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I
recently
criticized the leadership of the
National Association of Evangelicals [NAE], which claims to
represent 40 denominations with memberships totaling 30
million, for coming out strongly for amnesty.
As an
evangelical Christian myself, I absolutely don't see any
conflict between my faith and working for a sane
immigration policy for my country.
Evangelical Christians could be key allies in the fight
against open borders. They comprise approximately one
quarter of the U.S. electorate.
Polling indicates that most evangelicals are on our
side. When compared to mainline Protestants, Catholics
and Jews, evangelicals had the highest percentage of
respondents who believe that (1) the quantity of
immigrants, illegal and legal, is too high; (2) illegal
immigration is caused by lack of enforcement, (3) we
have enough Americans who can do our labor, (4) amnesty
for illegals is not the answer, (4) attrition through
enforcement is a good strategy, and (5) enforcing the law
is better than amnesty. [Religious
Leaders vs. Members: An Examination of Contrasting Views
on Immigration, Steven S. Camarota, CIS,
December 2009].
Already,
according to
Roy Beck of Numbers USA, approximately one-third of his
group's members are
evangelicals.
Nevertheless, although the evangelical rank and file
supports immigration sanity, just as with so many of our
society's institutions the evangelical leadership is not
reliable. I've recently seen three further outbreaks:
(Here,
Mark Krikorian questions how conservative they are.
This
coalition
held a meeting on Capitol Hill on July 9th.In
attendance were NAE president Leith Anderson, Richard
Land (more on him later) and of course,
Samuel Rodriguez, an Evangelical Hispanic activist
of whom I've
written before.
Rodriguez proclaimed that
"Today's Tea Party may very well spell tomorrow's
conservative funeral, unless that tea is accompanied by
something that enriches any meal. Chips and salsa"
Rodriguez threatened the GOP:
"Republicans [and] conservatives probably have the most
to lose, 'The Grand Old Party stands on the brink of
repeating history by completing a
wall,
not
between Mexico and the United States but between
Hispanic Americans and the conservative movement…The
"family values party" is alienating the most
pro-life, pro-family constituency in America. So is
this the party of Reagan and Lincoln, or the party of
nativists and
conservatives attempting to conserve a color rather
than an idea?"
Is
this guy hostile, or what?
Remember, the fact that the NAE leadership
pushes for amnesty doesn't mean that all 30 million
members of NAE-affiliated churches do.
You
can send NAE president Leith Anderson (photo
here ) a
polite email here
.
Dr.
Richard Land is president of the
Ethics and Religious Liberty
Commission of the Southern Baptist Convention, and
has been so
since 1988. Given what he's been involved in lately,
Baptists might wonder if it's time he step down.
National Public Radio just ran a little puff
piece/interview of Dr. Land, entitled
Conservative Southern Baptists Wade Into Immigration
Debate [NPR,
July 11, 2010].
Just
read the first paragraph and you'll see where he's
headed:
"Richard Land, president of the Southern Baptist
Convention's Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission,
plans to address a gathering of Hispanic Baptists this
weekend. Land will tell the group that his denomination
supports a
path to U.S. Citizenship for illegal immigrants, a
message that may test member loyalty within the
conservative denomination. Richard Land says his message
may
not be popular, but needs to be said. "
Here
are a few low points from the interview:
On
illegal aliens:
"We've
got 12
to 17 million people who are here illegally who
have, you know, I think it's important to note, they
broke the law in order to come here and work.
Whereas our homegrown criminals tend to break the law so
they don't have to work. "
On
illegal aliens being law-abiding:
"The
vast majority of these people are law abiding citizens
once they've gotten here. They've worked hard. It's not
realistic that we're going to round them up and send
them home….I don't think it's realistic, or I don't
think it's the way you treat people either."
On
amnesty:
"I
think that we need to have a pathway, an earned pathway
to legal status or citizenship, whichever they prefer."
(Links
added).
Just a
few days earlier, NPR had run another article about
Land:
GOP Faces Internal Divide on Changes to Immigration,
Mara Liasson, NPR, July 7, 2010
Part
of Land's argument: conservatives need Hispanic voters.
(Apparently he has never heard of the Sailer Strategy—or
doesn't want to). According to Land:
"I've
had some of them [fellow conservatives] appeal to me. They say, 'Richard,
you're going to divide the conservative coalition.' And
I said, 'Well, I may divide the old conservative
coalition, but I'm not going to divide the
new one. If the new conservative coalition is going
to be a governing coalition, it's going to have to have
a significant number of Hispanics in it, that's dictated
by demographics, and you don't get
large numbers of Hispanics to support you when
you're engaged in
anti-Hispanic immigration rhetoric."
Richard Land, in other words, is cheering on
the
Hispanicization of America and condemns anybody who
stands against it.
I
never see any concern of Dr. Land for Americans,
including ordinary Southern Baptists, who are
harmed by illegal and legal immigration.
Dr.
Land needs a lot of education and exhortation to help
him understand what is really going on in our country
and what needs to be done. I encourage our Southern
Baptist (and other) readers to contact Dr. Land and
politely attempt to educate him. You can email him
here. You
can leave him a voicemail (toll free) at 1-888-324-8456,
Monday through Friday.
You
can even call Richard Land during his live weekly radio
show, thus educating Land and his listeners at the same
time. The show is on Saturdays from noon to 3 p.m., Eastern Time.
The toll free number is 1-888-324-8456.
Also,
here is
the general contact form for the Southern Baptist
denomination. You can write it also.
The
U.S. Pastor Council's statement has been favorably
written up in
WorldNetDaily:
"A new
declaration on immigration already backed by hundreds of
pastors who lead tens of thousands of people urges the
government to secure the national borders as the first
part of any reform strategy."
Pastors Seek to 'Secure our National Borders', (Bob Unruh, World Net Daily, July 4th,
2010):
In
fact, one of the drafters of this document is one Dave
Welch, the executive director of the U.S. Pastor Council, who writes a column for
WorldNetDaily (see
here).
Dave
Welch of the US Pastor Council is not to be confused
with
Dave Welch the British poker player. The latter Dave
Welch is presumably gambling with his own money. The
former Dave Welch is gambling with the future of his
country in the name of religion—or something.
The
Pastors' Declaration on Border Security and Immigration
Reform puts forth a three point plan.
Step
One sounds good, it's
"Secure our
National Borders First":
"It is
the first business of our government to protect the
safety and welfare of citizens against 'enemies foreign
and domestic.' The well established fact that drug
cartels, gang members, other criminal elements and now
Middle Eastern operatives linked to Islamic terrorism
are freely moving across our southern border has created
an urgent national security crisis."
The
Declaration follows with the
Action Needed":
"All
borders, with specific priority to the southern border
of the United States, must be secured as soon as
possible using whatever means necessary to stop all
entry from points other than regulated crossing
stations. Fences, adequately armed U.S. military
presence, electronic surveillance, increased Border
Patrol forces, full enforcement of all existing
immigration laws and policy changes protecting citizens
as well as law enforcement from persecution, prosecution
or lawsuits when acting to protect life and property are
examples of first steps that need to be implemented."
Sounds
great! But…it's only Step One.
Step
Two is "Reform the Immigration System". And here the US Pastor Council goes
completely off the rails:
"The
process of entering the country legally is
fraught with red tape, fraud, delays, unacceptable
costs, unrealistically low quotas and inhumane treatment
for many if not most people who desire to emigrate to
the U.S. temporarily for education or work, or
permanently as citizens. This system needs to be
reformed so people legitimately seeking temporary or
permanent residency in this country are treated with
dignity and respect."
"Unrealistically low quotas"? We are already taking in
more legal immigrants than any other country. But
it's
never enough, is it?
What
the pastors are calling for is an increase in legal
immigration—which we definitely don't need.
And
then there's Step Three—"Implement
a just process to legal status for specified illegal
immigrants".
It's
A-M-N-E-S-T-Y—under yet another euphemism.
And
the conclusion to the Declaration sounds downright
totalitarian:
"We
the undersigned pastors declare our commitment to using
our voice and influence in every way possible to support
these principles. We will also publicly hold accountable
those who choose to remain silent, who are divisive for
purely political purposes, or who act in opposition to
these principles."
"Publicly hold accountable those who choose to remain silent"?
"Who are divisive for purely political purposes"?
"Who act in opposition to these
principles"?
They
talking to us?
The US
Pastor Council needs help and guidance also. Here is a
list of supporting pastors. If you think your pastor
is on the list, look him up and contact him.
Also,
you can contact the Pastors' Council
here and
here .
And
don't neglect to
write to Dave
Welch and educate him on why amnesty is a bad idea which
will encourage more illegal immigration and why we need
to reduce—not increase—legal immigration.
We
also need to educate many of our local clergy.
Too many confuse
pious noises and feeling good about themselves with
doing the right thing.
We need to
straighten them out.
Point
out that true Christian charity is helping people in the
name of Christ, with our own freely-given resources—not
taking taxpayers' money to spend on illegal aliens who
ought to be in their own country.
We
must not allow confused leaders like Leith Anderson,
Richard Land and Dave Welch to use our church offerings
to destroy our country.
American citizen Allan Wall (email
him) recently moved back to the