Evangelicals might be the bedrock of President Trump’s base, “but many of them are decidedly not on board with his recent decision to cap the number of refugees resettled in the U.S. in 2020 at 18,000,” writes Jeff Brumley inBaptist News Global. Galen Carey of the National Association of Evangelicals described the president’s decision as “dramatic and heartbreaking.” And in an opinion piece for Religion News Service, Chris Chancey writes about moving to Clarkston, a community outside Atlanta, which has welcomed thousands of refugees: “They looked different from us and cherished different faiths, but their stories were fundamentally human. In showing me the world through their eyes, they freed me from my fear.”
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