Speaker Johnson to Pope Leo: Do Better

The exchange was brief, but it was revealing.

When Speaker Mike Johnson was recently asked about Pope Leo’s rhetoric criticizing border enforcement and America’s immigration policies, he didn’t respond with talking points, partisan slogans, or political spin. He responded with Scripture.

Specifically, he cited Romans 13 — a passage that has anchored Christian teaching on civil authority for nearly two thousand years — reminding listeners that government is instituted by God to restrain evil and promote order. In other words: borders matter. Law matters. Order matters. And caring about them is not a betrayal of Christian compassion. It is an expression of it.

That response, reported by Fox News, was thoughtful, grounded, and biblically consistent. And it stands in sharp contrast to much of what passes today for “faith-based” commentary on immigration.

 Which brings us, respectfully, to Pope Leo.

As the spiritual leader of more than a billion Catholics worldwide, his words carry enormous moral weight. When he speaks about migrants, borders, and national responsibility, he is not simply offering a private opinion. He is shaping consciences.

And in this case, he should know better.

Christian compassion does not mean open borders.

It never has.

Scripture is clear on two parallel truths that must be held together, not pitted against each other.

First: Human beings are made in God’s image. They deserve dignity. They deserve mercy. They deserve care.

Second: God ordains civil authority to establish boundaries, enforce........

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