Immigration Crackdown Creates Fault Lines Among Baptists [View all]
Source: New York Times
Dec. 21, 2025 Updated 4:20 p.m. ET
When federal agents descended on Louisiana this month to pursue their aggressive deportation campaign, a group of Roman Catholic priests privately brought the Eucharist to the homes of immigrants too worried to step outside. But Lewis Richerson, the pastor of Woodlawn Baptist Church in Baton Rouge, planned to take an opposite approach.
I would not knowingly extend communion to an illegal immigrant who is visiting our church, he said. That person would be in sin by being in this country illegally, and Christians should obey the law of the land. Instead, the main way he would minister to them would be to help them submit themselves to the authorities, he said. They should absolutely deport themselves.
Mr. Richersons church is part of the Southern Baptist Convention, the largest Protestant denomination in the United States, with about 12.7 million members. For years, the denomination has supported immigration reforms, especially given its extensive missionary work and theological commitments to helping the least of these, as Jesus says in the gospel of Matthew.
But while Catholic bishops this year have repeatedly rebuked the Trump administration over its deportation actions, Southern Baptists are contending with an increasingly loud contingent in their ranks that, like Mr. Richerson, supports the immigration crackdown. Even as many rank-and-file churches continue to support immigrant ministries, signs of fracture are emerging.
Read more: https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/21/us/southern-baptists-immigration-trump.html
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