'Diminishing America': Major evangelical group attacks Trump-backed immigration act

A major evangelical humanitarian organisation has launched an attack on a new immigration plan backed by President Trump.

World Relief has spoken out after Trump offered his support for the RAISE Act which was proposed by Republican Senators Tom Cotton and David Perdue.

The act would cut the number of legal migrants into the USA by up to 50 per cent.

Tim Breene, CEO of World Relief, has issued a strong statement criticising parts of the act and suggesting it 'diminishes [the] US'.

'The notion of severely limiting legal immigration goes against the historic American values of freedom and opportunity, he said. 'We're pro-security, pro-economy, pro-family. This bill, however, significantly hampers the reunification of families in the United States which are the building blocks of our society.'

It isn't just the provisions for Green Cards which are causing controversy, though. The act would cap the number of refugees taken in by the US to 50,000 per year. In response to that proposal, another World Relief Spokesperson, Emily Gray said, 'Limiting the refugee admissions ceiling permanently to 50,000 abdicates our responsibility to those fleeing violence and persecution.'

The strongly worded intervention is unusual because many evangelical organisations have been vocally supportive of the Trump presidency, or at least kept their counsel. Now though, World Relief, which was founded in 1944 by the National Association of Evangelicals, has broken ranks.

Yesterday, White House adviser Stephen Miller described the RAISE Act as, 'pro-American immigration reform'. That line seems to have been dismissed by World Relief.

The organisation's president also joined the intervention, saying: 'When a nation of immigrants and refugees forsakes its past, it gives up its future.

Scott Arbeiter continued: 'We cannot lose the heart of compassion that gave so many of our own grandparents hope and refuge. The world needs American leadership; America needs the dignity, beauty and ingenuity of the peoples of the world. This is not a conversation about us versus them.' 

News
Shine Your Light Christmas outreach campaign exceeded all expectations
Shine Your Light Christmas outreach campaign exceeded all expectations

300,000 Christians were involved in the various outreach events.

Most Americans don't believe faith in God is necessary to be moral
Most Americans don't believe faith in God is necessary to be moral

A record majority of Americans now say that it isn’t necessary to believe in God to be moral and have good values, but this view is primarily held by individuals who already don't believe in God, according to new data from the Pew Research Center.

Three and a half years of silence, fear, and faith: Mishal’s escape from forced detention
Three and a half years of silence, fear, and faith: Mishal’s escape from forced detention

Abducted at the age of 18, Mishal spent three and a half years in forced confinement, enduring physical torture, religious coercion, threats, humiliation, and isolation before finally escaping with her baby daughter in her arms.

Pipe organs could be extinct by 2070
Pipe organs could be extinct by 2070

The pipe organs that remain are largely unused.