National Association of Evangelicals: "Love Thy Immigrant Neighbors" Anti-Immigrant Lobby: "Hammer Their Denominations"



Washington, DC - Despite having no religious standing whatsoever, the anti-immigrant lobby has launched an unprecedented attack on religious denominations in response to the National Association of Evangelicals' (NAE) recent statement in support of immigration reform and compassion for immigrant families.

Roy Beck, executive director of NumbersUSA, an anti-immigrant Internet group, told Congressional Quarterly[1] that "about a third of our members are evangelicals...We let them know, and they immediately started hammering their denominations." While evangelical leaders called for tolerance and a pragmatic approach to immigration, Beck fumed to his Internet followers that evangelical leaders "bring discredit on their religious faiths from their sloppiness in truth seeking and their lack of intellectual integrity."

Beck's call has been echoed on white nationalist websites (1, 2) and by Mark Krikorian, executive director of NumbersUSA's partner "think tank," called the Center for Immigration Studies (CIS). Krikorian declared that "for religious organizations to get involved in this issue is really not appropriate." Actual religious leaders disagree. In addition to the NAE, hundreds of denominations and communities of faith have made similar calls, including 500 national and regional denominations and religious organizations who signed a recent interfaith statement supporting comprehensive immigration reform and calling on Congress to act.

Krikorian's CIS also recently hosted a four-person press event to school religious leaders; three out of the four speakers were CIS staff. And CIS released a report by John R. Edwards, principal of the "Man in the Action Group," claiming to provide a more authoritative interpretation of the Bible than the one provided by actual religious leaders. Edwards is also the author of CIS reports which purport to correct the perspectives of nationally-recognized law enforcement officials on how to improve community safety, among other issues.

According to Frank Sharry, executive director of America's Voice:

"On matters of faith and pastoral care, I think it is fair to say that religious leaders speak with more authority than anti-immigrant hardliners like Roy Beck and Mark Krikorian.



"In fact, the resolution in support of comprehensive immigration reform approved without dissent by the National Association of Evangelicals was 'carefully and prayerfully developed with biblical reflections and extensive consultations among evangelical leaders,' according to Galen Carey, the association's director of government affairs, who was quoted in the Congressional Quarterly article mentioned above.



"Meanwhile, the anti-immigrant lobby hired the same man to pretend to know law enforcement better than America's police chiefs one week, and then claim to know the Bible better than the moral authority of nearly all of our nation's religious leaders the next. It looks like the Center for Immigration Studies called the press to a staff meeting and called it a 'panel of experts'."



 

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