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EXCLUSIVE: Catholic bishops chided for sowing ‘confusion’ on deportation stance

By Eric November 16, 2025

In a recent statement, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) expressed strong opposition to mass deportations and the dehumanizing treatment of immigrants, emphasizing the need to uphold human dignity amidst a climate of fear surrounding immigration enforcement. The bishops called for an end to the rhetoric that vilifies immigrants and highlighted the distressing conditions in detention centers, where many lack access to pastoral care. They voiced their concerns about families being torn apart due to immigration policies, stating, “We are grieved when we meet parents who fear being detained when taking their children to school.” This pastoral message reflects the Church’s commitment to compassionate care for all, particularly the marginalized, and seeks to foster a more humane approach to immigration.

However, the bishops’ stance has sparked controversy within the Catholic community. The conservative advocacy group CatholicVote criticized the bishops for creating “confusion” regarding the Church’s teachings on immigration enforcement. In a report titled “Immigration Enforcement and the Christian Conscience,” CatholicVote argues that supporting strong immigration laws, including deportation, does not contradict Catholic teachings. They propose that the moral implications of scripture apply to all individuals, including those affected by crime and poverty, and assert that enforcing immigration laws is necessary to protect both immigrants and citizens. CatholicVote President Kelsey Reinhardt emphasized the need for a more nuanced discussion on immigration, advocating for the importance of lawful order in safeguarding the dignity of all individuals. This ongoing debate within the Church underscores the complexities of immigration policy and the diverse perspectives among Catholics on how best to balance compassion with law enforcement.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NVu3vMLmfjU

EXCLUSIVE:
After the U.S. Catholic bishops issued a statement opposing mass deportations, a prominent American Catholic group chided some bishops for sowing “confusion” about the church’s official stance on law enforcement and called for a “more complete conversation on
immigration
.”  
On Wednesday, the
U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops
(USCCB) issued a “special pastoral message on immigration” in which the bishops said they felt “compelled now in this environment to raise our voices in defense of God-given human dignity.”
In the message, the bishops stated unequivocally, “We oppose the indiscriminate mass deportation of people. We pray for an end to dehumanizing rhetoric and violence, whether directed at
immigrants or at law enforcement.
“We are disturbed when we see among our people a climate of fear and anxiety around questions of profiling and immigration enforcement. We are saddened by the state of contemporary debate and the vilification of immigrants. We are concerned about the conditions in detention centers and the lack of access to pastoral care.”
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They also lamented that “some
immigrants in the United States
have arbitrarily lost their legal status. We are grieved when we meet parents who fear being detained when taking their children to school and when we try to console family members who have already been separated from their loved ones.”
A day later, conservative advocacy group CatholicVote issued a report titled, “Immigration Enforcement and the Christian Conscience.”
“Despite what some Church leaders in America have indicated, a faithful Catholic can support strong and humane immigration law enforcement — by means such as physical barriers, detention and deportation — without violating the teaching of the Church,” the report states. 
While the U.S. bishops’ statement invokes the scripture verse, “whatever you did for one of these least brothers of mine, you did for me,” in reference to the plight of migrants, CatholicVote’s report states that the “implications of this passage apply to all people — including those left poor, forgotten, unemployed and the victims of crime.”
The report posits that while “weak borders and lenient law enforcement are often presented as ‘humane’ and ‘compassionate’ policies demanded by Christian love,” such policies “frequently have a terrible human toll — such as when they enrich and empower the criminal cartels, clearly harming both Americans and foreigners in the process.”
It also makes the case for deportations even in instances that lead to the separation of families, saying, “In this regard, there is no essential difference between a prison sentence for other offenses and the deportation of illegal immigrants.
“If legitimate law enforcement is disruptive to family life, the responsibility lies with those family members who broke the law.”
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The report laments that “Catholics who advocate strong but humane immigration enforcement are sometimes accused of disobeying their bishops or the pope, and even violating Church teaching.” It also says that “statements from individual Church leaders in America and abroad have also added to the confusion, particularly when they draw a moral equivalency between
President Trump’s
immigration policy and, for example, the Democratic Party’s pro-abortion platform.”
Despite this, the report posits that “properly speaking, there is no such thing as an
official
‘Catholic position’ on the practical details of immigration policy.” Instead, it frames individual Catholics’ stances on immigration enforcement as “a matter of prudential political judgment,” which it says is “an area of responsibility that belongs properly to Catholic laypersons rather than the bishops.”
CatholicVote President Kelsey Reinhardt told Fox News Digital the group “wants to foster a more complete conversation on immigration and give moral standing and freedom of conscience for Catholics and Christians who recognize a need to secure the border and the importance of the rule of law.”
Reinhardt said “pastoral accompaniment on the part of the bishops and faithful Christians, however necessary, does not exhaust the Church’s moral vocabulary.”
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“The responsibility to regulate borders for the sake of the common good is not a caveat tacked onto an otherwise humanitarian manifesto; it is an integral part of Catholic doctrine,” said Reinhardt. “This is not a secondary or peripheral concern. As we argue, it is precisely the collapse of lawful order — not merely private prejudice — that has created the conditions in which exploitation flourishes, cartels thrive, and millions of migrants are pushed into a shadow-world without legal recourse or clear prospects.
“The point, put bluntly, is this: a nation cannot honor the dignity of immigrants if it has effectively abandoned the rule of law under which immigrants might be protected.”
CatholicVote made headlines in 2024 for issuing its first political endorsement for President Donald Trump. The group’s founder,
Brian Burch
, serves as the Trump administration’s ambassador to the Vatican.
Fox News Digital reached out to the USCCB for comment but did not immediately receive a response.

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