
Does the LDS Church have to take a stand to immigration?
The major premise of the article is whether or not the LDS Church has an obligation of take an official stand on immigration. Some argue that it is just fair that if the church took an active role in Prop 8 few years ago in California; they equally have to be actively engaged in immigration policy.
I will propose that the LDS Church DOES NOT have that obligation. There are major differences between immigration policy and Prop 8. For once, immigration policy is a purely political issue. The church has in many instances advice to the saints of this era to remain in their home countries. This should be a very clear clue that the church does not approve of all the immigrants –legal or illegal- that choose to come to the United States.
Proposition 8 in the other hand, is a purely moral issue. It defeats all that is natural and proper in LDS doctrine. The stand of the church on Prop 8 went beyond any political partisan and went straight to the point: the LDS Church opposes homosexuality.
I believe that some members of the church in Utah specially want to feel the warm hand of their church patting them on their back and say “it’s ok, don’t worry;” when the truth is that, the church does not completely support them or their actions. I am not trying to belittle their efforts to push the government to pass an immigration reform; I am just trying to tell them that they ought to do it alone, with no church support.