By Mark Tooley on 10.21.09 @ 6:08AM
The National Association of Evangelicals moves in the direction
of the National Council of Churches.
The National Association of Evangelicals (NAE) has adopted a new
pro–liberalized immigration stance that is creating ripples among
its conservative membership. Although NAE had touted its board's
supposedly unanimous backing, at least one prominent NAE member,
the Salvation Army, has apparently already disavowed it.
Professing to represent 30 million U.S. evangelicals, NAE has
just over 40 member denominations, the largest of which appears
to be the nearly 3 million member Assemblies of God.
Essentially the NAE has endorsed the failed Comprehensive
Immigration Act (CIR) of 2007, calling for a path to citizenship
for illegals that critics call amnesty, and urging "a realistic
program to respond to labor needs." Here's the resolution.
NAE's news release unequivocally announced, "NAE Approves
Resolution Supporting Comprehensive Immigration Reform."
Specifically, NAE urged establishing "a sound, equitable process
toward earned legal status for currently undocumented immigrants,
who desire to embrace the responsibilities and privileges that
accompany citizenship." NAE's president, Minnesota megachurch
pastor Leith Anderson, unveiled NAE's new advocacy earlier this
month to the U.S. Senate Judiciary subcommittee on Immigration,
Border Security and Citizenship. "We believe that undocumented
immigrants who have otherwise been law abiding members of our
communities should be offered the opportunity to pay any taxes or
penalties owed, and over time earn the right to become U.S.
citizens and permanent residents," Anderson
testified. "The process of redemption and restitution is core
to Christian beliefs, as we were all once lost and redeemed
through love of Jesus Christ."
Subcommittee chair Chuck Schumer, Democrat U.S. Senator from New
York, excitedly embraced NAE's position as a tacit endorsement
for his own effort to revive CIR. "Evangelicals' community
support for immigration reform is a moral imperative for all
people of faith," Schumer exclaimed. Lest anyone miss the point,
the New York Democrat read aloud from supportive letters from
other prominent evangelicals. "The urgency for immigration reform
cannot be overstated because it is so overdue," Schumer quoted
Florida megachurch pastor and NAE official Joel Hunter as saying.
Suburban Chicago megachurch pastor Bill Hybels was also
approvingly quoted: "We believe that most Americans would be
moved to pass comprehensive immigration reform if they could see
the faces of immigration as we have seen them." (Here's my
colleague Jeff Walton's report about the testimony.)
NAE President Anderson was, in a very Minnesota way, largely
understated in his testimony: "Why is immigration policy
important to evangelicals?" he asked. "Certainly because we
believe what the Bible teaches about treatment of 'aliens in the
land.' It is also because so many Hispanic, African and Asian
immigrants are evangelical Christians who are in our
denominations and churches by the millions. They are us."
National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference chief the Rev.
Sam Rodriguez, a prominent NAE official, also testified to
Schumer's committee. When the New York Democrat asked him whether
pro-CIR pastors face negative pressure from their congregations,
Rodriguez replied: "There's a disconnect between the pulpit and
the pews, particularly in non-ethnic congregations." The pastor
added: "That's why today's resolution by the National Association
of Evangelicals is historic; this is no longer a Latino thing or
a Hispanic church issue, now it's the collective evangelical
community saying 'we're in favor of comprehensive immigration
reform.'"
Still, Anderson proclaimed that NAE's board had voted with "no
dissent" for the pro-CIR stance. Unmentioned was that evidently
some NAE board members had abstained, including the Salvation
Army. "Please know that Salvation Army leadership chose to
abstain from signing the final resolution on immigration reform,"
reported an Army spokesman. "While the [NAE] news releases
did not report this specifically, the fact remains that any
resolution produced by the National Association of Evangelicals
does not automatically become the official policy of a member
organization (ie: The Salvation Army) unless they choose to make
it so. In this case, The Salvation Army chose not to adopt the
resolution nor will it become our stance on immigration reform.
In actuality, The Salvation Army has never established any
official position on this topic and has chosen to remain
politically neutral on the matter."
Even more definitely, the small Churches of Christ in Christian
Union (CCCU) also disavowed the NAE immigration stance. We do
"not support the NAE resolution on illegal immigration," its
General Superintendent declared. "We are a member of NAE, but our
opinion on the resolution was never requested. The Churches of
Christ in Christian Union support legal, regulated, and fair
immigration."
The NAE website
shows only 11 of NAE's over 40 member denominations endorsing the
immigration stance. And only 11 individuals are signers, though
reportedly 75 NAE board members voted for it.
Another prominent NAE member, the 340,00 member Presbyterian
Church in America (PCA), issued a statement, more defensively,
but also asserting that NAE does not speak for member churches.
"The NAE Immigration Resolution of 2009 has not become the PCA
position on immigration," insisted PCA Stated Clerk Roy Taylor,
who also chairs the NAE's board. But he still affirmed his own
support for it: "The NAE Immigration Resolution of 2009, in my
view, is a biblically-based, theologically reflective, carefully
balanced, concise document."
In fact, NAE's resolution admits "the Bible does not offer a
blueprint for modern legislation." So on what precisely does NAE
base its political counsel? It's not clear. As my colleague Alan
Wisdom points out, the NAE stance somewhat dismissively refers to
"rule of law" and implies potential skeptics of its immigration
position are "simplistic." It fails seriously to distinguish
between legal and illegal immigrants, and similarly fails to
admit the different responsibilities of the state versus the
church. NAE also does not distinguish refugees fleeing
persecution from other immigrants seeking economic advance.
Coming in the wake of NAE activism on Global Warming and U.S.
terror interrogation techniques ("torture"), NAE is now gearing
up next to call for nuclear disarmament. NAE's official stances
for traditional marriage and sanctity of life seem to be taking a
back seat. So how is NAE now substantively distinct from the old,
left-leaning National Council of Churches (NCC) for which it was
partly founded as a conservative alternative (at least for the
NCC's predecessor) more than 60 years ago?
The NCC became mostly irrelevant when its Mainline Protestant
voices stopped speaking for its churches and started speaking
"prophetically" to them. Similarly, the NCC moved beyond issues
of Christian consensus to adopt more morally ambiguous, and
ostensibly more fashionable, political causes du jour. This sad
history should be familiar to evangelicals. But the NAE seems
determined to repeat what has already been tried and failed.
topics:
Illegal Immigration, Evangelicals