The fastest growing ethnic group
in United Methodism are Spanish-speaking Methodists. North Alabama Methodists
have invested huge resources in establishing nearly a dozen new congregations
in the past few years. These new churches have become spiritual dynamos of our
conference, leading our conference in baptisms and professions of faith – until
HB56, our state’s notorious immigration law.
Though almost all of our
fledgling United Methodist Christians were documented, in just two months we
saw our congregations decimated and all of our prayerful work destroyed. Not
only did nearly all Spanish-speaking Methodists have an undocumented person in
their home or nearby but also the law -- designed (in the words of one of its
authors) to tell undocumented people to get out of Alabama -- created a climate
of fear.
In a discussion between me and
Sen. Scott Beason on the ultra-conservative “Laura Ingraham Show,” even Ms.
Ingraham called this law a heinous attack upon the free exercise of religion,
and an “embarrassment,” and chided Beason. (Fortunately, District Judge
Blackburn struck down the part of the law that caused so many in the church
immediate concern.)
The Reverend Dr. Thomas Muhomba
(himself a thoroughly documented immigrant to our country, along with six other
leading North Alabama pastors), who heads our ethnic ministries, has given us a
frightening report of the effects of HB56. Rev. Bart Tau tells us that on the
first of September, there was a mass exodus of children out of schools in his
area. While many of the children were citizens, their parents were not. One
family, whose daughter is an honor student at a Methodist college in Florida,
cannot come home because she is undocumented and fears traveling in Alabama.
Bart says that many parents have left Alabama fearing deportation that would
require them to abandon their children, making them wards of the state.
Rev. Tau says, “Our churches need
to remind our Hispanic brothers and sisters of our Lord’s love and care for
them as His children in this very scary time. For those that decide they must
leave, we can help them to deal with the details of a move and transition. We
can pick them up and bring them to church, so they don’t have to drive and risk
arrest. We can help them afford legal counsel when they need it, and we can
help them by taking care of their kids if they are detained. A simple Power of
Attorney can give a legal resident or citizen the ability to manage the affairs
of a person who is separated from their family and their possessions. We need
to show our love and support by standing beside our Latino families in a very
tangible way.”
At Riverchase, an established
congregation that has led the way in birthing and partnering with an Hispanic
congregation, Rev. Fernando Del Castillo (who despite our expensive legal
efforts was deported a few years ago, my first experience with difficult
immigration laws) states that HB56 fostered anxiety, fear, and panic among his
people . “Four of our families have already moved to different states, leaving
behind businesses, jobs, houses, and dreams.”
In Huntsville at Iglesia de la
Communidad, Rev. Roblero Macedonio’s church reports that his congregation lost
ten families who had to move to other states. Macedonio says that though his
congregation has all but disappeared, he vows to “continue preaching the word
and growing more disciples for the transformation of the world.”
By the way, nearly everyone I spoke to asked us to pray for the law enforcement officials who have been forced by our government to attempt to enforce the law. They are hopeful that the lawmakers will listen to the pleas of the business groups, school leaders, and police and sheriffs who have pled for revisions in the law.
And that’s just what we pray for too. Our Governor and legislators have admitted that the law needs change and they have promised that they would make changes in the law this legislative season that begins this week. We fully understand that when the law was devised, not all of them could know the nefarious implications of the law upon our businesses and schools.
I hope that by pointing to the effect of this law upon our churches, the lawmakers will consider the well-being of all of our people, particularly those who are attempting to practice the Christian faith in Alabama.
By the way, nearly everyone I spoke to asked us to pray for the law enforcement officials who have been forced by our government to attempt to enforce the law. They are hopeful that the lawmakers will listen to the pleas of the business groups, school leaders, and police and sheriffs who have pled for revisions in the law.
And that’s just what we pray for too. Our Governor and legislators have admitted that the law needs change and they have promised that they would make changes in the law this legislative season that begins this week. We fully understand that when the law was devised, not all of them could know the nefarious implications of the law upon our businesses and schools.
I hope that by pointing to the effect of this law upon our churches, the lawmakers will consider the well-being of all of our people, particularly those who are attempting to practice the Christian faith in Alabama.
Will Willimon
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