As pastoral leaders of
the Catholic Church in Florida, we are privileged to witness the vibrant,
faith-filled role immigrants play in building up the one universal Body of
Christ. Across Florida, the contributions of immigrants in our churches,
our schools, our communities and our families are a source of great hope
and promise to us all.
We also witness the
damage to human dignity and to our common good caused by our nation’s
broken immigration system. Every day, our pastoral staffs minister to
fearful and anxious people, who have been intimidated and frequently
defrauded, because of their immigration status. Thousands of our
parishioners are separated from immediate family members for years and
even decades because of backlogs in the family reunification program.
As Catholics, our
faith informs us that each of us has a promise to keep to our immigrant
brothers and sisters as well – the promise to work for just immigration
policies that promote families and honor human dignity. This is the goal
of “Justice for Immigrants: Together on the Journey of Hope” a campaign of
the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops.
Immigration reform is
not merely a political or policy decision. It is a profoundly moral issue.
The measure of a just society is how it treats its weakest and most
vulnerable members. Scripture informs us of the moral imperative to act
with justice toward immigrants: “You shall treat the stranger who resides
with you no differently than the natives born among you, have the same
love for him as for yourself; for you too were once strangers in the land
of Egypt” (Lv 19:33-34).
Our 11 million
brothers and sisters in Christ living in this country without legal
immigration status, including as many as 850,000 in Florida, suffer
multiple indignities: divided families, exploitative working conditions,
and lives vulnerable to fraud, crime, discrimination and violence. Let
us be clear – we do not endorse illegal immigration. The current
system is profoundly broken, separates families and facilitates
exploitation. We need to reform this broken system to create avenues for
legal immigration, to bring people out of the shadows and enable
them to enjoy fully the freedom and individual rights on which this
country was founded. We need an earned legalization provision. We will
not resolve the current problem with proposals that create an indefinite
and temporary status, leading to a permanent second class status.
The common good is a
fundamental and permanent principle of our Catholic social teaching. In
this situation, the common good requires laws that enable employers and
workers to progress. American employers need adequate legal means for
hiring manual laborers. A temporary worker program can help employers find
adequate labor, so long as it has appropriate limits and safeguards to
protect both American and visiting workers. Further, to avoid creating a
two-tiered society, with visiting workers who enjoy fewer rights and
opportunities than the rest of our community--a condition which harms both
those workers and the American-born workers who compete for jobs with
them--any temporary worker program should offer a path to permanent
residency. We also support changes to the family-based immigration system
to reduce the interminable waiting times for family reunification.
We oppose proposals
that focus on failed policies, emphasizing enforcement over reform. These
policies have proven ineffective at sealing our borders, but they are very
effective at punishing poor people who seek a dignified life for their
families. We endorse security policies that target the real threats to
our peace, rather than pushing further into the shadows the very workers
who are strengthening and building our country.
Undocumented status
should not be a crime, and bishops, priests, religious sisters,
parishioners, and social workers must be able to carry out our faith
commitment to our neighbors without fear of breaking the law. Our common
faith in Jesus Christ moves us to search for ways that favor a spirit of
solidarity. It is a faith that transcends borders and bids us to overcome
all forms of discrimination and violence so that we may build
relationships that are just and loving.
We ask all Floridians
and particularly every Catholic in our state to become informed about the
moral imperative for just and comprehensive immigration reform. We urge
all people of good will to put aside the myths and misinformation that
keep us from hearing our brother and sister immigrants’ cries for
justice. The campaign website
www.justiceforimmigrants.org examines the issues – economic, social
and political—and references the texts of Scripture and Catholic social
teaching that call each of us to action.
In this season of
Lent, we remember our Savior, born into poverty, whose parents were
refugees in the land of Egypt, who extolled the good in the Samaritan and
the foreigner, who died on the cross for every human person. Each of us,
as brothers and sisters in Christ, has a role to play. We call on all
Catholics to become informed about these issues by visiting the Justice
for Immigrants web site, pray and take action to build the Kingdom of God
among us, for all of us, today.
|
Archbishop John C.
Favalora
Archdiocese of Miami |
Bishop John J. Nevins
Diocese of Venice |
Bishop John H. Ricard,
SSJ
Diocese of Pensacola/Tallahassee |
|
Bishop Robert N. Lynch
Diocese of St. Petersburg |
Bishop Victor Galeone
Diocese of St. Augustine |
Bishop Gerald M.
Barbarito, JCL
Diocese of Palm Beach |
|
Bishop Thomas G. Wenski
Diocese of Orlando |
Auxiliary Bishop Felipe
J. Estévez
Archdiocese of Miami |
Auxiliary Bishop John
G. Noonan
Archdiocese of Miami |
The Florida Catholic Conference
201 W. Park
Avenue
* Tallahassee, FL * 32301-7715
Phone (850) 222-3803 * Fax (850) 681-9548