ethical demand
must resonate in our hearts
revealed in our lives
These issues are fundamental to the disciple of Jesus Christ.
“What we do to the least among us, we do to Him” is an ethical demand that must resonate in our hearts and be revealed in our lives.
I ask the faithful to join with people of good will everywhere and to stand with those who are afraid to leave their homes, afraid to go to the hospital, afraid to take their children to school, afraid to buy groceries — those who are forced to live in fear every moment of every day.
These are the ways we stand with Jesus Christ.
And between our voices and our always respectful, nonviolent witness, we might just reveal that the soul of our great nation is alive and well in us.
Archbishop Weisenburger of Detroit wrote these thoughts as the closing lines to an Opinion Piece titled, ICE violence, child separations put America’s soul in crisis that was published in the Detroit Free Press on Feb. 1, 2026.
Read that line again, “What we do to the least among us, we do to Him” is an ethical demand that must resonate in our hearts and be revealed in our lives.
How can any Christian any where read that and not feel called upon to act, to do something.
Anything but support what is happening and if not openly support, say nothing.
Again, “What we do to the least among us, we do to Him” is an ethical demand that must resonate in our hearts and be revealed in our lives.
It might also be good to remember the warning.
What warning?
I point you back to Bible to the Book of Matthew, Chapter 7.
I’ll quote the verse in the King James English as it seems to resonate in my heart.
Chapter 7, verse 21 says, “Wherefore by their fruits ye shall know them.”
And in verse 23 …
Verse 23 reads, “And then will I profess unto them, I never knew you.”
These issues are fundamental to the disciple of Jesus Christ.
Who willingly runs that risk?
Read the complete essay below the photo.

In the light of recent and tragic immigration enforcement incidents, a great many individuals have asked my opinion of our nation’s immigration procedures.
Actually, they are among the issues that keep me awake at night.
Before I address the question, please allow me to recount a portion of my personal history which — along with the Gospel and Catholic teachings — has profoundly affected my understanding of the situation.
‘What you do to the least among you, you do to me’
When I served as the Bishop of Tucson, Arizona, my diocese contained the entire Arizona-Mexico border. Working with government entities, Tucson’s Catholic Charities coordinated the reception of thousands of immigrants during my tenure.
While it was usually a far lesser number, at its peak our Catholic Charities processed 1,400 asylum-seekers and immigrants per day. While Catholic theology makes no distinction between assisting immigrations with or without documents, I would note that every person we assisted was brought to us by the U.S. Border Patrol or other federal agents, and each was in possession of valid immigration documents.
In my own interactions with these immigrants, I knew I was on holy ground as I would hear their stories. I would also witness the traumatic wounds of those who had seen relatives killed or did all they could to find food for starving children. I am forever changed by that experience, and when I couple it with Our Lord’s teaching, “What you do to the least among you, you do to me,” I am compelled to speak on their behalf.
Fatal and toxic
In the last few weeks, we have witnessed a 5-year-old child, Liam Conejo Ramos, separated from his mother and quickly sent with his father from Minnesota to a detention center in Texas. This fast relocation of detainees seems to be a policy that seeks to separate the detained from family, community or any local legal assistance.
As this family entered the U.S. as legal asylum-seekers and committed no crimes, many are left to wonder, why focus on them? Having largely failed to detain and deport the large numbers of violent criminals as promised, is Immigrations and Customs Enforcement now rounding up legal asylum seekers for the sake of an optic of success?
We then witnessed the killing of Renee Good, whose death at the hands of ICE agents was ruled a homicide by the local medical examiner’s office. Rather than allowing for a transparent and independent investigation of the death, our federal government is uncooperative, and insisting on doing only the equivalent of an internal investigation.
More recently, we have the tragic death of Alex Pretti, a Veterans Affairs Hospital nurse. A common concern in both deaths is that they appear to have been fatal over-uses of violent force on the part of federal agents. The matter is made further toxic by leadership vilifying Good and Pretti within hours of their killings, despite having no substantial knowledge of the facts at that time.
America’s soul is at risk
I must admit that when I look at the totality of this situation, I am dumbfounded and deeply disturbed.
As a proud American, I have always lived by the belief that we are a nation of guiding values, a nation of noble virtues, a nation established on the rule of law and respectful of human rights. Increasingly, I find myself asking if our nation is losing its very soul.
For this reason, I join my voice to the growing number of those who have expressed grave concern for what is happening in our midst.
I also reject any notion of an internal investigation of these incidents, and instead call for an independent and transparent review of these actions.
Lastly, I call for a restoration of entirely innocent small children who have been separated from their mothers. Are we not better than that?
We must acknowledge that a substantial degree of responsibility for this catastrophe flows from the failure of our federal government to craft reasonable immigration reform.
Missing that federal leadership, we should not be surprised at the humanitarian and moral crisis that has resulted.
It seems that Americans can only envision two options: Either open borders with no restraint, or closed borders with no immigration of any kind.
That dichotomy is a lie. It is quite possible to acknowledge, respect and defend our borders, while also creating a path for the same kind of immigration that brought many of our ancestors to this nation.
I believe that our elected legislators are intelligent and capable. What is lacking is unified resolve to create this critical immigration reform. While admitting that it is a daunting task, I nevertheless urge our legislators to address what is truly a life-or-death issue, even if it entails braving the onslaught of criticism from those entrenched on one side or the other of this crisis.
Christ’s ethical demand
Without substantial immigration reform that balances legitimately maintained borders with the mercy that has always been at the root of our nation, I fear we will continue to see 5-year-olds separated from mothers, American citizens killed while protesting or exercising their right to free speech and documented immigrants who arrived in this nation via the correct channels rounded up for deportation.
Again, these issues are fundamental to the disciple of Jesus Christ. “What we do to the least among us, we do to Him” is an ethical demand that must resonate in our hearts and be revealed in our lives.
I ask the faithful to join with people of good will everywhere and to stand with those who are afraid to leave their homes, afraid to go to the hospital, afraid to take their children to school, afraid to buy groceries — those who are forced to live in fear every moment of every day.
These are the ways we stand with Jesus Christ. And between our voices and our always respectful, nonviolent witness, we might just reveal that the soul of our great nation is alive and well in us.
May God bless you, may God bless those at risk and may God bless our great nation.
Edward J. Weisenburger is the Archbishop of Detroit.


