The sob stories of illegal aliens getting deported keep coming. Is it Biblical to enforce border laws? Does the bible speak about borders and privileges of citizenship?
Welcome to Politics by Faith. Thank you very much for being here. I want to talk about citizenship. We've had a lot of illegal immigration stories lately, a lot of stories, more and more coming out every day of ICE agents arresting people and deporting people. One woman was in Miami. She's been here for 20 years and she was fined $1.8 million because the 1952 Immigration and Nationality Act says that for every day you stay here past your deportation order, which she was in 2005.
It's a $500 fine. That adds up to $1.8 million. So there's gonna be more and more stories like this, more and more stories of ICE agents showing up to courthouses, people being afraid. And that's the point.
That's what the point of it is, to try to get people to leave to self-deport. There's only 7,700 ICE agents who can detain and deport people, and there's 20, 30 million illegal aliens, so self-deportation is the only way.
So these are all efforts to try and get people to tell other people that we should go, and also if they catch you, you may be sent to Rwanda or South Sudan. Now I want to share something that popped out of me in Acts 22. Now yesterday we talked about Acts 22, but we ended up talking about a very
different aspect of it. Talking about Phil Robertson, but the original story I wanted to share out of Acts 22 is about Paul and the Jews were beating him, calling for him to be killed. I'll pick it up here. He, this Roman leader, at once took soldiers and centurions and ran down to them. And when they saw the tribune and the soldiers, they stopped beating Paul. So this is when Paul talks to the people in Hebrew.
We talked about this yesterday. He tells this whole road to Damascus story. Then he uses the word Gentile, right? Acts 22, 22 up to this word, they listened to him. Until he said the word Gentile, they listened to him. Then they raised their voices and said, away with such a fellow from the earth, for he
should not be allowed to live. Quick sidebar, Luke 2, which we we're gonna get to in a second here it's been more time on but In Luke 2 Jesus is brought to the temple mom and dad bring him to the temple Simeon is there and the Holy Spirit told Simeon that he would not die before he sees the Lord's Christ and Simeon there sees baby Jesus took him in his arms arms and said, Lord, now you are letting your servant depart in peace
according to your word. For my eyes have seen your salvation, that they have prepared in the presence of all peoples a light for revelation to the Gentiles and for glory to your people Israel. So we go right from the birth, Simeon talking about Jesus saving Gentiles and here we have Jews wanting to kill Paul for saying the same. Anyway back to Acts 22. The Tribune ordered Paul to be brought into the barracks saying that he should be examined by flogging to find out why
they were shouting against him like this. But when they stretched him out for the whips, Paul said to the centurion who was standing by, is it lawful for you to flog a man who is a Roman citizen and uncondemned? When the centurion heard this, he went to the tribune and said to him, what are you about to do for For this man's a Roman citizen. So the tribune came and said to him, tell me, are you a Roman citizen? He said, yes. The
tribune answered, I bought this citizenship for a large sum. And Paul said, but I am a citizen by birth. So those who were about to examine him withdrew from him immediately. And the tribune also was afraid, for he realized that Paul was a Roman citizen and that he had bound him." So first of all, this flogging was a beating that men died from.
Second, this centurion, well both of them, were worried because they already bound him. It was illegal to even bind him up like they did, let alone beat him. They didn't get to beating him yet, but even bounding him up right here. It says the tribune was also afraid for he realized that Paul was a Roman citizen and that he had bound him. You can't even do that because as a citizen of Rome, you have due process as a citizen of Rome. You
have due process. If you're not a citizen, there was no process. That's why they bound him up. We're about to kill him. But having citizenship meant something. No, and the Roman asks Paul again, if this is true, because you can't lie about this, if you lie about being a Roman citizen, you could be put to death for
that.
I love how God uses Paul's special backgrounds for God's own purposes. By the way, this interesting line here, to examine, that it was like torture. That's what it was just like, think like waterboarding. It was torturing him, beating him, so that Paul would admit whatever his crime was, whatever was making the Jews so upset, just admit it and just beat it out of them. That's what that was. Now I bring this up here. This stood out beyond obviously the theological purposes.
This is just a secular study right here, but here's an example in history where citizenship meant something, meant something special. It meant something different than not being a citizen. Today, and this has been the left's goal for a long time, citizenship is cheap,
and they want to make it even cheaper. They want it to be meaningless. So we're all global citizens, right? They want citizenship to be something where there's no special privileges, not even voting. The left has opened up voting already to illegal aliens in there's no special privileges. Not even voting.
The left has opened up voting already to illegal aliens in certain cities for certain races. I know San Francisco school board races, illegal aliens can vote and they would open that up nationwide if they could. They wanted to make it where being a citizen of America meant nothing, but nothing special. And you can come from anywhere in the world and have the same privileges as citizens of America. And if you do that, it doesn't mean anything. The left talks about giving due process,
but really what they mean is infinity process to people who aren't entitled to it. The same that citizens are, these are rights reserved for citizens. Rome 2000 years ago had a legal framework and a classification for citizen and it mattered. So now Paul has a right to a fair trial. Now that he's a citizen or he has been, but now that it's known he has a protection from harsh penalties. He has a right to appeal. He has access to courts. He has constitutional protections. Non-citizens didn't have this. Obvious, right? They were going to kill him until he said the magic words, I'm a Roman citizen. Having an American citizenship should mean that much too.
Even abroad, we used to, we should get back to a world where no one in a foreign country would ever touch someone with an American passport. The cartels still kind of operate this way where they won't hurt an American official in Mexico knowing that if they did, the full force of American might would rain down on them so they won't touch the American at least for now. We have these stories every week or so.
Oh, I just saw this one. Let me say I pulled this one up. But every week or so there's another hostage from somewhere around the world that was released to an American or to America. And it's amazing that these people were ever taken in the first place. How dare you touch an American citizen. This is a freed Israeli hostage talking about what the Hamas terrorists
thought of Trump.
They were scared of him. Yeah, they wanted...
Who?
The terrorists.
Were afraid of Trump.
Yeah. They wanted Kamala to be chosen.
You talked politics with them?
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. They wanted Kamala to be elected. When Trump came into, became president, yeah, the way they treated us changed, for me, personally. This is what I felt.
I think because they anticipated that a deal would come soon. Yeah. And that's when they started giving you more food.
Exactly. More food, treated me better, you know, stopped cursing me, stopped spitting on me. They were scared of Trump treated
him better. Needs to be true with all of America though. They need to be scared of America and treat Americans better. Let's go back to Luke 2. This is right after Jesus, are you with me on that point so far? Citizenship should mean something.
Luke two, right after Jesus is born.
And it came to pass in those days, days that a decree went out from Caesar Augustus that all the world should be registered. The census first took place while, uh, Corinthians was governing Syria. Even back then, a counting of people took place. And they needed this for taxes, so military purposes. And in America, this is needed for that, but also for appropriate representation in Congress
and the electoral college. Now, we do this every 10 years. I think the Constitution says, or I think it's pretty vague where you can do it, it has to be done at least every 10 years. I think we can do it again before 2030, be my argument. And we just say, well, why would you need to do it before then?
Well, the census admitted that their 2020 census was wrong. They over-counted in many states and under-counted in many states and under counted in many states. The states they under counted, Arkansas, Florida, Illinois, Mississippi, Tennessee, and Texas. Every single one of those is a red state. Illinois is technically a blue state, but only because of Chicago.
The states they over counted, Delaware, Hawaii, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New York, Ohio, Rhode Island, and Utah. Those are all blue states except for Utah and Ohio. So they over counted in the blue states which means they gave them more representation in Congress than they deserve and in the Electoral College and they under counted in the
red states. Now if you look at accurate population changes in these states and across the country, the 2030 census is going to make it so that a Democrat would have to win every single Midwest swing state in order to win the election. The population shifts around the country are in the Republicans' favor. There's no question about that. Now Stephen Miller was recently asked about not including illegal aliens in the census coming favor, there's no question about that. Now Stephen Miller was recently asked about
not including illegal aliens in the census coming up in 2030, because right now they are. Illegal aliens are counted in the census. He said the administration of course is working to change that, he said it's a top priority. Then he said the best way to exclude illegal aliens
from the census is to exclude illegal aliens from America. But in Luke two, it says, so all went to be registered everyone to his own city. There's another example thousands of years ago of boundaries of sovereignty, of citizenship, all a proper role of civil government. If you're an illegal alien here, you're a citizen of Venezuela. You should be included in their census, not our census. And we as a nation have the right to protect and defend our borders, and who's
allowed in this country. Now, the Bible also says that Christians are citizens of heaven.
Philippians 3.20, our citizenship is in heaven.
And we eagerly await a savior from there, the Lord Jesus Christ. It's amazing truth, amazing truth. And does not mean that there are no countries here on earth.
In the meantime, we will set our mind on heavenly things, and we can also have proper boundaries and governmental authorities while here on earth. To be a citizen of heaven, it means that through faith in Jesus, our primary identity and loyalty and ultimate home are not found in this world, but in God's eternal kingdom. That is true. And you can believe in borders while here on earth. God did. Acts 17, 26. From one man, he made every nation of men to live on all the face of the earth,
and he determined their appointed times and the boundaries of their lands. It is okay to believe in boundaries, borders, and citizenship. The Bible speaks to all these things. Mike Slater dot locals dot com. Transcript commercial free on the website. Thank you so much for being here.
Thank you so much for being here. Mike Slater dot locals dot com.