Saturday, November 07, 2009 Last Update:07:14 pm ET

World|Mon, Jun. 15 2009 07:15 PM EDT

Christ Calls Us to Be Neighbors to Immigrants, Says WCC Chief

By Jennifer Gold|Christian Today Reporter

LONDON – The head of the World Council of Churches has called upon Christians to live out the core message in Jesus’ parable of the Good Samaritan and treat others as their neighbors.

The Rev. Dr. Samuel Kobia was speaking at the opening of the WCC’s conference on the response of churches to racism and other forms of discrimination and exclusion.

Pointing to the unprecedented gains of anti-immigration parties in the recent European Parliament election, Kobia warned that racism was “still alive” in the world.

He urged some 50 church leaders and theologians convening in Utrecht, in the Netherlands, to learn from the biblical concept of hospitality demonstrated in the parable of the Good Samaritan which, he said, challenged Christians to enter into "a form of intimacy with strangers and the unknown."

While the Samaritan had no obligation to help the Jew, his sworn enemy, he “acted contrary to the universal expectations and against his own cultural history and community interest,” said Kobia.

“He showed mercy in spite of it all,” he added. “The Good Samaritan showed mercy when he could have exacted rough justice.”

The conference, which ends Wednesday, marks the 40th anniversary of the WCC’s Combat Racism campaign to assist the victims of racial discrimination in different parts of the world, most prominently in South Africa under the apartheid regime.

Kobia said Christians needed to embrace people of different races and faiths.

“Christ calls us to be neighbors of immigrants, of oppressed minorities within our own nations, of all who are in need of a neighbor,” he said. “Christ calls us to be neighbors of people of other races who come to be a part of our community.

“Christ calls us to be neighbors of people of other faiths who become part of a society where Christianity is the majority.”

Kobia concluded with an appeal to Christians to oppose all systems, structures, and policies that discriminate on the basis of race, ethnicity or religion.

“We are called to reiterate our clear position that racism is a sin against God who determines the color and race of all those God creates.”

The conference, which Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands is joining, is expected to draw up strategies and networks to advocate against racism within society and the church.

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  • Sat Oct 17, 2009 6:59 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    This movement has been taken to absurdity in Minnesota. Last year when H1N1 broke out, and migrated here from Mexico, the public schools refused to educate parents about it for fear that it would raise "anti-immigrant, anti-mexican" sentiment. Good progressives they were who made this decision to not send information home in multiple languages with the children whose parents were here illegally- so as not to make them feel bad.

    out of the first 3 children deaths in Minnesota, 2 were children of mexican migrant workers. The racist absurdity of not intentionally targeting the illegal population with the information they needed to protect their children was part of this "progressive" mindset that to do so would have been mean spirited and hurt their feelings.

    Well, now that their children are dead, I bet those illegal immigrant parents are mad that nobody told them or informed them in the state of minnesota about the H1N1 virus and how deadly it could be.

    There needs to be some balance on the illegal immigrant issue. The WCC and the NAE both fail to realize the true life and death implications of some of the positions they are advocating and how they inform the policy that is set by government and church. That is neither justice, nor loving the neighbor, nor following Christ's mandate for the "other." Sometimes, in the case of how Minnesota failed to warn illegal immigrants of the problem, some might construe this radically progressive posturing as contributing in some significant ways to death, poverty, family instability, and a new kind of racism that would rather let illegal immigrants die than not be seen as a radically liberal ultra politically correct good progressive.

  • Sun Jun 21, 2009 1:48 am Agree: 1   Disagree: 0

    "Actually, we are called to be neighbors with everyone not just immigrants . . . This call to be a good Samaritan should not be taken to mean that we should neglect our immigration policies; immigrants must enter our country legally like everyone else . . ."

    So true. My parents were immigrants and came through Ellis Island with tags on their coats and assimilated learning our language and customs--not them expecting others to learn their language and customs. And they were subject to discrimination NINA (No Irish Need Apply) in jobs; however I have never forgotten coming home from school and telling my mom that the kids were making fun of me, calling me dirty names, etc. - Did she complain--no! She said, "take all of that and then some--it will help you become a strong adult because life is not easy.
    Today, everyone gets a lawyer, goes to court, or complains to the ACLU (wimps that they are) and we've become a Matriarchal society. One time I told my mom that a nun (my teacher) had hit me; like a good mom she marched me up to school and said, "Did you hit my son?"
    The nun said, "I sure did. Did you want to know why?" She whispered in mom's ear. My mother "whacked" me and said, "Next time, sister. Smack him three times harder."
    Today we get, "Oh my good little boy wouldn't do such a thing, etc." [If it weren't for the good nuns I would be in my thirtieth year of prison today]

    Also, there are thousands of drug dealers and pimps (bringing young innocent girls to a life of reborn slavery in this great land of ours) and terrorists leaking through our borders both the Mexican and Canadian sides (even learning Spanish to not look like terrorists)

  • Tue Jun 16, 2009 11:34 pm Agree: 5   Disagree: 5

    Flagged as inappropriate. show Actually, God told us to be good Samaritans only to people that believe in him, are male and heterosexual. Everyone else, we stone to death and send to hell. hide

  • Tue Jun 16, 2009 3:57 pm Agree: 6   Disagree: 2

    Actually, we are called to be neighbors with everyone not just immigrants . . . This call to be a good Samaritan should not be taken to mean that we should neglect our immigration policies; immigrants must enter our country legally like everyone else . . .

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