There are many questions to be asked about SB 1070, Arizona’s controversial new immigration law: questions of constitutionality, of enforcement, of specific provisions, of racial bias. These issues are certainly important and require much thought and discussion. But for the follower of Jesus they must take backseat to a much more important question: how does SB 1070 impact the “least of these”?
Matthew 25 contains some of Jesus’ most famous stories. Jesus speaks in the parable both to the righteous and the wicked, and to the latter he says, “For I was hungry and you gave me no food, I was thirsty and you gave me no drink, I was a stranger and you did not welcome me, naked and you did not clothe me, sick and in prison and you did not visit me. … Truly, I say to you, as you did not do it to one of the least of these, you did not do it to me.” This passage has long stood as a perennial call to Christians to stand with the oppressed, with the “least of these,” with those at the bottom of society, those most marginalized by “the system.” I believe that it is this passage which must frame Christian discussion of Arizona’s immigration law.
I submit that Christians must regard undocumented immigrants as “the least of these” in the context of the American immigration debate. Every year, millions of people around the world struggle to make enough money to live, to feed their children, to be able to go through their day-to-day lives with some semblance of security. Many of these people find that they are unable to find work in their own country, and so they seek to emigrate and establish a new life somewhere else to provide for themselves and their families. Pushed out by broken systems and broken circumstances, marginalized by greedy economic structures and ineffective governments, many look towards the United States and its relatively strong economy as offering hope for the future of themselves and their children.
Unfortunately for most of these people, it is incredibly difficult to immigrate legally to the United States. The process is time-consuming, costly, and uncertain, and can thus leave a potential immigrant who is denied a visa worse off at the end of the attempt than at its beginning. Daunted by the difficulty of this long-term process, with fears compounded in many cases by immediate economic uncertainties, many people are put into a situation where they see no other option to provide for their themselves and their families than to enter the country illegally. With no realistic alternatives, they live at the margins of American society.
These undocumented immigrants, truly the “least of these,” are the targets of Arizona’s new law. SB 1070 is manifestly designed to further marginalize these people and those who help them, to make it easier to arrest and prosecute them, to interrupt their day-to-day lives as they work (often in below-minimum-wage-jobs) to set food on the table every night. Rather than try to fix the broken systems that put these people in the situations they are in, Arizona has decided to punish them and ostracize them. Arizona has cracked down on the victims of America’s broken immigration system rather than try to address the underlying problems with the system itself.
I believe that a straightforward application of the message of Jesus Christ condemns Arizona’s immigration law. The Kingdom of Heaven is a kingdom of grace not legalism, of inclusion not exclusion, of welcome not hostility. The Gospel of Jesus of Nazareth is a proclamation of justice in the face of oppression, of liberation from bondage, of love for the marginalized. With this in mind, I ask Christians across America to remember that as they do to the least of these, so do they do to Jesus himself.
[This post was originally published at YourPerspective.org]




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31 July 2010 at 09:07
kristiancanler
>> Arizona has cracked down on the victims of America’s broken immigration system rather than try to address the underlying problems with the system itself.<<
Hadn't thought of this! I never realized how the impersonal economic forces pushing immigration make attempts to keep people out or make them leave once they're here a woefully short-term response.
31 July 2010 at 19:28
Bill Peltz
One other point to consider: US economic and trade policies work to increase the stream of economic refugees. My understanding is that NAFTA has been very destructive to Mexican agriculture, for example. Subsidies to large US corn producers enable them to export to Mexico at prices which small Mexican farmers can’t match. This has driven people off their farms and into the cities and into the migrant stream — or into the migrant stream in order to send money home to support their relatives on the farms and in the villages.
Our responsibility to “the least of them” is increased when it is our policies which have “lessened” them. We owe them.
31 July 2010 at 22:13
Matt Shafer
Great points Bill. The US needs to be mindful of how its action impact people on both sides of the border.
31 July 2010 at 23:42
Samantha
http://www.takeourjobs.org/
Incidentally, I saw the guy leading up the Take Our Jobs initiative on the Colbert Report, but nevertheless, I think it’s really cool, and offers a non-religious reason to encourage open immigration. Aside from the fact that restrictive immigration policies are inherently illogical.
but anyways.
8 August 2010 at 17:57
The Parable of the Good Mexican « sword and cross
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