Alabama Law Criminalizes Samaritans, Bishops Say
By CAMPBELL ROBERTSON
Published: August 13, 2011 
CULLMAN, Ala. — On a sofa in the hallway of his office here, Mitchell Williams, 
the pastor of First United Methodist Church, announced that he was going to 
break the law. He is not the only church leader making such a declaration these 
days. Josh Anderson for The New York Times
Alabama Religious Leaders Sue to Stop Immigration Law
Since June, when Gov. Robert Bentley, a Republican, signed an immigration 
enforcement law called the toughest in the country by critics and supporters 
alike, the opposition has been vocal and unceasing. 
Thousands of protesters have marched. Anxious farmers and contractors have 
personally confronted their lawmakers. The American Civil Liberties Union and 
other civil rights groups have sued, and have been backed by a list of groups 
including teachers’ unions and 16 foreign countries. Several county sheriffs, 
who will have to enforce parts of the new law, have filed affidavits supporting 
the legal challenges. 
On Aug. 1, the Justice Department joined the fray, contending, as in a similar 
suit in Arizona, that the state law pre-empts federal authority to administer 
and enforce immigration laws. 
And on that same day, three bishops sued. 
An Episcopal bishop, a Methodist bishop and a Roman Catholic archbishop, all 
based in Alabama, sued on the basis that the new statute violated their right 
to free exercise of religion, arguing that it would “make it a crime to follow 
God’s command to be Good Samaritans.” 
“The law,” said Archbishop Thomas J. Rodi of Mobile, “attacks our core 
understanding of what it means to be a church.” 
While church leaders have spoken out against similar laws elsewhere, Alabama is 
the only state where senior church leaders have gone so far in formal, 
organized opposition. But the law in Alabama, a state with an estimated 120,000 
illegal immigrants, according to the Pew Hispanic Center, goes further than any 
other. 
It contains some of the controversial provisions of other recent state laws, 
including one that empowers local law enforcement to try to ascertain 
immigration status after pulling people over for traffic violations. 
But the law also makes it a crime to transport, harbor or rent property to 
people who are known to be in the country illegally, and it renders any 
contracts with illegal immigrants null. 
To some church leaders — who say they will not be able to give people rides, 
invite them to worship services or perform marriages and baptisms — the law 
essentially criminalizes basic parts of Christian ministry. 
Framers of the law say this is broadly exaggerated. The provisions, they say, 
clearly pertain to human traffickers or employers actively seeking to skirt the 
law. Churches, or people simply acting as Good Samaritans, were not intended as 
targets of the law, they say, nor would they be singled out in practice. 
“It’s not as explicit as the churches would obviously like,” said State Senator 
Bryan Taylor, a Republican. “But I do not think that any church or any 
clergyman is subject to prosecution for doing their Christian mission.” 
Transporting an illegal immigrant, lawmakers point out, is considered a crime 
under the law if it is done “in furtherance of the unlawful presence” of the 
person in the United States. “Harboring” an illegal immigrant is a crime only 
if it is done to shield the person from detection. 
Lawyers for the church leaders contend that the language is far too vague to 
rely on such reassurances. 
On Wednesday, Alabama’s attorney general asked the State Supreme Court to 
interpret the passages raised in the church lawsuit, which has been 
consolidated with two other suits, including the one brought by the Justice 
Department. 
Leaders of the denominations represented in the suit are not the only ones with 
concerns. 
An ecumenical group of ministers in Auburn has publicly condemned the law. Bob 
Terry, the president of The Alabama Baptist newspaper, wrote in a column that 
the state was trying to dictate Christian ministry. 
Andy Heis, the pastor of the new, nondenominational Desperation Church in 
Cullman, said, “It puts you in a really, really hard place.” 
“I understand legally where they’re coming from,” he said, pointing out that 
obeying government laws was a biblical command. “But spiritually, I have to do 
what God calls me to do.” 
The politics of this are unusual, with those opposed to the law, mostly coming 
from the left, arguing that the statute falls short of biblical principles, and 
the law’s supporters, mostly from the right, arguing that secular laws and 
biblical law cannot always run on the same track. 
And the politics are thorny for ministers, who acknowledge that the immigration 
law is broadly popular. Congregations are not in lock step behind their 
leaders. Bottom of Form
 
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Take Mac Buttram, a retired Methodist minister and a Republican who represents 
Cullman in the Legislature and voted for the law. Like other lawmakers, he 
insists that many of the law’s opponents misunderstand or exaggerate what it 
says. 
 
Mr. Buttram also said he was surprised by comments from church leaders, 
including his own bishop, implying that those who supported the law were being 
mean-spirited and un-Christian. 
“It’s a Christian issue, it’s a moral issue, but it’s not an issue in which we 
should be casting judgment,” he said, adding that several Methodist ministers 
had since called him expressing their support for the law. 
State Representative Micky Hammon, a Republican and one of the law’s sponsors, 
said some church leaders had asked that a passage be included in the law that 
would exempt churches from certain provisions. But every attempt at writing 
such a passage ended up creating an unacceptably large loophole, he said, 
adding that any necessary adjustments to the law could still be made. 
For some church leaders, the issue cannot be cut free of the weight of Alabama 
history. 
The need for language forbidding racial profiling and the frequent failure by 
those discussing the law to distinguish between illegal immigrants and 
Hispanics in general give pause to opponents, even if they agree that current 
federal immigration policy is not working. 
“Alabama needs to sit this one out,” said Bishop William H. Willimon, a 
Methodist who serves North Alabama. “The civil rights memorial in Birmingham is 
kind of a reminder that we’ve got to watch this sort of thing.” 
An open letter to the governor and the law’s legislative sponsors, written by 
two Methodist ministers and signed by more than 150 other ministers, begins 
with a reference to the 1963 Letter From a Birmingham Jail by the Rev. Dr. 
Martin Luther King Jr., in which the civil rights leader rebuked liberal 
religious leaders, among them the predecessors of those who brought the 
lawsuit, for urging restraint in the fight against segregation. 
The authors of the letter said they did not feel that they were making up for 
the clerical restraint during the civil rights years, but were simply drawing 
attention to Dr. King’s thoughts on unjust laws. 
“King was saying context doesn’t matter — if it’s unjust, it’s unjust, and you 
call it like you see it,” said the Rev. Matt Lacey, whose Birmingham church was 
attended in the 1960s by Bull Connor, the city’s police chief and lead enforcer 
of segregation laws. 
Mr. Williams, the pastor in Cullman, signed the letter but is less 
confrontational than some of his fellow ministers. For one thing, he thinks the 
church needs to be careful on how it speaks. 
“I don’t think that the church can stand up and say a particular law is 
Christian or not,” he said. Still, he said, he has told his ministers to keep 
doing what they are doing, including the church’s active Hispanic ministry, 
whether the law is upheld or not.

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