Bishop Mark Brennan gives blistering critique of indiscriminate immigration enforcement
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Bishop Mark Brennan of Wheeling-Charleston, West Virginia. / Credit: Archdiocese of BaltimoreWashington, D.C. Newsroom, Aug 7, 2025 / 14:33 pm (CNA).As officials carry out mass deportations across the United States, Bishop Mark Brennan of Wheeling-Charleston, West Virginia, is criticizing the Trump administration's policy of deporting "as many immigrants as possible" without "distinguishing between true criminals and law-abiding persons."In a recent statement addressing Catholics in his diocese, Brennan said "some of you have told me that you were happy to support a presidential candidate who would install order at the southern border and keep out drug traffickers, terrorists, and violent criminals but that you didn't expect this wholesale assault on the majority of immigrants, who work hard, are raising their families, and live peacefully in our communities."The bishop urged the government to prioritize deporting violent criminals rather than upstanding people, highlighting th...
Bishop Mark Brennan of Wheeling-Charleston, West Virginia. / Credit: Archdiocese of Baltimore
Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Aug 7, 2025 / 14:33 pm (CNA).
As officials carry out mass deportations across the United States, Bishop Mark Brennan of Wheeling-Charleston, West Virginia, is criticizing the Trump administration's policy of deporting "as many immigrants as possible" without "distinguishing between true criminals and law-abiding persons."
In a recent statement addressing Catholics in his diocese, Brennan said "some of you have told me that you were happy to support a presidential candidate who would install order at the southern border and keep out drug traffickers, terrorists, and violent criminals but that you didn't expect this wholesale assault on the majority of immigrants, who work hard, are raising their families, and live peacefully in our communities."
The bishop urged the government to prioritize deporting violent criminals rather than upstanding people, highlighting that entering the U.S. "without official government permission is a misdemeanor, a crime but a lesser one, on the level with loitering, public intoxication, and shoplifting."
Brennan's critique of mass deportations aligns with a number of other Catholic leaders including Los Angeles Archbishop José Gómez, who recently said: "A great nation can take the time and care to make distinctions and judge each case on its merits."
"On our journey to eternity, the Lord expects us to help one another," Brennan said. "Why else would he command us: Love your neighbor as yourself and do unto others as you would have them do unto you?"
"In the light of these Christian principles, we the people must act," Brennan declared. For example, Catholics can call for "less cruel" enforcement and can speak up "when we hear grossly inaccurate talk about undocumented immigrants being uniformly criminal, when only a few commit violent crimes."
"As people of faith, we should pray intensely for God to touch the minds and hearts of our political leaders and move them to be more reasonable and humane in their policies; and for those who implement those policies to do so with respect for their fellow human beings."
Brennan encouraged those enforcing immigration policies "to consider whether a specific action is morally justified," because ultimately, "the final judge of our actions is God."
Speaking of law enforcement officers, he said: "I recognize that they have sworn to uphold the law. Yet the manner in which a law is enforced matters. Those acting on the government's behalf cannot escape personal responsibility for an unjust action with the excuse that it was ordered by their superiors."
"That defense was not allowed during the Nuremberg trials of Nazi war criminals at the end of World War II," Brennan explained. "The judges held that a soldier, guard, or official who authorized or engaged in gross violations of human rights was personally responsible for his acts."
With that said, Brennan clarified: "What has been reported about excesses in immigration enforcement does not approach the horror of Nazi treatment of prisoners, but the principle of personal responsibility for one's actions remains the same."
"Our Church would have no martyrs if the highest good was to preserve one's life. Some things are worth taking a principled stand for," Brennan said. In tandem with bishops across the nation, Brennan called on Catholics "to affirm the humanity of all immigrants, regardless of legal status."
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The Archdiocese of Port-au-Prince condemned the kidnapping of nine people from an orphanage on the outskirts of the capital on Sunday, Aug. 3. / Credit: Creative Photo Corner/ShutterstockACI Prensa Staff, Aug 12, 2025 / 06:00 am (CNA).The Archdiocese of Port-au-Prince denounced the "collapse of humanity" in Haitian society, "where the unthinkable has become commonplace," in response to the kidnapping of nine people from an orphanage on the outskirts of the capital on Aug. 3. In a statement, the archdiocese said it received the news of the kidnappings, which included an Irish lay missionary and a disabled 3-year-old boy, with "deep sadness and profound indignation" and expressed "its fraternal solidarity and spiritual closeness" with the orphanage, a "tireless sower of hope for the most vulnerable."The archdiocese also expressed its solidarity with the residents of Kenscoff, who have been affected "by the brutal violence that has taken hold in this town over the past few mo...
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Miguel Uribe Turbay. / Credit: LuigiVenegas, Original uploader (2019), CC BY 4.0, via Wikimedia CommonsACI Prensa Staff, Aug 11, 2025 / 14:40 pm (CNA).Colombian Sen. Miguel Uribe Turbay died Monday morning, Aug. 11, just over two months after being shot by a hitman, his wife, María Claudia Tarazona, confirmed. The politician was hospitalized at the Santa Fe Foundation Hospital in Bogotá."You will always be the love of my life. Thank you for a life full of love, thank you for being a father to the girls, the best father to Alejandro. I ask God to show me the way to learn to live without you," Tarazona wrote on Instagram early this morning.Born on Jan. 28, 1986, in Bogotá, Colombia, Uribe Turbay was the son of businessman Miguel Uribe and journalist Diana Turbay, who was murdered in 1991 after being kidnapped by the order of Pablo Escobar, the head of the Medellín Cartel. Uribe Turbay, whose family background is Maronite Catholic, held various public offices until he was ele...
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Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception, Syracuse, New York. / Credit: Mahmoud Masad/ShutterstockWashington, D.C. Newsroom, Aug 11, 2025 / 16:02 pm (CNA).The Diocese of Syracuse, New York, announced on Aug. 9 that Bishop Douglas J. Lucia has taken on the additional job of parish priest at three churches in Baldwinsville, New York. The diocese announced a number of changes to pastoral assignments that went into effect on Aug. 1, including Lucia serving as pastor at St. Augustine Church, St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Church, and St. Mary of the Assumption Church. The three churches are part of the same parish and share various initiatives and resources."Certainly, a crucial component in our parishes is the priest. Without the priest, there is no Mass; and without the Mass there is no Eucharist, no food for the journey," Lucia wrote in a recent letter to the churches' parishioners.After announcing that the previous pastor, Father Joe O'Connor, received seminary work as a new assignm...