Is the Catholic Church pro-illegal immigrant? You bet.
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Is the Catholic Church pro-immigrant? You bet.
Updated 8/20/2006 7:45 PM ET
By Paulette Chu Miniter
The Catholic Church — an unrelenting opponent of abortion and homosexuality and troubled by its own priest-abuse scandals — has been called many things, but fashionable isn't often among them. Yet fashion is why some critics now speculate the church has involved itself in today's third rail of politics: immigration reform. The chorus has been steady and building. A sampling:
TIMELINE:Immigration, Catholicism and America
•Rep. Pete King, R-N.Y., a Roman Catholic and chairman of the House of Representatives' Homeland Security Committee, told Fox's Bill O'Reilly earlier this year, "This has become the politically correct tune. ... Too many people in the Catholic Church have signed onto this. It's fashionable."
•Rep. Tom Tancredo, R-Colo., a leading opponent of illegal immigration, has blamed the church's stance on "left-leaning religious activists."
•CNN's Lou Dobbs has accused the church of avidly looking south of the border just "to add a few folks to those pews."
Where does the church stand on the current debate? While the Vatican has articulated a broad vision of immigration through the years, it has largely deferred to the bishops' conferences in each country on specific public policy efforts. In the USA, the church favors the Senate's more moderate legislation over the House's heavy-handed enforcement-only approach. Both bills are stalled, but immigration is expected to be a prominent issue once Congress returns from its summer recess.
History tells the story
A snapshot of today's immigrants quickly reveals their significance to the church: 42% of all legal immigrants to the USA are Catholic. And by 2020, the church projects that more than half of its members will have Spanish surnames.
While Tancredo Republicans and Dobbs protectionists speculate that the church wants immigration reform simply because it is fashionable politics or is a way to put more people in the pews, there is a much larger and longer standing Catholic case for migration. The U.S. Catholic Church was founded by and for immigrants, and it sees today's nativist grumblings as the same that confronted the American church in its earliest years.
"We are relearning what it means to be an immigrant church," says Mark Franken, head of migration and refugee services for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB). "There are just a lot of people unaware of both the theological dimension for migration, and also our history in this country."
Brought to America by Spanish and French explorers, Catholicism accounted for 1% of the population in the 13 colonies in 1776, according to the Archdiocese of St. Louis. By the end of the 19th century, the Catholic population had swelled, and anti-immigrant sentiment had emerged as Irish and other newcomers had dramatically changed the church's face. In 1920, three of four U.S. Catholics were immigrants, and it is for these immigrants that the church created its vast network of schools, charities and hospitals.
Today, the Catholic Church is America's largest with 69 million members, roughly four times the size of the second-largest, the Southern Baptist Convention. It credits the vast majority of its growth in the USA over the past four decades to this nation's ever-increasing Hispanic population.
For the church, the migrant's plight is a universal one tracing back to the Holy Family. Pope Pius XII, in 1952, declared the Holy Family of Jesus, Mary and Joseph to be the archetype of every refugee family. He based this on their flight into Egypt, calling them "the models and protectors of every migrant, alien and refugee of whatever kind who, whether compelled by fear of persecution or by want, is forced to leave his native land, his beloved parents and relatives, his close friends, and to seek a foreign soil."
The church has emphasized the duty of Christians to "welcome the stranger," citing the commandment in the book of Leviticus that "you shall treat the stranger no differently than the natives born among you." The church also points to Jesus' description of the final judgment, when those who welcomed him in the form of a stranger inherit the kingdom of heaven.
"The biblical tradition puts the migrant and exile at the very center of concern. Therefore, we, as believers and followers of Jesus, can do no less," the USCCB's Franken told a Lutheran gathering in 2004.
Even the church's language is rooted in migration. The word "parishioner," for instance, is related to the Greek word paroikos, which means "wayfarer" or "sojourner." A parish, then, is a community of migrants, and migration itself is a metaphor for humanity, as all people pass through life on the way to their final destination back to God.
Consistent advocacy
The bishops' call for "just and humane" immigration reform is no different from what the church's leaders have advocated: from Pope John XXIII — who said, "Every human being has the right to freedom of movement" — to Pope John Paul II, who in an annual message for World Migration Day in 1995 said, "The illegal migrant comes before us like that 'stranger' in whom Jesus asks to be recognized," and Catholics must help these strangers "whatever their legal status with regard to state law."
If the Catholic Church has wound up on the politically correct side of today's debate, it certainly took a more principled and traditional route than its skeptics avow.
Paulette Chu Miniter lives in New York and is a fellow at the Phillips Foundation, a non-profit public affairs organization.
Re: Is the Catholic Church pro-illegal immigrant? You bet.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Brian503a
[url=http://www.[b]Is the Catholic Church pro-immigrant? You bet. [/b]
Definitely! And, they want to increase their congregation #'s! Don't have time right now for a more lengthy response, but I have no respect or compassion for the Catholic church, and throughout history, they have been VERY unkind to those who practice other religions and very intolerant too of views that differ from their views. Plus, then there are the scandals. :roll: