More than two-dozen Christian and Jewish groups representing millions of Americans โ ranging from the Episcopal Church and the Union for Reform Judaism to the Mennonites and Unitarian Universalists โ filed a federal court lawsuit Tuesday challenging a Trump administration move giving immigration agents more leeway to make arrests at houses of worship.
The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in Washington, contends that the new policy is spreading fear of raids, thus lowering attendance at worship services and other valuable church programs. The result, says the suit, infringes on the groupsโ religious freedom โ namely their ability to minister to migrants, including those in the United States illegally.
โWe have immigrants, refugees, people who are documented and undocumented,โ said the Most Rev. Sean Rowe, the presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church.

โWe cannot worship freely if some of us are living in fear,โ he told The Associated Press. โBy joining this lawsuit, weโre seeking the ability to gather and fully practice our faith, to follow Jesusโ command to love our neighbors as ourselves.โ
The new lawsuit echoes and expands on some of the arguments made in a similar lawsuit filed Jan. 27 by five Quaker congregations and later joined by the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship and a Sikh temple. It is currently pending in U.S. District Court in Maryland.
Names as defendants in the new lawsuit are the Department of Homeland Security and its immigration enforcement agencies. The DHS assistant secretary for public affairs, Tricia McLaughlin, offered this response via email: "We are protecting our schools, places of worship, and Americans who attend, by preventing criminal aliens and gang members from exploiting these locations and take safe haven there because these criminals knew that under the previous Administration that law enforcement couldnโt go inside."
โDHSโs directive gives our law enforcement the ability to do their jobs,โ she added.

A memorandum filed Friday by the Department of Justice, opposing the thrust of the Quaker lawsuit, outlined further arguments that may also apply to the new lawsuit.
In essence, the memo contended that the plaintiffsโ request to block the new enforcement policy is based on speculation of hypothetical future harm โ and thus is insufficient grounds for issuing an injunction.
The memo said that immigration enforcement affecting houses of worship had been permitted for decades, and the new policy announced in January simply said that field agents โ using โcommon senseโ and โdiscretionโ โ could now conduct such operations without pre-approval from a supervisor.
One part of that memo might not apply to the new lawsuit, as it argued the Quakers and their fellow plaintiffs have no basis for seeking a nationwide injunction against the revised enforcement policy.
โAny relief in this case should be tailored solely to the named plaintiffs,โ said the DOJ memo, contending that any injunction should not apply to other religious organizations.
The plaintiffs in the new lawsuit represent a vastly larger swath of American worshippers โ including more than 1 million followers of Reform Judaism, the estimated 1.5 million Episcopalians in 6,700 congregations nationwide, nearly 1.1 million members of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), and the estimated 1.5 million active members of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church โ one of the countryโs oldest predominantly Black denominations.
Among the other plaintiffs are the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), with more than 3,000 congregations; the Church of the Brethren, with more than 780 congregations; the Convenciรณn Bautista Hispana de Texas, encompassing about 1,100 Hispanic Baptist churches; the Friends General Conference, an association of regional Quaker organizations; the Mennonite Church USA, with about 50,000 members; the Unitarian Universalist Association, with more than 1,000 congregations; the United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism, with more than 500 U.S. congregations; and regional branches of the United Methodist Church and the United Church of Christ.
โThe massive scale of the suit will be hard for them to ignore,โ said Kelsi Corkran, a lawyer with the Georgetown University Law Centerโs Institute for Constitutional Advocacy and Protection who is lead counsel for the lawsuit.
The plaintiffs joined the suit, she said, โbecause their scripture, teaching, and traditions offer irrefutable unanimity on their religious obligation to embrace and serve the refugees, asylum seekers, and immigrants in their midst without regard to documentation or legal status.โ
Prior to the recent Trump administration change, Corkran said immigration agents generally needed a judicial warrant or other special authorization to conduct operations at houses of worship and other โsensitive locations" such as schools and hospitals.
โNow itโs go anywhere, any time,โ she told the AP. โNow they have broad authority to swoop in โ theyโve made it very clear theyโll get every undocumented person.โ
She cited a recent incident in which a Honduran man was arrested outside his familyโs Atlanta-area church while a service was being held inside.
The lawsuit includes details from some of the plaintiffs as to how their operations might be affected. The Union for Reform Judaism and the Mennonites, among others, said many of their synagogues and churches host on-site foodbanks, meal programs, homeless shelters and other support services for undocumented people who might now be fearful of participating.
One of the plaintiffs is the Latino Christian National Network, which seeks to bring together Latino leaders with different traditions and values to collaborate on pressing social issues. The networkโs president is the Rev. Carlos Malavรฉ, a pastor of two churches in Virginia, who described to the AP what network members are observing.
โThere is deep-seated fear and distrust of our government,โ he said. โPeople fear going to the store, they are avoiding going to church. ... The churches are increasingly doing online services because people fear for the well-being of their families.โ
The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, which leads the nation's largest denomination, did not join the lawsuit, though it has criticized Trump's migration crackdown. On Tuesday, Pope Francis issued a major rebuke of the deportation plan, warning that the forceful removal of people purely because of their illegal status deprives them of their inherent dignity and โwill end badly.โ
Many conservative faith leaders and legal experts across the U.S. do not share concerns about the new arrest policy.
โPlaces of worship are for worship and are not sanctuaries for illegal activity or for harboring people engaged in illegal activity,โ said Mat Staver, founder of the conservative Christian legal organization Liberty Counsel.
โFugitives or criminals are not immune from the law merely because they enter a place of worship,โ he said via email. โThis is not a matter of religious freedom. There is no right to openly violate the law and disobey law enforcement.โ
Professor Cathleen Kaveny, who teaches in the theology department and law school at Boston College, questioned whether the plaintiffs would prevail with the religious freedom argument, but suggested the Trump administration might be unwise to disregard a traditional view of houses of worship as places of sanctuary for vulnerable people.
โThese buildings are different โ almost like embassies,โ she said. โI think of churches as belonging to an eternal country.โ
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Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the APโs collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.