and if he repents, forgive him”. Maybe I missed something, but to date I have not seen any Illegal Immigrants come forward and turn themselves in to authorities, saying forgive me. Instead, I see many unrepentant Illegal Immigrants who have plenty of excuses as to why they broke the law, who continue to use false documents, who have plenty of demands to change our law, and who are quick to demand their rights. Is not breaking the law because you covet something your neighbor has a sin? Is not identity fraud bearing false witness and thus a sin? Thus is not forgiving unrepentant sin the same as condoning that sin, and thus participating in that sin? Or are those Ten Commandments and other pronouncements against breaking the law like Romans 13: 1-2 or 1 Peter 2: 13-14 or John 10:1 just pesky guidelines to be ignored when inconvenient?
12:31 PM on 03/05/2010
Why must immigration reform always limit itself to border issues? Many foreigners living here in the US are doing so legally but would like a legal clear road to citizenship or some other status which would make us feel part of a country many of us have been working hard to move forward.

Just to have my example here to clarify the issue for those that don't have much contact with immigrants. I first arrived in the US at age 5 and due to my fathers work I would spent a couple of years here and a couple of years in other countries. But let me just clearly state my situation.

16 total years lived in the US, undergrad degree in NYC (which I paid for with my money), 5 years working under various work visas and an american sister bron and raised here.

Despite all that I would have to wait 7 years to be able to get a green card through my sister. I like thousands of others are now faced with a decision, stick around the US having our visa status schackling our evolution or give up and go to Europe.

As an educated commercially inclined individual had I status I would open my own company that would employ others. So next time you pick up a sign complaining about immigrants taking your job remember you are also keeping out those that could employ you
02:39 PM on 03/05/2010
Those of us who are running companies don't welcom competition from folks who would feel compelled to hire illegal aliens either.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
11:32 AM on 03/05/2010
I have mixed feelings about this. They have broken the law by coming here but since our Government (and many people who employ them) are not willing to send them back, there has to be a way of dealing with these people. We cannot have huge sections of people without medical care due to the fact that epidemics started in this demographic will utltimately affect us all. Emergency rooms cannot deny them care and so the insurance rates of the insured will continue to increase. Of course the CEO salaries and administrative costs of insurance companies will also keep premiums on the rise. That being said, I do claim to be a Christian and do feel Jesus wants us to help them and all in need. What the answer is, I don't know but things can't keep going the way they are now for any of us.
11:01 AM on 03/05/2010
I have a question. Somebody help me with this. Since illegal aliens broke the law by coming here in the first place, why can't the get amnesty, a green card, but NO voting rights?

The fear that Americans have is that they are going to get those rights anyway. I don't see how you solve this problem without that stipulation.
It seems like the penalty should at the very least be that you cannot vote for life. You can still work, etc., it's just that you're not a citizen. It's all about votes. A comprehensive bill would also have strict laws against employers and tough border security measures as well.
11:15 AM on 03/05/2010
Oops. I forgot to add mandating E-verify.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
vampbella09
10:33 AM on 03/05/2010
So when do we stop invoking mythological beings into the body politic? Religion and faith have a hell of lot to answer for and I for one no longer want anti reason pro faith wack jobs at any level discussing government in a secular society.
10:16 AM on 03/05/2010
gasp.....someone in the USA wants to follow Jesus?

99.99999 percent of so called Christians in the USA only want to worship Him. To heck with following Him, that would take effort, conscience, honesty et al.