Posted on 04/28/2006 11:23:02 AM PDT by george wythe
Does a focus on family values demand a tight border to protect Americans from outsiders, or an open-door policy to ensure opportunity to the poor of other nations? It is more important to welcome the stranger or to respect the rule of law?
At a forum Thursday hosted by the conservative Christian group Family Research Council, conservative and liberal religious leaders lobbed Bible verses, unable to agree on what Jesus would do about the nation's nearly 12 million illegal immigrants.
Immigrant advocates warned that a crackdown would harm families and violate Scripture. And a lawmaker leading the charge for tougher enforcement decried the impulse to direct "compassion" at foreigners while ignoring the plight of low-income Americans.
(Excerpt) Read more at khou.com ...
Titus 3:1
Remind the people to be subject to rulers and authorities, to be obedient, to be ready to do whatever is good,
Just as many have written, generally speaking, there is no obstacle to solving all this.
Go after the employers. If illegals are unable to work, they will self-deport. Before the welfare state emerged, this happened each time the U.S. went into an economic plunge.
To minimize the welfare state's safety net, require applications for assistance to be processed through INS. Tell hospitals and clinics, yes, they are responsible for proof of citizenship. Tell them it is a form of health insurance.
Can Christians love their neighbor and enforce the law? What a dumb question.
Traitors! IMO, will be the response from the congregants of the Church of michael weiner(savage).
Then Jesus proceeded with the parable of the Good Samaritan.
Why do you think that the parable has the qualifier "good" in front of Samaritan? Could it be that most Jesus thought that Samaritans were bad people?
Why did the Jews think that? Could it be that the Samaritans were illegal aliens? Or even worse, foreigners living on land stolen from the Israelites?
Could it be that the Samaritans were brought into Israel by the Assyrians and other oppressors of the Israelites? Could it be that the Samaritans were living in land stolen from the children of Israel, speaking a different language, and worshipping a different god?
Could it be that the Samaritans were a fifth column who sided with the Jews' enemies every time the Jews tried to improve their nation's stance?
How can such wicked illegal aliens living on stolen land be your neighbor?
Total crap. Jesus never said to break the law. In fact He said "Render therefore unto Caesar the things that are Caesar's; and unto God the things that are God's." (Matthew 22:21)
Love does not necessarily equate with extreme suicidal altruism.
The Tom Tancredo fans here should take a look at the churches that they attend this Sunday. I think they might shocked at how many Hispanics are sitting in their pews.
Therefore, I can well imagine His advice to the illegal immigrant (of any nation) would be to leave the US - and if desirous to return, (s)he should then re-enter the US following the proper legal procedure.
God is not a door mat. God is a God of Love, but people conveniently forget that God is also a God of Justice. He don't like law-breakin'.
So just what is your correlation here?
Love the neighbor but deal with the neighbor's law breaking! As the neighbor is picked up for deportation, give them your address and let them know you will help when they enter legally or register to follow the legal pathway. We are being invaded by poor people fleeing a feudal state but sending back our dollars to relatives not able to leave the Vincdente Feudal kingdom ... and that means we are subsidizing the Mexican nation and its feudal suppression. If we are true Christians (one questions the Catholic support for continuing this support for feudalism), we will work to end this feudal kingdom of Vincente and his family lords.
That's the crux of the debate. We already know Caesar's law. We also know that Caesar's law can change very quickly.
The Christians in this panel were discussing God's law, the more permanent law that Christians must obey even if it conflict's with Caesar's temporarity laws.
And this is a bad thing?
I am reminded of the story (perhaps apochryphal) that, when President Eisenhower first proposed federal aid to teach foreign languages in public schools, one Southern Democrat Congressman picked up a King James Bible and thundered, "If English was good enough for Jesus Christ, it's good enough for me!"
Christians ask: Can you love thy neighbor but deport him, too?
Er, I would love to deport him.
Is this a trick question?
As you help yourself to the fruits of their labor, such as eating food picked by them, etc.etc.
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