Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Samuel Gregg: Catholic Approach To Immigration Avoids Emotional Reactions
Samuel Gregg: Catholic Approach To Immigration Avoids Emotional Reactions
Apr 29, 2025 11:54 AM

In mentary for the National Catholic Register, Acton’s Director of Research Sam Gregg considers the topic of immigration, specifically the current U.S. border crisis. Gregg views the border crisis through the lens of Catholic Social Teaching, which he says gives us a principled and thoughtful (as opposed to emotional) framework.

We also have a rich tradition of teaching about political questions that embodies principles based upon the Gospel and the natural law: principles that lay Catholics have the primary responsibility, as Vatican II underscored, to apply plex subjects such as immigration.

Catholic teaching on immigration contains many exhortations to be merciful. Indeed, mandment to love our neighbor often means we’re required to go beyond the strict demands of justice, albeit not in ways that violate justice. At the same time, the Church articulates a framework for thinking — rather than merely emoting — through the immigration issue in a manner consistent with Catholic concerns for liberty, justice, human flourishing and mon good. And part of this involves affirming that there is a right — albeit not an unlimited right — to migrate.

Gregg outlines the teachings on immigration from two popes, St. John Paul II and Pope Emeritus Benedict, along with the Catechism of the Catholic Church.

As a collective whole, these statements tell us several things. First, while there is a right to migrate, it isn’t absolute. The right to life and the right to migrate aren’t on the same level. The former is the foundation of the latter: not vice versa. Second, each nation’s government has the responsibility to formulate immigration policy so that it serves that mon good.

It is Gregg’s argument that our current system makes it very difficult to immigrate to the U.S. legally, which incentives illegal immigration. This, in turn, increases human trafficking, and law-abiding U.S. businesses suffer from the lack of skilled labor. Gregg insists that these burdensome laws much be changed in a legal, constitutional manner. This also requires clear thinking, rather than emotive, reactionary behavior. It is only this way that mon good will be served.

Read “Immigration: A Principled Catholic Approach Avoids Emotionalism” at the National Catholic Register.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
No More Landfills? How One New Company Is Banking On Garbage
At Wired, Issie Lapowsky says most of us are paying rent on our garbage. Not that we think of it that way. Millions of businesses are paying billions of dollars in rent on their garbage. They don’t think of it that way, of course, just as the fees they pay trash haulers to pick up their junk. But a significant portion of that money covers the cost of the landfill space itself. And what is a landfill if not a...
Real Life is Much More Than Economic
I think it is important to keep in mind that it is not the world of economics that is critical to human life on earth. When I left the field of economics for what I still believe to be a more important life agenda, it was because I regarded economics as driving cross-country at 80 mph with myeyes firmly fixed on the rear-view mirror. We do, in fact, live in a world defined by economic and political realities, just as...
Michael Keaton And The Golden Globes: ‘Work Hard, Don’t Quit’
It is award season in Hollywood. Nearly every weekend for the next few months, there will be a parade on some red mentators bashing some actress on her wardrobe choice, and self-aggrandizing speeches from people who seem to know little about life outside of a West Coast mansion and an East Coast apartment. Last night, at the Golden Globes, one speech stood out. Michael Keaton has worked steadily for years as an actor, but has never been recognized as one...
Explainer: President Obama’s Proposal for Free Tuition at Community College
Yesterday, in a short, videotaped preview of his ing State of the Union address, President Obama unveiled a new proposal: Make two years munity college free for all students who meet certain eligibility standards. Here is what you should know about the proposal. What would students have to do? Students would be required to munity college at least half-time, maintain a 2.5 GPA, and make steady progress pleting their program.” What munity colleges have to do to qualify? Community colleges...
Explainer: The Boko Haram Massacre in Nigeria
What’s going on in Nigeria? During an attack that started January 3 and continued through this past weekend, the African Islamic militant group Boko Haram opened fire on 16 northern Nigerian villages. The death toll estimates range from 200 to as many 2,000 people. Another 10,000 people who managed to escape have fled to neighboring Chad. Many Nigerians drowned in an attempt to cross Lake Chad to escape what is now described as the “deadliest massacre” in the history of...
The Blessings of Abundant and Affordable Energy
I grew up with the attitude that wealth was measured by whether the sun was shining and the fish were biting and whether my belly was full and the family larder stocked with canned vegetables and fruit as well as fresh meat and poultry raised on our tiny 80-acre farm in Michigan. To quote Dylan Thomas: “And the sabbath rang slowly / In the pebbles of the holy streams.” Certainly there were items and conditions we desired, desires often unmet...
World of Warcraft economics, population control, and virtual gold
You may have heard of the puter game World of Warcraft (WoW), which recently released its fifth expansion, which adds more quests, dungeons, and other content, in November. WoW has over 10 million players and there are few signs of this slowing down, which is impressive for a game originally released in 2004. What you might not have known is that there plex economic and social structures in place everywhere in the game. But do these systems mirror real life...
Europe, Radical Islam, and the Socialist Roots of Modern Anti-Semitism
Even before the Paris attacks, there were worries over a sharp rise in anti-Semitism in the UK and mainland Europe in 2014, says Caroline Wyatt of the BBC. In the past few years thousands of French Jews have fled the country to the one place they feel safe: Israel. “The French munity is gripped by a very deep sense of insecurity and that sense is often traced back to the attack in Tolouse in 2012,” says Avi Mayer, a spokesperson...
Economy of Wonder: Peter Kreeft on Truth, Goodness, and Beauty
In the latest video from For the Life of the World, Christian philosopher Peter Kreeft expounds on the Economy of Wonderand how it intersects with our stewardship of God’s house. Hipster head-bobbingispermitted: There’s beauty everywhere. We just don’t see it…Life is a mystery to be lived continuously, not a problem to be solved suddenly… In this life, we are so full and foolish that we appreciate only a few of these things, since we have more and more slaves that...
Review: In Praise of the Bourgeois, Liberty-Loving Race of Hobbits
In light of the discussion about distributism in the ments, I’m posting John Zmirak’s excellent Religion & Liberty review of The Hobbit Party: The Vision of Freedom that Tolkien Got and the West Forgot by Jonathan Witt and Jay Richards (Ignatius Press, 2014) here on the PowerBlog. Note how he ends the review with a discussion of Tolkien and whether his work lent support to distributism. Have at it. In Praise of the Bourgeois, Liberty-Loving Race of Hobbits By John...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved