December 7, 2006 By Elliott Wright
TUCSON, Ariz. – Concern for people migrating across political borders is motivating
increasing mission collaboration between The United Methodist Church in the United
States and the Methodist Church of Mexico. Simultaneously,
United Methodist general agencies are stepping up their collective attention to
U.S. immigration policy and legislation. Bishops and
others from annual (regional) conferences north and south of the U.S.-Mexican
border met Dec. 1-2 in Tucson to formalize what will be called the Methodist Border
Mission Network. It was the third meeting of its kind in the last 15 months. The
day before, meeting in Phoenix, representatives from most of the general agencies
and the denomination's Council of Bishops set up an Interagency Task Force on
Immigration, a possibility projected by the church's legislating General Conference
six years ago. This panel will focus on federal, state
and local immigration policy and on education about immigration issues within
the denomination. The emphasis is on just immigrant policy and comprehensive U.S.
immigration reform legislation. Bishop Minerva Carcaño
of Phoenix convened the interagency group as chairperson of an immigration committee
of the Council of Bishops. In addition, as host bishop, she presided at the meeting
that set up the border mission group. Most of the participants in the interagency
group also attended the Tucson sessions to make presentations on existing programs
dealing with immigrants. Cooperative work between U.S.-Mexican
border conferences is not new, but it has taken on new urgency as, acting under
current laws, the United States has slowed the flow of undocumented people moving
north from Mexico and Central America. Those who do cross are often in dire need
of human necessities. More and more people are being stranded along the southern
border, and increasing numbers are being jailed or deported by the United States
with no resources to return to their places of origin. Bishops
or their delegates from three Mexican and four U.S. annual conferences began meeting
in 2005 to consider mutual concerns related to immigration. The series of meetings
were made possible by a grant from the United Methodist Board of Global Ministries.
Bishop Joel N. Martínez of San Antonio, the board's president, has strongly promoted
the initiative. World without borders The
new bi-national group envisions a time when God's people engage in mission in
a world without borders. Its mission is to "manifest our Wesleyan heritage in
cross border ministries through mutually empowering collaboration between the
Methodist Church of Mexico and The United Methodist Church." "This
new border mission network will begin with the acute matter of immigration, but
we want to anticipate an expanded agenda in the future," Martínez said. He
noted that his conference and others along the northern border have sustained
relations with corresponding Mexican Methodist conferences to the south. United
Methodist Volunteers in Mission form one of the major means of interaction. The
Rev. Felipe Ruiz, who heads the immigration ministry of the Mexican church, said
that 82 percent of the people crossing the border into the United States are from
Mexico, with Hondurans, Salvadorians and Brazilians forming the next largest groups.
Saving lives A major
concern at both the border consultation and the interagency meeting was how the
churches serve acute human needs and work to prevent the loss of life among migrants.
Both gatherings acknowledge that migration – the movement of people – is a global
reality challenging the churches. Considerable attention
in Tucson focused on the different ways in which the U.S. and Mexican churches
experience the current immigration situation. In the
United States, the concern is that of hospitality and life-saving services. In
Mexico, the ministry opportunities arise in relation to three groups: Central
Americans passing through on the way to the border, the concentration of hopeful
crossers along the border, and those being deported by the United States. Many
people are being assisted by the Methodist Aid Center for Migrants, sponsored
by the church in Mexico. 700-mile wall Last
September, the Council of Bishops of the Methodist Church of Mexico adopted a
resolution questioning certain aspects of current U.S. immigration policy. The
action questioned the wisdom of the proposal to build a wall along 700 miles of
the 2,000-mile border. Such a wall, the bishops said, "will result in more immigrants
dying in their attempt to enter the USA." Directors of the Board of Global Ministries
endorsed this perspective in a resolution passed in October. Bishop
Milton Velasco Legorreta of Chihuahua and Bishop Jaime Vazquez Olmena of San Ysidro
took part in the Tucson deliberations. United Methodists were represented by the
Desert Southwest, Southwest Texas, California-Pacific and New Mexico Annual conferences.
United Methodist agencies and organizations taking part
in the Interagency Task Force on Immigration include the Council of Bishops; Board
of Church and Society; Board of Discipleship; Board of Global Ministries and its
United Methodist Committee on Relief and Women's Division; Commission on Religion
and Race; Commission on Christian Unity and Interreligious Concerns; General Council
on Finance and Administration; and the National Plan for Hispanic and Latino Ministries.
Programs highlighted included UMCOR's Justice for Our
Neighbors, which sponsors 22 congregation-based legal clinics for immigrants in
the United States, and the educational work of United Methodist Women on migration-related
concerns. United Methodist News Service Elliott
Wright is the information officer of the United Methodist Board of Global Ministries. |