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by Emmitt Barry, Worthy News Correspondent
(Worthy News) – Over two dozen Christian and Jewish groups, representing millions, sued the Trump administration to block expanded immigration arrests at houses of worship.
The lawsuit, filed in D.C. federal court, argues the policy instills fear, reducing church attendance and programs, violating religious freedom to minister to migrants.
“We have immigrants, refugees, people who are documented and undocumented,” said the Most Rev. Sean Rowe, presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church. “We cannot worship freely if some of us are living in fear,” he told The Associated Press. “By joining this lawsuit, we’re seeking the ability to gather and fully practice our faith, to follow Jesus’ command to love our neighbors as ourselves.”
The new lawsuit builds on a similar case filed Jan. 27 by Quaker congregations, later joined by the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship and a Sikh temple, now pending in Maryland federal court.
The Trump administration has yet to respond to the new lawsuit, which names the Department of Homeland Security and its immigration agencies as defendants.
However, a Justice Department memo filed Friday opposing the Quaker lawsuit argued that blocking the policy is based on speculative future harm, insufficient for an injunction. The memo also stated that immigration enforcement in houses of worship has long been permitted, and the January policy merely grants field agents discretion to act without prior supervisor approval.
The latest lawsuit represents a diverse coalition of faith groups, including over 1 million Reform Jews, 1.5 million Episcopalians, 1.1 million Presbyterians (U.S.A.), and 1.5 million African Methodist Episcopalians. Other plaintiffs include the Disciples of Christ, Church of the Brethren, Hispanic Baptist churches, Quakers, Mennonites, Unitarian Universalists, Conservative Jewish congregations, and regional branches of the United Methodist Church and United Church of Christ.
Many conservative faith leaders and legal experts disagree with concerns over the new arrest policy. “Places of worship are for worship and are not sanctuaries for illegal activity or for harboring people engaged in illegal activity,” said Mat Staver, founder of the conservative Christian legal group Liberty Counsel. “Fugitives or criminals are not immune from the law merely because they enter a place of worship,” he stated via email. “This is not a matter of religious freedom. There is no right to openly violate the law and disobey law enforcement.”
Copyright 1999-2026 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
President Donald Trump said the United States carried out a major bombing raid on Iran’s Kharg Island, destroying what he described as every military target on the strategically vital export hub.
An explosion damaged a Jewish school in Amsterdam early Saturday in what authorities described as a deliberate attack against the Jewish community, raising alarm after recent assaults on synagogues in the Netherlands and neighboring Belgium.
Pakistani police have launched a criminal investigation after a young Christian man was brutally killed in the eastern city of Lahore, an attack that has shocked members of the country’s small Christian community, investigators told Worthy News on Saturday.
U.S. President Donald J. Trump says the United States and allied nations should send warships to help reopen the Strait of Hormuz near Iran, a strategic waterway through which roughly one-fifth of the world’s oil supply passes.
Investigations continued Friday after a suspected Islamist gunman opened fire in a classroom at Old Dominion University in the U.S. state of Virginia on Thursday, killing a Reserve Officers’ Training Corps (ROTC) instructor and wounding two others before he was subdued by students and died, officials said.
All six crew members aboard a U.S. refueling aircraft have died after the plane crashed over western Iraq, the U.S. military confirmed Friday, as fighting between the United States, Israel, and Iran continued to intensify.
U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said Friday that Iran’s newly installed supreme leader is likely wounded, disfigured, and hiding underground as the Islamic Republic reels from the opening blows of the war with the United States and Israel.
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