CNN Argues White Christians Must Embrace Mass Immigration to Save Church

In this Oct. 1, 2017 file photo, Pope Francis poses for selfies with migrants at a regiona
AP/Luca Bruno

CNN has offered its own racist read on Christianity’s future in America, insisting white Christians must embrace mass immigration of people of color in order to save the faith.

The “spread of White Christian nationalism” and the Church’s opposition to gay sex “have stained the church’s reputation,” writes CNN’s John Blake, and the decline of American Christianity can only be stemmed by encouraging more black and brown Christian immigrants.

“Christianity could rebound in America if White Christians embrace this one change,” he writes.

According to “the nation’s top religion scholars and historians,” the American church “is poised to find new life for one major reason: Waves of Christians are migrating to the US,” the article asserts.

The American church may find salvation in “the booming of Christianity in what is called the ‘Global South,’ the regions encompassing Latin America, Africa and Asia,” the article declares.

Nevertheless, the “biggest challenge” to Christianity’s future in America is not declining numbers, Blake argues, “but the church’s ability to adapt to this migration.”

This migration is known as the “Browning of America,” he states, meaning a demographic trend expected to make white people the minority in the U.S. by 2045.

Migrants gather outside a legal training session inside Reynosa’s largest shelter, Senda de Vida 1, hoping to further their case for asylum on August 30, 2022 in Reynosa, Mexico. (Michael Nigro/Getty)

Yet the influx of black and brown Christians from places like Latin America and Asia “collides with another trend: a burgeoning White Christian nationalist movement that insists, incorrectly, that the US was founded as a White, Christian nation,” Blake warns. “It is hostile to non-White immigrants.”

The death knell for Christianity in America, he asserts, could come if the U.S. “enters another xenophobic period and limits migration from non-White Christians” or if “some Christians still cling to the belief that America is supposed to be a White Christian nation.”

“The future of American Christianity is neither white evangelicalism nor white progressivism,” Blake writes, citing New York Times columnist Tish Harrison Warren. “The future of American Christianity now appears to be a multiethnic community that is largely led by immigrants of the children of immigrants.”

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