Resettling Afrikaners Is a ‘Faustian Bargain,’ Says Episcopal Church’s Sean Rowe

Afrikaners
FILE - White South Africans demonstrate in support of U.S. President Donald Trump in front of the U.S. embassy in Pretoria, South Africa, Saturday, Feb. 15, 2025. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay, File)

Share

(RNS) — Faith leaders expressed a strident commitment to continue to follow their moral compasses on immigration, including refugee resettlement issues — despite any potential retaliation from the Trump administration — at an RNS webinar on Tuesday (May 20).

“Institutional resistance is now more important than ever,” said the Most Rev. Sean Rowe, the presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church. “The church may be one of the few institutions that will be able to stand up and to tell the truth along the way, and not fold to demands and continue to be asked to make compromises on our moral decision-making.”

Rowe spoke about faith-based lawsuits, explaining the Episcopal Church’s decision to end its refugee resettlement partnership with the United States government over the Trump administration’s new focus on resettling white Afrikaners from South Africa. The Episcopal Church has a long history of opposing apartheid in South Africa, and Rowe said the Trump administration created “a real distortion of the facts and of the truth” when claiming Afrikaners were now being subjected to racial discrimination in the country post-apartheid.

RELATED: South African Bishop Thanks Episcopal Leader for Declining To Resettle White Afrikaners

“Afrikaners don’t fit any definition of refugee,” Rowe said, explaining that he spoke with Cape Town Archbishop Thabo Makgoba about the many Africans fleeing violence who were now “jumped” in line by the white Afrikaners to get to the U.S.

Rowe acknowledged that some argued Episcopal Migration Ministries should resettle Afrikaners now to be able to hopefully resettle other refugees later. However, he defended the church’s decision by saying, “The problem with any kind of Faustian bargain like that is that the devil always wins.”

Presiding Bishop-elect Sean Rowe speaks following his election during the Episcopal Church General Convention in Louisville, Kentucky, Wednesday, June 26, 2024. (Photo by Randall Gornowich)

Several other faith-based refugee resettlement groups have told RNS they are providing or will provide services to a small number of Afrikaners arriving in the U.S. Church World Service and World Relief, two such agencies, both urged the Trump administration to resume refugee resettlement as normal.

The Rev. Carlos Malavé, president of the Latino Christian National Network, said, “As followers of Jesus, we must be faithful to our call.

“We cannot shy away from being prophetic and to name the evils that we are seeing coming out of the policies of the administration,” he said.

RELATED: Episcopal Church Refuses To Resettle White Afrikaners, Ends Partnership With US Government

Malavé said the task now is to articulate a Gospel worldview coming from Jesus Christ, “a worldview in which every human being is loved, accepted, cared for, without any difference among them.”

Immigrant families attending churches in his network had initially been afraid to go to sensitive locations like churches, hospitals and schools after the Trump administration lifted restrictions on immigration raids at those sites. But now, with time to reflect, Malavé said, these families are leaning on their faith.

“They have come to think, yes, there’s danger out there, but I’m in God’s hands. My family is in God’s hands,” he said.

Continue Reading...

AlejaHertzler-McCain@churchleaders.com'
Aleja Hertzler-McCain
Aleja Hertzler-McCain is an author at Religion News Service.

Read more

Latest Articles