Evangelicals spar over immigration reform
NAE resolution "The Bible does not offer a blueprint for modern legislation, but it can serve as a moral compass and shape the attitudes of those who believe in God," the NEA resolution stated. "The challenge today," the NAE maintained, "is to determine how to maintain the integrity of national borders, address the situation with millions of undocumented immigrants, devise a realistic program to respond to labor needs, and manifest the humanitarian spirit that has characterized this country since its founding." The NAE's "For the Health of the Nation: An Evangelical Call to Civic Responsibility," urges:
That immigrants be treated with respect and mercy by churches. Exemplary treatment of immigrants by Christians can serve as the moral basis to call for government attitudes and legislation to reflect the same virtues. The IRD's Tooley pounces Mark Tooley, the president of the conservative think tank The Institute on Religion & Democracy, was having none of what the NAE was proposing. Although dismayed, he apparently wasn't all that surprised by the NAE's action. In a column for The American Spectator, in which he expressed several criticisms aimed at the NAE, Tooley labeled the organization's resolution as "a ... pro-liberalized immigration stance" and maintained that it "is creating ripples among its conservative membership." Tooley wrote: "Essentially the NAE has endorsed the failed Comprehensive Immigration Act (CIR) of 2007, calling for a path to citizenship for illegals that critics call amnesty, and urging 'a realistic program to respond to labor needs.'" He pointed out that several NAE-member organizations had not endorsed the NAE's position, including the Salvation Army, the Churches of Christ in Christian Union (CCCU), and the Presbyterian Church in America (PCA), and that only 11 individuals are signers, though reportedly 75 NAE board members voted for it. Tooley later told OneNewsNews -- the news service of Rev. Donald Wildmon's American Family Association, that "The NAE has in the recent past become outspoken on environmentalism and global warming, and then condemn[ed] the U.S. for what it calls 'torture' in its interrogation of terror detainees. And next, [the NAE] plans to adopt a petition regarding nuclear disarmament."
Earlier this month, the Christian Post reported that "America's Voice, which supports humane comprehensive immigration reform, blasted leaders of NumbersUSA for encouraging its evangelical members to 'hammer' their denominations with complaints against the NAE's new immigration resolution": At the Capitol Hill press conference Samuel Rodriguez, the president of the National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference (NHCLC) -- which serves 15 million Hispanic Christians -- spoke in support of the NAE resolution. Rodriguez, who has been an outspoken opponent of abortion rights, same-sex marriage, and as Bruce Wilson recently pointed out, aligned himself with Pastor John Hagee, was far more sensitive and sensible regarding immigration:
"On behalf of our 25,434 churches, we commend and applaud today's resolution by our sister organization, the NAE. This is, without a doubt, a tipping point. We can no longer state that immigration reform stands as a Latino, immigrant or partisan issue. Today's resolution conveys a collective message on behalf of the Evangelical community that at the end of the day immigration reform is a matter of justice firmly grounded on biblical truth."
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