Immigration Reform: Change Takes Courage and Faith WASHINGTON (By Jim Wallis, Huffington) March 4, 2010 — The 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.
If our political leaders won't make room
for the "strangers" among us, we will —
because Jesus commands us to do so.
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.
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.
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. |
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