Catholic Bishops And Immigration
By James
Fulford
In the February, 2001 issue
of First
Things Magazine, Richard Neuhaus deconstructs the legislative
program of
the National
Conference of Catholic Bishops, which he has heard
called the “religious lobby of the Democratic Party."
Of course liberals are calling it the “religious
lobby of the Republican Party." (It's officially bipartisan.)
The parts about crime and the poor are so socialistic
that Nat
Hentoff
likes them.
Neuhaus says that
Ten of the eighty-four
positions taken are in the category of migration
and refugee issues before Congress. Here, too,
questions could be raised, but the fact is that on
immigration the U.S. bishops take pretty much the
position of The
Wall
Street Journal, which, only half tongue in
cheek, calls for a constitutional amendment abolishing
national borders. The Catholic Church is the largest,
and possibly the most effective, pro–immigration
organization in the country. This has everything to do
with strategic and pastoral planning, reflecting the
fact that Latinos constitute at least a quarter of the
more than sixty million Catholics in the U.S., and
some expect they will be half the Catholic population
by the middle of the century. Can moral
arguments backed by Catholic
social doctrine
be mustered in support of limiting or even cutting
back on immigration? Certainly. But my impression is
that making them is like spitting in the wind. On this
question, the bishops have a long–standing and
settled conviction—not unrelated to the immigrant
history of Catholicism in this country—that a
generous immigration policy is good for poor people
seeking opportunity, good for America, and good for
the Catholic Church.
Later he says:
(A wrinkle here is that
unions could become newly important for the Church if
they succeed
in organizing large numbers of immigrant
workers, but that hasn’t happened yet and, for
several reasons, may not happen.)
And again:
Meanwhile, the Republican
Party has in recent decades become the champion of the
Church’s public priorities—the protection of
innocent human life, parental choice in education, the
defense of marriage, church–state cooperation, and
an array of issues under the rubric of religious
freedom.
But immigrant Catholics still tend to vote against Republicans. Even when they vote pro-life,
they vote for pro-life Democrats. There's nothing in
Catholic doctrine that says you have to vote Democrat,
and at the policy level, as Neuhaus points out, the
Democratic Party might as well be controlled by the
Orange Lodge. Or Bob Jones University.
Years ago C. S. Lewis discussed the idea that the
Church (in his case the Episcopalian Church, but his
point is the same) ought to give political advice:
People say, "The
Church ought to give us a lead." That is true if
they mean it in the right way, but false if the mean
it in the wrong way. By the Church they ought to mean
the whole body of practicing Christians. And when they
say that the Church should give us a lead, they ought
to mean that some Christians -- those who happen to have
the right talents -- should be economists and
statesmen, and that all economists and statesmen
should be Christians, and that their whole efforts in
politics and economics should be directed to putting
"Do as you would be done by" into action.
If that happened, and if we others were really ready
to take it, then we should find the Christian solution
for our own social problems pretty quickly. But, of
course, when they ask for a lead from the Church most
people mean they want the clergy to put out a
political program. That is silly. The clergy are those
particular people within the whole Church who have
been specially trained and set aside to look after
what concerns us as creatures who are going to live
forever: and we are asking them to do a quite
different job for which they have not been trained.
The job is really on us, on the laymen. The
application of Christian principles, say, to trade
unionism and education, must come from Christian trade
unionists and Christian schoolmasters; just as
Christian literature comes from Christian novelists
and dramatists--not from the bench of bishops getting
together and trying to write plays and novels in their
spare time.
Mere
Christianity (Book 3, Chapter 3)
Bishops are supposed to tell us that murder is
wrong, and justifiable homicide is right, but not to
fiddle with gun control, because they don't know
good policy from bad policy, the way they know
right from wrong.
The same applies to capital
punishment.
Bishops are supposed to be in favor of mercy and
prudence; the official doctrine
of the church is one of "Capital punishment if
necessary, but not necessarily capital
punishment." But bishops should not be saying
that “advances in modern penal systems enable us to
protect society from violent offenders without the
need to resort to capital punishment”, because
“advances in modern penal systems” are not
Catholic doctrine, they’re a figment some idiot
criminologist's imagination.
So by C. S. Lewis' rule, a good, specifically
Catholic immigration policy would come from good
Catholics like Pat Buchanan who have actually given it
some study.
In fact, even a bad
Catholic immigration policy would be better if it
came from bad Catholics like Geraldo Rivera or Teddy Kennedy, because their
policy would be based on genuine wickedness and
malice, rather than unworldly ignorance, and would at
least make some kind of sense. (Geraldo would support
the immigration of tall blonde women with big breasts;
Kennedy would insist that they all be registered
Democrats who can swim.)
The Bishops aren’t necessarily being malicious in
their immigration policy. You should never attribute
to conspiracy what can be explained by stupidity,
ignorance, or (in the case of the Republican
leadership) cowardice.
Think the Bishops aren't acting in ignorance of the
facts? Well, here's Father Neuhaus again:
After the economics
pastoral, which pronounced on everything from marginal
tax rates to just income distribution, a mischievous
journalist called a large number of bishops and
reported that most of them did not know what a
marginal tax rate is. To put it gently, they did not
know what they were talking about.
May 09, 2001