• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
Christian News Now

Christian News Now

News for the Thinking Christian

  • Home
  • U.S.
  • World
  • Church
  • Faith
  • Tech & Science
  • Family
  • Entertainment
  • Sports

Lutherans Ask Trump Administration to Admit More Refugees as Deadline Looms

September 29, 2020 by Staff

by Emily McFarlan Miller

(RNS) — Days before the deadline for the federal government to set its annual limit on the number of refugees that can be admitted to the United States, the Trump administration has not yet proposed that number, according to Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service, the largest faith-based organization in the U.S. dedicated to serving immigrants.

If a new number isn’t set by Wednesday (Sept. 30), no refugees will be admitted to the U.S. until the Trump administration’s determination of the limit is made.

More than 200 clergy of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, the country’s largest Lutheran denomination, are asking the administration to raise that number to at least 95,000 in the 2021 fiscal year, which begins in October.

Meanwhile, of the 18,000 refugees approved by the administration for the current fiscal year, a historic low, only 10,845 have been settled in the U.S. 

“Our nation’s once pristine reputation as a place of refuge for the oppressed and persecuted of all faiths has been gravely damaged,” LIRS President and CEO Krish O’Mara Vignarajah said in a written statement.

Vignarajah, a former refugee from Sri Lanka, said she questioned if her family would be welcomed to America today “were we fleeing the ethnic and religious persecution that drove us from our home.”

In 2019, Trump set the refugee ceiling at 30,000 people. His first year in office, it was 45,000.

At the time, each determination was the lowest number of admissions a president had set since the refugee resettlement program started in the 1980s.

As of the end of 2019, about 79.5 million people had been forcibly displaced from their homes, or about 1% of the world’s population. Among those, 26 million were considered refugees, according to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees.

The work of helping refugees find a home in America largely is done by faith-based organizations. Of the nine groups authorized by the U.S. government to resettle refugees, six claim a religious affiliation: LIRS, World Relief, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, Church World Service, HIAS (founded as the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society) and Episcopal Migration Ministries.

Last week, LIRS leaders and 243 clergy in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America sent a letter to Trump and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo expressing support for refugee resettlement and requesting the United States admit at least 95,000 refugees in fiscal year 2021.

That’s “a testimony to the Lutheran faith values to love our neighbor, accompany the vulnerable, and welcome the stranger,” according to the letter.

ELCA congregations have assisted refugees with housing, language, employment and social supports necessary for their integration into our communities since the 1980s, the letter said. But their ability to do so depends on the “moral leadership” of the government.

“As people of faith, we believe that we must honor the dignity of every human, regardless of national origin. We have a commitment to follow the teachings of Jesus and to uphold our nation’s tradition of protecting the persecuted,” the letter reads.

This article originally appeared here.

Filed Under: Faith

Primary Sidebar

Trending News

Newsboys Sues The Roys Report, World Vision, Concert Promoter Following Sexual Abuse Allegations Against Michael Tait

Pop Singer Raye Finds Answers in Scripture, Not Social Media

Tim Keller Did Not Avoid Difficult Topics for the Sake of Being ‘Winsome,’ Says Kathy Keller

Former Youth Pastor Arrested on Sexual Battery Charges Involving Minor

RSS ChurchLeaders

  • What Happens When the Pastor’s Kid Leaves the Church?
  • Tim Keller Did Not Avoid Difficult Topics for the Sake of Being ‘Winsome,’ Says Kathy Keller

RSS Faithit

  • The Truth About Marriage After 50: What No One Tells You
  • The ‘Sandwich Generation’: Life Between Raising Children and Caring for Aging Parents

RSS ForEveryMom

  • Mark Wahlberg Listens to Old Voicemails To Keep the Memory of His Mom Alive
  • WARNING: A Sexual Predator Literally Came to My Door — Here’s What Happened

Footer

About Us
Privacy Statement
Terms and Conditions
Cookie Settings
Contact Us
Newsletter

Images used on christiannewsnow.com are licensed from stock photography providers including Shutterstock, Getty Images, iStock, Unsplash, and other licensed contributors, or are used with permission. Individual image credits are available upon request.

Search

Copyright © 2026 · Christian News Now