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Immigration: Our Position

By Mark A. Taylor

What is Christian Standard”s position on immigration? Read carefully the articles, opinions, and interviews posted at our site this week before you decide the answer to that question. You”ll see that our writers don”t always agree with each other, so any one of them does not speak for all the rest””or for Christian Standard.

That diversity of opinion among Bible-believing followers of Christ is one reason we”ve tackled this topic. We fear that too many Christians have come quickly to their conclusions without considering counter views from others who also love God.

And some Christians haven”t thought much about the problem at all.

Even though we know an estimated 11 million undocumented immigrants live in the United States, it”s convenient to believe they don”t live in my neighborhood, don”t shop at my supermarket, don”t attend my local school, don”t work in my community. But this likely isn”t true. If two issues of this magazine can cause readers to see the immigrants around them, we will have accomplished something important.

Troy Jackson this week tells one immigrant”s story. Next week we”ll introduce you to several more undocumented persons who have been helped by concerned Christians. In some cases, the helpers knew they were helping an undocumented person or family. In others, they didn”t know. Their example challenges us to consider our own attitudes and actions toward the immigrants among us.

As one writer points out this week, the influx of immigrants has brought the world to the communities where we live. These folks for whom Christ died are looking for jobs, for hope, for someone who will help them navigate a complicated society whose language they may not understand. It”s not difficult to determine how Christ would have us respond to them: “In everything, do to others what you would have them do to you” (Matthew 7:12).

What is Christian Standard”s position on immigration? As a rule we don”t make pronouncements on political or legal issues, and that”s not our purpose here. As more than one writer this week and next says, the issues are complicated and the solutions are not easy.

But surely every reader can agree on this position: Let”s show love, Christian love, to immigrants. If we must ask about their status, let that not be the first question. We may be the best or only way for the immigrants around us to experience the peace and purpose we have discovered in our Lord. That”s Christian Standard”s position on immigration.