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A Pastor's Testimony of Redemption May End in Deportation

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100312-walterPastor Walter is experiencing firsthand the effects of a broken immigration system. Walter migrated to the United States from Colombia when he was young, petitioned by his parents, who were Lawful Permanent Residents. Walter's parents wanted for their son to enjoy the opportunities that the United States had to offer.

As a young man, though, Walter fell into the wrong crowd of friends. On one occasion, in 1992, a friend offered Walter what he should have known was too good to be true: a large sum of money for himself if he'd make a discreet commercial exchange with a stranger in downtown Chicago. Walter made a bad decision -- and he ended up convicted of a crime and imprisoned for two years.

After serving his time and being released from jail, though, Walter's life experienced a radical turn-around. Drawn to a local church by a particularly notable girl in the choir -- Andrea, now his wife -- Walter realized his own need for redemption. Walter accepted Christ in 1995, putting his past behind him. "Thanks to God and his mercy, I am now a new creation," Walter says, citing the apostle Paul.

In 2007, Walter and Andrea started a church on the north side of Chicago, and it has grown steadily as it ministers to Spanish-speaking people from throughout the region. Given his own testimony, Walter counts it a privilege to be able to share with others -- especially those who have lost their way -- the hope that he has found in Christ. "I am a witness that Christ changes lives," Walter testifies.

While he has walked through immigration challenges with members of his church -- a few years ago, a good friend was deported and separated from his family -- Walter never imagined that he would have to experience these trials himself. After all, he had come to the United States lawfully, with a green card, and his wife and children, as well as his parents and siblings, are all citizens. Last October, however, Walter traveled to his home country of Colombia for a vacation. Upon his return to the U.S. in November, Walter presented his green card and his passport, eager to be at home in Chicago with Andrea and his two children, Johanan (12) and Faith (10). The immigration agents at the airport in Miami, however, informed him that there was a problem: His crime, committed in 1992, for which he had satisfactorily served his criminal sentence, rendered him deportable.

After several hours of detention, Walter was allowed to return to Chicago, but the authorities kept his green card -- and informed him that he would need to report to immigration court in Chicago in January, where a judge will determine if he would be allowed to stay or required to leave.

While Walter has a strong faith in God's provision, he is naturally anxious about his upcoming court date. He has spent thousands of dollars to hire an immigration attorney, but there is no guarantee that he will be successful. If deported, his wife and kids will face a terrible decision: leave their homeland, and the kids' schools, and their church, to go to an entirely foreign country, or face indefinite separation from their husband and father. The growing church, likewise, will be without its pastor.

Walter recognizes that he made a serious mistake 15 years ago, but he knows that God has forgiven him, and he served his time. Unfortunately, Walter is one of thousands who have found that the U.S. immigration system is neither forgiving nor sensible. As one of many evangelical Christians in the United States who faces separation from his family under the current system, Walter yearns to see the church in the U.S. "raise its voice" in favor of just, compassionate, and sensible reforms to the U.S. immigration system.

Matthew Soerens is the co-author of Welcoming the Stranger: Justice, Compassion, & Truth in the Immigration Debate (InterVarsity Press, 2009). He lives in suburban Chicago in an intentional community called Parkside.

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This account is taken from Voices of Immigration, a campaign of Christians for Comprehensive Immigration Reform (CCIR) aimed at highlighting the stories of immigrants in our country. Believing that every person is made in the image of God, we seek to restore the human element to the conversation around immigration reform. Each day this week a new story will be highlighted on God's Politics, with additional ones posted throughout March at CCIR's Web site: www.faithandimmigration.org.

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by: NMRod

03-14-2010 @ 4:20am

It's a misunderstanding. The Republican majority passed a series of laws that have grown ever more draconian in their treatment of lawful immigrants, under the guise of cracking down on undocumented (illegal) immigrants, which is more palatable to the conscience than admitting outright racism aimed at all immigrants.

Even if you have lived here eighty years, arriving in the USA even one day after birth, if you are not a citizen, there is no offense that cannot result in deportation and this includes any offense that COULD have resulted in incarceration for a year, even if the sentence is suspended or the penalty actually incurred only a small fine or a day or hour in jail, even if it occurred many years before.

Truly, America has transformed itself over the last decades into a punitive, draconian nation that has an incarceration rate many times of any other nation - including even the past pariah states of South Africa and the Soviet Union. America has 4 per cent of the world's population, but fully 25% of the world's incarcerated population. Huge swathes of the population have been permanently disenfranchised from voting. In some areas, a majority of inhabitants cannot vote or ever obtain any government benefit. Fully 47 million Americans have a record.

This is not a compassionate nation. It likes to THINK it is compassionate, but even many of its charities are either self-serving vehicles for wealthy interests, are PR stunts or outright frauds. It loves to be SEEN as giving. Foreign aid itself is mostly given so that well-connected corporations - mostly munitions manufacturers - can sell their weapons and be subsidized. Instead of compassion, conflict and death, always profitable to such ventures, are fomented as good economic policy.

I submit that the callousness not only to the foreigners in our midst, but the growing indifference to the suffering of our own citizenry being relentlessly pushed to the economic bottom as elites profit mightily, can be laid at the feet of the elites' relentless appetite for empire. Empire requires harsh measures to be used against the occupied, who naturally don't like to be dominated by outsiders, even as we don't, in order to maintain empire. When we steel our resolve to do "whatever it takes" regardless of issues of human rights, justice or even ignoring loss of innocent lives as mere "collateral damage," then our hearts harden to humanity in general, even our own. There is no fundamental difference between "us" and "them" so reviling "them" results in a general disparagement of the humanity in our midst - "neighbor" as well as the "enemy" Jesus commanded us to love.

Our hearts grow ever colder.

by: ckgmail

03-12-2010 @ 11:32pm

My understanding of the law (possibly a misunderstanding) is that because of Pastor Walter's criminal activity in the distant past he MAY be deported, not that he MUST be. I pray for an understanding heart of flesh in the immigration judge who hears his case. The family, the church, the community, the nation would be ill-served by his deportation. Let compassionate common sense rule.

by: ckgmail

03-14-2010 @ 11:54am

Sojourner's verse of the day for March 12:

When an alien resides with you in your land, you shall not oppress the alien. The alien who resides with you shall be to you as the citizen among you; you shall love the alien as yourself, for you were aliens in the land of Egypt: I am the Lord your God.

- Leviticus 19:33-34

by: Revgabel

05-17-2010 @ 1:08am

You need to learn what alien that was being referenced to. It an alien who came to the land legally and was living by the law. They earned the right to be treaded as a citizen.

I do believe that our laws need to be changed but they have to be respected.

As to "America has 4 per cent of the world's population, but fully 25% of the world's incarcerated population." a high percentage are aliens. Other countries have harsher laws that cause people to think twice before braking a law. They do not give 3 meals a day, free education, color t.v. and such to the law breakers.

We need to work together in finding an answer instead of blaming everyone else.

by: Revgabel

05-17-2010 @ 1:08am

You need to learn what alien that was being referenced to. It an alien who came to the land legally and was living by the law. They earned the right to be treaded as a citizen.

I do believe that our laws need to be changed but they have to be respected.

As to "America has 4 per cent of the world's population, but fully 25% of the world's incarcerated population." a high percentage are aliens. Other countries have harsher laws that cause people to think twice before braking a law. They do not give 3 meals a day, free education, color t.v. and such to the law breakers.

We need to work together in finding an answer instead of blaming everyone else.

by: Revgabel

05-17-2010 @ 1:08am

You need to learn what alien that was being referenced to. It an alien who came to the land legally and was living by the law. They earned the right to be treaded as a citizen.

I do believe that our laws need to be changed but they have to be respected.

As to "America has 4 per cent of the world's population, but fully 25% of the world's incarcerated population." a high percentage are aliens. Other countries have harsher laws that cause people to think twice before braking a law. They do not give 3 meals a day, free education, color t.v. and such to the law breakers.

We need to work together in finding an answer instead of blaming everyone else.

by: ckgmail

03-14-2010 @ 1:54pm

Sojourner's verse of the day for March 12:

When an alien resides with you in your land, you shall not oppress the alien. The alien who resides with you shall be to you as the citizen among you; you shall love the alien as yourself, for you were aliens in the land of Egypt: I am the Lord your God.

- Leviticus 19:33-34

by: NMRod

03-14-2010 @ 4:20am

It's a misunderstanding. The Republican majority passed a series of laws that have grown ever more draconian in their treatment of lawful immigrants, under the guise of cracking down on undocumented (illegal) immigrants, which is more palatable to the conscience than admitting outright racism aimed at all immigrants.

Even if you have lived here eighty years, arriving in the USA even one day after birth, if you are not a citizen, there is no offense that cannot result in deportation and this includes any offense that COULD have resulted in incarceration for a year, even if the sentence is suspended or the penalty actually incurred only a small fine or a day or hour in jail, even if it occurred many years before.

Truly, America has transformed itself over the last decades into a punitive, draconian nation that has an incarceration rate many times of any other nation - including even the past pariah states of South Africa and the Soviet Union. America has 4 per cent of the world's population, but fully 25% of the world's incarcerated population. Huge swathes of the population have been permanently disenfranchised from voting. In some areas, a majority of inhabitants cannot vote or ever obtain any government benefit. Fully 47 million Americans have a record.

This is not a compassionate nation. It likes to THINK it is compassionate, but even many of its charities are either self-serving vehicles for wealthy interests, are PR stunts or outright frauds. It loves to be SEEN as giving. Foreign aid itself is mostly given so that well-connected corporations - mostly munitions manufacturers - can sell their weapons and be subsidized. Instead of compassion, conflict and death, always profitable to such ventures, are fomented as good economic policy.

I submit that the callousness not only to the foreigners in our midst, but the growing indifference to the suffering of our own citizenry being relentlessly pushed to the economic bottom as elites profit mightily, can be laid at the feet of the elites' relentless appetite for empire. Empire requires harsh measures to be used against the occupied, who naturally don't like to be dominated by outsiders, even as we don't, in order to maintain empire. When we steel our resolve to do "whatever it takes" regardless of issues of human rights, justice or even ignoring loss of innocent lives as mere "collateral damage," then our hearts harden to humanity in general, even our own. There is no fundamental difference between "us" and "them" so reviling "them" results in a general disparagement of the humanity in our midst - "neighbor" as well as the "enemy" Jesus commanded us to love.

Our hearts grow ever colder.

by: ckgmail

03-12-2010 @ 11:32pm

My understanding of the law (possibly a misunderstanding) is that because of Pastor Walter's criminal activity in the distant past he MAY be deported, not that he MUST be. I pray for an understanding heart of flesh in the immigration judge who hears his case. The family, the church, the community, the nation would be ill-served by his deportation. Let compassionate common sense rule.

by: ckgmail

03-14-2010 @ 11:54am

Sojourner's verse of the day for March 12:

When an alien resides with you in your land, you shall not oppress the alien. The alien who resides with you shall be to you as the citizen among you; you shall love the alien as yourself, for you were aliens in the land of Egypt: I am the Lord your God.

- Leviticus 19:33-34

by: ckgmail

03-14-2010 @ 1:54pm

Sojourner's verse of the day for March 12:

When an alien resides with you in your land, you shall not oppress the alien. The alien who resides with you shall be to you as the citizen among you; you shall love the alien as yourself, for you were aliens in the land of Egypt: I am the Lord your God.

- Leviticus 19:33-34

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by: ckgmail

03-12-2010 @ 11:32pm

My understanding of the law (possibly a misunderstanding) is that because of Pastor Walter's criminal activity in the distant past he MAY be deported, not that he MUST be. I pray for an understanding heart of flesh in the immigration judge who hears his case. The family, the church, the community, the nation would be ill-served by his deportation. Let compassionate common sense rule.

by: ckgmail

03-12-2010 @ 11:32pm

My understanding of the law (possibly a misunderstanding) is that because of Pastor Walter's criminal activity in the distant past he MAY be deported, not that he MUST be. I pray for an understanding heart of flesh in the immigration judge who hears his case. The family, the church, the community, the nation would be ill-served by his deportation. Let compassionate common sense rule.

by: NMRod

03-14-2010 @ 4:20am

It's a misunderstanding. The Republican majority passed a series of laws that have grown ever more draconian in their treatment of lawful immigrants, under the guise of cracking down on undocumented (illegal) immigrants, which is more palatable to the conscience than admitting outright racism aimed at all immigrants.

Even if you have lived here eighty years, arriving in the USA even one day after birth, if you are not a citizen, there is no offense that cannot result in deportation and this includes any offense that COULD have resulted in incarceration for a year, even if the sentence is suspended or the penalty actually incurred only a small fine or a day or hour in jail, even if it occurred many years before.

Truly, America has transformed itself over the last decades into a punitive, draconian nation that has an incarceration rate many times of any other nation - including even the past pariah states of South Africa and the Soviet Union. America has 4 per cent of the world's population, but fully 25% of the world's incarcerated population. Huge swathes of the population have been permanently disenfranchised from voting. In some areas, a majority of inhabitants cannot vote or ever obtain any government benefit. Fully 47 million Americans have a record.

This is not a compassionate nation. It likes to THINK it is compassionate, but even many of its charities are either self-serving vehicles for wealthy interests, are PR stunts or outright frauds. It loves to be SEEN as giving. Foreign aid itself is mostly given so that well-connected corporations - mostly munitions manufacturers - can sell their weapons and be subsidized. Instead of compassion, conflict and death, always profitable to such ventures, are fomented as good economic policy.

I submit that the callousness not only to the foreigners in our midst, but the growing indifference to the suffering of our own citizenry being relentlessly pushed to the economic bottom as elites profit mightily, can be laid at the feet of the elites' relentless appetite for empire. Empire requires harsh measures to be used against the occupied, who naturally don't like to be dominated by outsiders, even as we don't, in order to maintain empire. When we steel our resolve to do "whatever it takes" regardless of issues of human rights, justice or even ignoring loss of innocent lives as mere "collateral damage," then our hearts harden to humanity in general, even our own. There is no fundamental difference between "us" and "them" so reviling "them" results in a general disparagement of the humanity in our midst - "neighbor" as well as the "enemy" Jesus commanded us to love.

Our hearts grow ever colder.

by: NMRod

03-14-2010 @ 4:20am

It's a misunderstanding. The Republican majority passed a series of laws that have grown ever more draconian in their treatment of lawful immigrants, under the guise of cracking down on undocumented (illegal) immigrants, which is more palatable to the conscience than admitting outright racism aimed at all immigrants.

Even if you have lived here eighty years, arriving in the USA even one day after birth, if you are not a citizen, there is no offense that cannot result in deportation and this includes any offense that COULD have resulted in incarceration for a year, even if the sentence is suspended or the penalty actually incurred only a small fine or a day or hour in jail, even if it occurred many years before.

Truly, America has transformed itself over the last decades into a punitive, draconian nation that has an incarceration rate many times of any other nation - including even the past pariah states of South Africa and the Soviet Union. America has 4 per cent of the world's population, but fully 25% of the world's incarcerated population. Huge swathes of the population have been permanently disenfranchised from voting. In some areas, a majority of inhabitants cannot vote or ever obtain any government benefit. Fully 47 million Americans have a record.

This is not a compassionate nation. It likes to THINK it is compassionate, but even many of its charities are either self-serving vehicles for wealthy interests, are PR stunts or outright frauds. It loves to be SEEN as giving. Foreign aid itself is mostly given so that well-connected corporations - mostly munitions manufacturers - can sell their weapons and be subsidized. Instead of compassion, conflict and death, always profitable to such ventures, are fomented as good economic policy.

I submit that the callousness not only to the foreigners in our midst, but the growing indifference to the suffering of our own citizenry being relentlessly pushed to the economic bottom as elites profit mightily, can be laid at the feet of the elites' relentless appetite for empire. Empire requires harsh measures to be used against the occupied, who naturally don't like to be dominated by outsiders, even as we don't, in order to maintain empire. When we steel our resolve to do "whatever it takes" regardless of issues of human rights, justice or even ignoring loss of innocent lives as mere "collateral damage," then our hearts harden to humanity in general, even our own. There is no fundamental difference between "us" and "them" so reviling "them" results in a general disparagement of the humanity in our midst - "neighbor" as well as the "enemy" Jesus commanded us to love.

Our hearts grow ever colder.

by: ckgmail

03-14-2010 @ 11:54am

Sojourner's verse of the day for March 12:

When an alien resides with you in your land, you shall not oppress the alien. The alien who resides with you shall be to you as the citizen among you; you shall love the alien as yourself, for you were aliens in the land of Egypt: I am the Lord your God.

- Leviticus 19:33-34

by: ckgmail

03-14-2010 @ 11:54am

Sojourner's verse of the day for March 12:

When an alien resides with you in your land, you shall not oppress the alien. The alien who resides with you shall be to you as the citizen among you; you shall love the alien as yourself, for you were aliens in the land of Egypt: I am the Lord your God.

- Leviticus 19:33-34

by: ckgmail

03-14-2010 @ 1:54pm

Sojourner's verse of the day for March 12:

When an alien resides with you in your land, you shall not oppress the alien. The alien who resides with you shall be to you as the citizen among you; you shall love the alien as yourself, for you were aliens in the land of Egypt: I am the Lord your God.

- Leviticus 19:33-34

by: ckgmail

03-14-2010 @ 1:54pm

Sojourner's verse of the day for March 12:

When an alien resides with you in your land, you shall not oppress the alien. The alien who resides with you shall be to you as the citizen among you; you shall love the alien as yourself, for you were aliens in the land of Egypt: I am the Lord your God.

- Leviticus 19:33-34

by: Revgabel

05-17-2010 @ 1:08am

You need to learn what alien that was being referenced to. It an alien who came to the land legally and was living by the law. They earned the right to be treaded as a citizen.

I do believe that our laws need to be changed but they have to be respected.

As to "America has 4 per cent of the world's population, but fully 25% of the world's incarcerated population." a high percentage are aliens. Other countries have harsher laws that cause people to think twice before braking a law. They do not give 3 meals a day, free education, color t.v. and such to the law breakers.

We need to work together in finding an answer instead of blaming everyone else.

by: Revgabel

05-17-2010 @ 1:08am

You need to learn what alien that was being referenced to. It an alien who came to the land legally and was living by the law. They earned the right to be treaded as a citizen.

I do believe that our laws need to be changed but they have to be respected.

As to "America has 4 per cent of the world's population, but fully 25% of the world's incarcerated population." a high percentage are aliens. Other countries have harsher laws that cause people to think twice before braking a law. They do not give 3 meals a day, free education, color t.v. and such to the law breakers.

We need to work together in finding an answer instead of blaming everyone else.

by: Revgabel

05-17-2010 @ 1:08am

You need to learn what alien that was being referenced to. It an alien who came to the land legally and was living by the law. They earned the right to be treaded as a citizen.

I do believe that our laws need to be changed but they have to be respected.

As to "America has 4 per cent of the world's population, but fully 25% of the world's incarcerated population." a high percentage are aliens. Other countries have harsher laws that cause people to think twice before braking a law. They do not give 3 meals a day, free education, color t.v. and such to the law breakers.

We need to work together in finding an answer instead of blaming everyone else.