• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
Catholic Review

Catholic Review

Inspiring the Archdiocese of Baltimore

Menu
  • Home
  • News
        • Local News
        • World News
        • Vatican News
        • Obituaries
        • Featured Video
        • En Español
        • Sports News
        • Official Clergy Assignments
        • Schools News
  • Commentary
        • Contributors
          • Question Corner
          • George Weigel
          • Elizabeth Scalia
          • Michael R. Heinlein
          • Effie Caldarola
          • Guest Commentary
        • CR Columnists
          • Archbishop William E. Lori
          • Rita Buettner
          • Christopher Gunty
          • George Matysek Jr.
          • Mark Viviano
          • Father Joseph Breighner
          • Father Collin Poston
          • Amen Columns
  • Entertainment
        • Events
        • Movie & Television Reviews
        • Arts & Culture
        • Books
        • Recipes
        • CR for Kids
  • About Us
        • Contact Us
        • Our History
        • Meet Our Staff
        • Photos to own
        • Shop
        • CR Media platforms
        • Electronic Edition
        • Subscribe
  • Advertising
  • Shop
        • Purchase Photos
        • Books/CDs/Prayer Cards
        • Magazine Subscriptions
        • Archdiocesan Directory
  • Radio/Podcasts
        • Catholic Review Radio
        • Protagonistas de Fe
        • In God’s Image
  • News Tips
  • Subscribe
A family member of a Venezuelan, who is being held in a high-security prison in El Salvador after being deported from the U.S., reacts during a protest to demand their release, in Caracas, Venezuela, March 24, 2025. (OSV News photo/Gaby Oraa, Reuters)

Cardinal McElroy, immigration advocates warn U.S. at a moral crossroad with migrants

March 26, 2025
By Kate Scanlon
OSV News
Filed Under: Feature, Immigration and Migration, News, World News

WASHINGTON (OSV News) — Representatives of Catholic and immigration advocacy organizations, and Washington’s new Cardinal Robert W. McElroy, grappled with the need to send a clear moral message on the dignity of migrants amid the “uncertainty” of the political moment at a recent event in the nation’s capital.

Participants at a March 24 conference organized by Jesuit Refugee Service/USA and the Center for Migration Studies of New York considered challenges and opportunities in migration policy from the perspective of Catholic social teaching. They addressed disruptions to funding for projects done in partnership with the federal government and skepticism about the church’s work in this area, including from some Trump administration officials.

Cardinal McElroy, who became archbishop of Washington earlier in March, took particular aim in his comments at some officials’ calls for mass deportations and the termination of the U.S. Agency for International Development. USAID, the government’s now-shuttered humanitarian aid agency, operated in countries all over the globe and provided some funding for efforts by Catholic and other faith-based humanitarian groups.

Then-San Diego Bishop Robert W. McElroy is pictured in a file photo speaking with Mexican Archbishop Francisco Moreno Barron of Tijuana through the border fence in San Diego. (OSV News photo/David Maung)

“I think we must say to ourselves quite clearly and categorically: The suspension of Agency for International Development monies for humanitarian relief is moral theft for the poorest and most desperate men, women and children in our world today,” Cardinal McElroy said. “It is unconscionable through any prism of Catholic thought. And thus, we who are in the work of helping migrants and refugees, in this case, are merely in the work of helping humanity as it exists in suffering, to understand that giving less than 1% of our government’s budget to assist the most desperate humanitarian needs of the world is our obligation as people of faith and as a nation.”

“Eliminating our government’s meager but so crucial assistance to those who are in need for clinics, health, vaccines, and food services throughout the world,” he said, is “utterly contrary” to “our life as disciples of Jesus Christ.”

Cardinal McElroy issued a sharp rebuke of mass deportations, while adding that humane efforts to reduce irregular migration would be in line with Catholic teaching.

“In this moment in which mass deportation is the national goal of our government, every undocumented person,” as well as their families, he added, “lives in fear, and it is purposeful, it is a fear meant to generate deportation.”

But Cardinal McElroy also said, “There are many people who oppose immigration on the very position that they think our borders should be secure.” He said that can be in line with Catholic teaching.

Catholic social teaching on immigration balances three interrelated principles — the right of persons to migrate in order to sustain their lives and those of their families, the right of a country to regulate its borders and control immigration, and a nation’s duty to regulate its borders with justice and mercy.

“Many people who are seeking stronger security at the border do so out of a sense that stronger security at the border, that is a legitimate goal, and the exclusion of those who are truly guilty of serious crimes who are undocumented, is also a legitimate goal,” he said. “We must understand that in our discussion, we can’t lump everyone together. But we must always also understand that many themes that are supporting the effort to undermine the rights, the human dignity of the undocumented, come from the blackest hearts of our history.”

On immigration, Cardinal McElroy said the United States faces “two different pathways.”

“The first pathway, which Catholic social teaching would support, is to change our laws so that they have secure borders and dignity for the treatment of everyone at those borders and a generous asylum and refugee policy, that is one pathway we as a nation can come to order,” Cardinal McElroy said.

The cardinal said he believed most Americans would favor that pathway.

“The other pathway is a crusade, which comes from the darkest parts of our American psyche and soul and history. The crusade denigrates the undocumented. It labels them as defective, castigates them and captures them and encapsulates them as criminals,” he said. “It refuses to see the human being that is there and the good that they have already accomplished in the society which they have been living for so many years.”

He said, “These are the two choices we have.”

Some speakers at the conference addressed ongoing litigation over the government’s termination of a contract with the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ refugee resettlement program as part of its broader effort to enforce its hardline immigration policies. Others addressed Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton’s attempt to shut down El Paso’s Annunciation House, a Catholic nonprofit serving migrants as among other challenges.

Cardinal Fabio Baggio of Bassano del Grappa, Italy, the undersecretary of the Vatican’s Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development, addressed the conference virtually hours before his participation in a March 24 rally, march and prayer vigil in solidarity with migrants in El Paso, Texas. Cardinal Baggio said that a lack of regard for the dignity of migrants is part of what Pope Francis has described as the “throwaway culture” that is also behind disregard for the unborn and the elderly.

Read More Immigration & Migration

Study: Mass deportation has ‘chilling’ effect on labor market for immigrant, US-citizen workers

Proposed regulations would further restrict housing, work eligibility for migrants

New Mexico diocese fights Trump push to seize pilgrimage site for border wall

As justices consider birthright citizenship, displaced mom says her US-born child ‘should belong’

New data analysis provides baseline for weighing options on unauthorized immigration, say experts

Supreme Court hears arguments in Trump effort to end temporary protections for Haitians, Syrians

Copyright © 2025 OSV News

Print Print

Primary Sidebar

Kate Scanlon

Click here to view all posts from this author

For the latest news delivered twice a week via email or text message, sign up to receive our free enewsletter.

| MOST POPULAR |

  • Archdiocese of Baltimore files new proposed plan for Chapter 11 reorganization
  • Archbishop Lori ordains 12 transitional deacons
  • Pope Leo XIV’s encyclical on artificial intelligence is coming: Here’s what he has said on AI so far
  • Brazilian nun drowns while trying to save fellow sister in Sicily
  • Faith at bat: Failure, injury, pressure shape high school athletes

| Latest Local News |

Catholic high school students experience professions firsthand

Archbishop Lori ordains 12 transitional deacons

Radio Interview: Saying yes to God’s plan

Archdiocese of Baltimore names teachers of the year

Archbishop Lori recognized with new award

| Latest World News |

Archbishop Broglio highlights faith, service at annual memorial Mass for Catholic war dead

Parish scarred by clergy abuse creates memorial for survivors

Global executions surge to highest recorded figure in 44 years, Amnesty International report says

AI cannot replace humanity, conscience, truth, Irish archbishop says

Pope Leo XIV thanks Catholic Extension Society for supporting poor US dioceses

| Catholic Review Radio |

Footer

Our Vision

Real Life. Real Faith. 

Catholic Review Media communicates the Gospel and its impact on people’s lives in the Archdiocese of Baltimore and beyond.

Our Mission

Catholic Review Media provides intergenerational communications that inform, teach, inspire and engage Catholics and all of good will in the mission of Christ through diverse forms of media.

Contact

Catholic Review
320 Cathedral Street
Baltimore, MD 21201
443-524-3150
mail@CatholicReview.org

 

Social Media

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Recent

  • Archbishop Broglio highlights faith, service at annual memorial Mass for Catholic war dead
  • Catholic high school students experience professions firsthand
  • Global executions surge to highest recorded figure in 44 years, Amnesty International report says
  • Parish scarred by clergy abuse creates memorial for survivors
  • AI cannot replace humanity, conscience, truth, Irish archbishop says
  • I’m OK, you’re OK…well we’re mostly OK (on springtime transitions)
  • Pope Leo XIV thanks Catholic Extension Society for supporting poor US dioceses
  • Question Corner: Are parish priests allowed to do confirmations?
  • Archbishop Lori ordains 12 transitional deacons

Search

Membership

Catholic Media Assocation

Maryland-Delaware-DC Press Association

The Associated Church Press

© 2026 CATHOLIC REVIEW MEDIA, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED