Joint Public Issues Team Blog

Joint Public Issues Team Blog


What would be in a Welcome Manifesto from your church?

Posted: 18 Dec 2018 02:55 AM PST

Today, 18 December, is the UN International Migrants Day.

If you are not a migrant but part of a community or society that is receiving migrants, it is a day to think about offering a hand of welcome and friendship.

If you are a migrant yourself, it is a day to think about your experiences of arrival and settling.

For all of us, it is a day to acknowledge and celebrate the richness that migration brings in terms of sharing culture and to give thanks for the welcome and friendship that is extended (whether that is from people arriving or people receiving!).

An example of what receiving communities can do has been the work of our partner churches in Italy through the Federation of Protestant Churches in Italy (FCEI).

In August the FCEI Council approved a statement, a “Welcome Manifesto”, which declares the intention of the church to be a place of welcome and hospitality. The text of this declaration is below.

The FCEI wants people to know that the Church stands for humanitarian protection, respect of human rights and human dignity, supports solidarity between nations and which challenges racism and xenophobia.

The Welcome Manifesto is grounded in scripture and calls for a transformation attitudes and policies with regards to the question of how receiving communities respond to refugees and migrants.

  • What would your church’s Welcome Manifesto look like?
  • What are the points that you would like to make to society and to politicians?
  • And what areas of the Church’s life need to be included in ensuring that we belong to churches that welcome?

In the last week, new global agreements on how governments respond to refugees and migrants have been adopted. You can read more about the United Nations process around these, which the World Council of Churches and the ACT Alliance have engaged in and helped shape, at https://refugeesmigrants.un.org/

Federation of Protestant Churches in Italy (FCEI)

Welcome Manifesto

This is a church which welcomes…

  • “In as much as you have done this for one of the least of my brothers, you have done this for me.” (Matthew 25:40)

God comes to us as a stranger: by pushing away those who seek our help we close the door to Jesus who looks for us and reaches out his hand to us.

  • “I was a stranger and you welcomed me.” (Matthew 25:35)

We declare that faith in Christ commits us to welcoming those who knock at our door in search of help, protection and care.

  • “On the day that God created humankind, he did so in his own image.” (Genesis 5:1b)

We affirm that every man, women and child is a creature of God, made in his own image and, therefore, that no one may be discriminated against on the basis of colour, religion or gender identity.  Every form of racism is, for us, a theological heresy.

  • “Cursed is he who tramples on the rights of the foreigner.”  (Deuteronomy 27:19)

We are called to defend the lives, dignity and rights of migrants, asylum seekers, Roma, ethnic and religious minorities, and all those who are persecuted and marginalised.

  • “There is neither Jew nor Greek…because you are all one in Christ Jesus.” (Galations 3:28)

The Gospel of Christ tears down ethnic differences and calls us to be a Church which is open to encounter and exchange, in which Italians and immigrants live the Christian faith together. 

  • “A man came down from Jerusalem to Jericho, and was set upon by bandits who stripped him, beat him and then went off, leaving him half dead. […] A Samaritan, on seeing him, had compassion for him; he went to him, bound his wounds, pouring oil and wine on them, put him on his own mount, took him to an inn and took care of him.” (Luke 10:30, 33-34) 

We value and support those who save the lives of migrants and victims of human trafficking, and those who guarantee humanitarian rescue both in the Mediterranean and in the Alpine passes.

….and so

  • We reject as false the assertion that welcoming migrants is at odds with meeting the needs of Italians, because a country which is amongst the richest in the world has the resources to guarantee both and because we know that, in time, new immigrants will themselves constitute a resource for a country such as Italy which is in significant demographic decline.
  • We are committed to guaranteeing humanitarian corridors for the benefit of asylum seekers which provide a safe and legal means for them to arrive in Europe.  We do so ecumenically and always in accordance with European law.
  • We believe in the need to integrate immigrants into a welcoming society, capable of promoting intercultural encounter and exchange according to the principles of the Italian Constitution.
  • We oppose the Italian and European policy of closing borders, deportation and reducing guarantees of international protection for asylum seekers, all the more so when UN institutional sources attest to systematic violation of human rights in countries of departure and transit.
  • We ask all – but most particularly those with institutional responsibilities – to adopt language which respects the dignity of migrants and to evidence in their actions their opposition to xenophobic and racist attitudes.
  • We denounce and criticise the political campaign against immigrants and asylum seekers which, given reducing numbers of arrivals, perfectly sustainable within in a framework of European solidarity, serves only to exacerbate and sensationalise public debate.
  • We appeal to our sister churches in Europe because they too welcome a share of  the world’s asylum seekers and urge their governments to promote a policy of sharing migratory flows in a framework of solidarity and shared responsibility.

Remembering the words of the apostle: “If I speak in the tongues of men and angels but have no love, I am but a clanging gong or a sounding cymbal.”  (1 Corinthians 13:1), we affirm that the love of God for humanity is stronger than our personal or national self-interest and that we are called to witness to this every day with joy, hope and trust.

This “Welcome Manifesto” was approved on 8th August 2018 by the Council of the Federation of Protestant Churches in Italy (FCEI).

Download the full Welcome Manifesto

This is the second of a series of blogs about creating a welcoming environment. Read the first here.

Image above: On the southernmost tip of the Italian island of Lampedusa, a sculpture of an open door greets the sea. It’s called ‘La Porta d’Europa’ — the door of Europe. Credit: Mediterranean Hope.

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