Last night, President Trump removed his acting attorney general after she refused to defend his executive order restricting travel from seven Muslim-majority nations. Sally Q. Yates was deputy attorney general under President Obama and was serving until the Senate confirms Trump’s nominee for the post, Sen. Jeff Sessions.
This is just the latest news in the ongoing controversy over the travel ban. Immigrants from Iran, Iraq, Syria, Sudan, Libya, Yemen, and Somalia are directly affected by the president’s decision.
The administration notes that these nations were listed on the Obama-era Terrorist Travel Prevention Act of 2015. President Trump blames the airport chaos that followed his executive order on computer outages at Delta Air Lines and political protests. He noted in a tweet that only 109 people out of 325,000 were detained and held for questioning. An additional 173 were denied entry on flights to the US from the seven countries listed in the order.
Arguments in favor of the ban:
- A four-month restriction on travel from these countries is needed to keep Americans safe.
• The chaos that resulted was a temporary consequence of preventing terrorists from traveling into the US.
• If advance warning or a grace period had been announced, terrorists could have traveled before the ban took effect.
• The order is not against Muslims in general—it does not affect more than forty other Muslim-majority countries.
Democratic leader Chuck Schumer saw the controversy very differently, calling the executive order “mean-spirited and un-American.” The New York Times called the ban “illegal.” Critics note that none of the 9/11 terrorists came from the seven banned countries. Protesters in many other countries are registering their opposition as well.
My purpose this morning is not to argue for one side or the other. Rather, it is to think biblically with you about three issues central to the debate.
One: Scripture encourages security. Continue reading Denison Forum – Trump travel ban: 3 biblical priorities