Talking to Your Kids About Illegal Immigration
Students of James Madison High School in Brooklyn attended school online this week after officials moved almost 2,000 illegal migrants into the school’s gym ahead of inclement weather.
Far from an isolated incident, the students’ exile caps-off more than five-years of skyrocketing illegal immigration through America’s southern border.
Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) encounters with people entering the country illegally more than doubled from approximately 997,500 in fiscal year 2019 to a whopping 2,475,700 in FY 2023.
A record-breaking 785,400 illegal migrants were apprehended in the first three months of 2024 — the highest number of quarterly encounters ever recorded.
Overwhelmed with the new arrivals, beleaguered border states like Texas and Arizona started transporting migrants awaiting immigration proceedings to self-described sanctuary cities in 2022.
Cities like Denver, Chicago and New York, now hosting thousands of migrants each, don’t have the money or housing to provide for them — leaving some American citizens to pay the price.
As illegal immigration increasingly affects kids’ lives, parents should teach their kids to think biblically about the issue.
Here’s a couple of points to get you started.
QUICK LOOK
- Biblical conversations about illegal immigration start with compassion
- Illegal immigration isn’t biblical because of the three S-es: Safety, Security, and Sustainability
- Faithful prayer is more important and powerful than any human policy argument
Before diving into policy particulars, it’s important to ground your conversations in God’s commandment to love our neighbors.
Too frequently, worldly sentiments about border security suggest illegal immigrants are less than human, or “the bad guys.”
It’s an undeniably attractive way for adults to view the world because it doesn’t require introspection or discernment. Children are vulnerable to believing this absolutist lie because they lack the capacity to fully comprehend complex problems.
You can help your children avoid making illegal immigrants “the bad guys” by emphasizing that God creates and loves all people equally and offers them forgiveness for every sin — including breaking the law.
Parents can contextualize this lesson with examples of Jesus engaging with imperfect people during His earthly ministry, and how His love healed and redeemed them.
As your children grow, you can further humanize people who come to America illegally by exploring why many come — fear for their safety, desperation to provide for their families, and desire to better their circumstances.
Reflective questions like, “Have you ever done something wrong when you were afraid?” can help children understand these moral dilemmas and identify with those searching for better lives.
Biblical discussions of immigration policy should be anchored in our desire to love and care for our neighbors.
Once children understand that people entering America illegally are humans worthy of care and compassion, they can begin contemplating which policies most effectively care for everyone involved.
To explain why illegal immigration is wrong in a biblical context, just remember the three S-es: Safety, Security and Stability.
Illegal immigration through America’s southern border greatly endangers migrants, who face innumerable environmental and social obstacles on their journey.
Migrants face severe heat, risk of drowning and dehydration. More recently, thousands of immigrants have swum across the Rio Grande river and shimmied under concertina barbed wire to illegally reach Texas.
The journey is so dangerous that many rely on smugglers and human traffickers to get them across the American border, a gambit that can lead to deadly accidents.
Business is booming for cartels and illegal organizations making money off migrants seeking their help. Traffickers charge would-be immigrants exorbitant fees to cross the border, leaving immigrants in debt bondage once they’ve reached the other side. Other times, cartel members torture vulnerable migrants to extort money from their families abroad.
Children are particularly vulnerable to human- and sex-trafficking by cartels. A brief DNA-testing program implemented at the border in 2021 revealed single migrants often “rent” children to pose as a family, seeking easier entry to the U.S.
By explaining how dangerous the journey is, you can show kids why it isn’t caring or compassionate to incentivize people migrate illegally.
Legal immigration procedures allow law enforcement to vet people entering the country, making sure they won’t harm American citizens.
Illegal immigration circumvents these checks and balances, allowing violent people — or even terrorists — to come to America with no one the wiser.
Cartels and other dangerous organizations take advantage of illegal immigration to engage in human- and drug-trafficking. Most of the synthetic opioid fentanyl, which is causing unprecedented deaths across the nation, comes through the southern border.
Illegal immigration puts our biblical and physical neighbors — American citizens — in danger, which means it’s neither caring nor compassionate to allow it.
To understand the potential impact of illegal immigration on American society, kids must understand basic civics.
Our government depends on knowing how many people live here.
America’s public utilities and social programs, like homeless shelters and food stamps, are funded by taxes, which each working American pays according to their income. America’s political system functions based on vote tallies from districts with specific populations.
If people enter the country illegally, they aren’t paying taxes and or voting. That means one of two things: either they suffer by abstaining from voting and using public services like law enforcement or they vote and use public services illegally, draining tax dollars and causing American citizens to suffer.
If tax and voting systems are compromised, America can’t offer the privileges and rights so many illegal migrants seek. That means everyone suffers.
The three S-es help show kids that illegal immigration harms everyone involved, violating Biblical ethics.
But that doesn’t mean parents should suggest the border security system America has in place is perfect.
Many migrants fall through the cracks. Sometimes, those who should qualify to come to America aren’t allowed in, and those who try to come legally channels suffer interminable waiting periods.
Teach your kids that it’s good to lament and turn to God when broken systems work imperfectly.
Christians faithfully hope that God, who perfectly embodies truth and mercy, sees and empathizes with the plight of every person who comes to this country illegally. We believe we can petition Him to intervene and dispense His perfect justice in every situation, and that He will rid the Earth of sin and brokenness when He returns.
No policy discussion or human reasoning will ever surpass the effectiveness of prayer and obeying God’s commands. If you can teach your child nothing else about illegal immigration, teach them that!
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Emily Washburn is a staff reporter for the Daily Citizen at Focus on the Family and regularly writes stories about politics and noteworthy people. She previously served as a staff reporter for Forbes Magazine, editorial assistant, and contributor for Discourse Magazine and Editor-in-Chief of the newspaper at Westmont College, where she studied communications and political science. Emily has never visited a beach she hasn’t swam at, and is happiest reading a book somewhere tropical.