Samuel Rodriguez: Justice Demands Pathway to Legal Immigration
As evangelical Christians, our faith stands universally recognized by a simple symbol: a cross. The cross is both vertical and horizontal. Vertically, we stand connected to God, His kingdom, eternal truth and glory. Horizontally, to our left and to our right, we stand connected to family, culture, society and community.
Immigration reform lies along both the vertical and horizontal planes. Vertically, the heart of God stands moved by the plight of the immigrant and the suffering. Horizontally, immigration reform will serve as a reconciliatory prescription for a nation divided by partisan politics.
The cross gives me hope. Hope that the days of deportation and self-deportation rhetoric are officially over. Hope that the politicians remember the promises made and reconcile rhetoric with action. For after all, faith without works is dead.
Correspondingly, we as Christ followers should stand committed to reconciling conviction with compassion, truth with love and righteousness with justice. At the end of the day, our objective should be to reconcile the Rev. Billy Graham’s message with the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.’s march. In doing so, we will advance not the agenda of the donkey or the elephant, but exclusively the agenda of the Lamb.
Both political parties in Washington, D.C., have played the proverbial political football with the issue of comprehensive immigration reform. That’s why it’s wonderful to see the faith community take the lead on this issue that transcends politics.
Some Christians have used the rule-of-law argument against comprehensive immigration reform. This argument is often framed by pointing to the biblical passage of Romans 13, which opens with the sentence, “Let every person be subject to the governing authorities” (ESV).
Justice demands that, as a nation, we rise above the political fray. Justice requires us to form a compassionate process of integration for those who have come here with a pure purpose of providing for their families a better tomorrow. Justice is not amnesty. Justice secures the border and stops illegal immigration but also builds a bridge where the undocumented can qualify through a strict regimen of metrics, can pay fines and can begin a process of fully embracing the American dream.
In the 1960s, the evangelical community stood on the sidelines as Martin Luther King Jr. marched for justice. In the 21st century, evangelicals should refuse to repeat history. We should stand committed to contextualizing the moral imperative behind immigration reform. Driven by Matthew 25 and a commitment to reconcile conviction with compassion, the followers of Christ should lead the charge for immigration reform that protects our values, borders and, more importantly, the image of God in every human being. This commitment is consistent with the image of the cross and the agenda of the Lamb.
Samuel Rodriguez is president of the National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference. He has been a featured speaker in White House and congressional meetings on Hispanic-American issues and justice concerns and was named by CNN as “the leader of the Hispanic evangelical movement.” He is an ordained minister of the Assemblies of God.