USCCB clings to 'work of mercy' narrative, but Catholic faithful aren't buying it
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US Catholic laity – fed up with Democrats' flouting of US immigration law – are pushing back against American prelates who are fighting to maintain the status quo.
The US Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) has suffered widespread backlash in recent days, as they've characterized their facilitation of illegal migrants' entry into the United States as a "work of mercy" motivated by Christian charity, and not – as many critics allege – by government cash.
Tensions ignited last week, as the USCCB issued a public condemnation of President Donald Trump's executive orders (EOs) on illegal immigration designed to protect the American public. In the following days, these tensions grew, until erupting into an outright firestorm over the weekend.
VP TAKES BISHOPS TO TASK
During an appearance on CBS News' Face the Nation on Sunday, Vice President JD Vance was asked about the USCCB's response to the administration's deportation program. Vance voiced dismay, and proceeded to deliver the bishops a knock-out rebuke.
Vance told host Margaret Brennan, "[A]s a practicing Catholic, I was actually heartbroken" by the criticism.
"I think that the US Conference of Catholic Bishops needs to actually look in the mirror a little bit and recognize that when they receive over $100 million to help resettle illegal immigrants, are they worried about humanitarian concerns? Or are they actually worried about their bottom line?" Vance queried, adding:
Drawing attention to the big hole in the bishops' scope of concern, Vance noted: "If they're worried about the humanitarian costs of immigration enforcement, let them talk about the children who have been sex trafficked because of the wide open border of Joe Biden. … "
The Vice President also emphasized the primacy of the mandate given to the Trump administration by the American electorate, declaring, "We're going to enforce immigration law. We're going to protect the American people."
A VAIN ATTEMPT AT DAMAGE CONTROL
Vance's punch landed. Stung by the Vice President's criticism, the bishops cobbled together a response – which many described as "canned" – later that day.
The USCCB took swiftly to the Internet, posting a statement defending its motives in resettling illegal migrants, in an attempt to justify its receipt of millions of dollars from the Feds:
The bishops also touted their decades-long partnership with the government in service to those they refer to as "refugees."
“Faithful to the teaching of Jesus Christ, the Catholic Church has a long history of serving refugees," the statement read. "In 1980, the bishops of the United States began partnering with the federal government to carry out this service when Congress created the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program (USRAP)."
REACTIONS TO THE VP-USCCB CLASH
Social media reactions to Vance's comments and the USCCB's defense of itself were swift and pointed. Representative comments include:
MOBILIZING AGAINST TRUMP'S EFFORTS TO CLOSE THE BORDER
In addition to condemning Trump's EOs and reframing Vance's comments to fit their narrative of mercy, many bishops and lay leaders are actively working to assist illegal immigrants to outmaneuver deportation efforts.
The diocese of El Paso, led by Bp. Mark J. Seitz, chairman of the USCCB's migration committee, is preparing to push back on Trump's immigration EOs.
Community activists gathered on the steps of St. Patrick Cathedral in the border town last Thursday to protest and develop ways to challenge the government's directives.
"I am here with these leaders today on the steps of the cathedral to make clear that we will never be robbed of who we are. We are here today to say that El Paso is and will remain a welcoming community," Seitz declared.
Leftist and LGBTQ activist Bp. John Stowe of the diocese of Lexington says he is working with others in the event churches are targeted by ICE in his jurisdiction. His plans include developing procedures, including requiring a warrant, in the case of a raid at a church.
The Maryland Catholic Conference, which includes the archdiocese of Baltimore, archdiocese of Washington, and the diocese of Wilmington, has been arming illegal immigrants with the legal tools to resist ICE agents or police.
At a recent gathering a local advocacy attorney provided a lesson on the rights of illegal immigrants when they are stopped by authorities.
"Immigrants have rights regardless of immigration status," the attorney said.
The lesson, designed by CLINIC (Catholic Legal Immigration Network, Inc), the largest nonprofit immigration law organization in the country, provided a "Know Your Rights" packet in 10 languages. The packet teaches illegal immigrants what to say or do if an ICE agent comes to their home.
A video distributed by Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese of Milwaukee's Refugee & Immigration Services Program instructs illegal immigrants on how to evade immigration authorities.
The 3-minute lesson provides a step-by-step plan for how to get around lawful immigration enforcement actions – from not answering the door to how to get in touch with the nearest immigration lawyer.
Catholic Charities operates under the guidance and support of the USCCB.
RESISTANCE GOES UP TO THE TOP
The Catholic Church's opposition to Trump's plans for the deportation of illegal immigrants goes up to the Church's highest office.
Pope Francis publicly slammed Trump's deportation plans, describing them as a "disgrace."
"If it is true, it will be a disgrace, because it makes the poor wretches who have nothing to pay the unpaid bill. It won't do. This is not the way to solve things," Francis said during an interview on a popular Italian talk show on the eve of Trump's inauguration.
This is not the first time the pope slammed attempts by the US to gain control of its border.
Two years ago, Francis denounced efforts to limit migration at the US-Mexico border.
In an interview with left-leaning 60 Minutes, the pontiff called out a plan to shut down a Catholic charity in Texas, suspected of alien harboring and human smuggling, as “madness.”
"That is madness. Sheer madness," Francis said. "To close the border and leave them there, that is madness."
Tom Homan, Trump's Border Czar, takes issue with what he sees as the pope's double standard on controlled borders.
"I'm a lifelong Catholic – I was born a Catholic and been through Catholic doctrine," Homan said in a recent interview. "First of all, [the pope's] got big problems there [in the Vatican]. He ought to stick to the Catholic Church and fix that."
"Second," he said, "they have a wall around the Vatican. If you illegally enter the Vatican … you'll be charged with a serious crime being jailed."
"Securing the border saves lives. When less people come, less women get raped by the cartels, less children die in the river, less Americans die of fentanyl overdoses," Homan argued.
Dr. Barbara Toth has a doctorate in rhetoric and composition from Bowling Green State University. She has taught high school in Poland and Oman and at universities in the US, China and Saudi Arabia. Her work in setting up a writing center at Princess Nourah bint Abdulrahmen University, an all-women's university in Riyadh, has been cited in American journals. Toth has published academic and non-academic articles and poems internationally.
Editor's note:
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