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Special edition of 'This Week' Sunday with Co-anchor Martha Raddatz live from the Vatican in Rome following the historic election of Pope Leo XIV

time10-05-2025

  • Politics

Special edition of 'This Week' Sunday with Co-anchor Martha Raddatz live from the Vatican in Rome following the historic election of Pope Leo XIV

This is a listing for 'This Week' airing Sunday, May 11, 2025. 1:19 ABC News SPECIAL EDITION OF 'THIS WEEK' SUNDAY WITH CO-ANCHOR MARTHA RADDATZ LIVE FROM THE VATICAN IN ROME FOLLOWING THE HISTORIC ELECTION OF POPE LEO XIV Rev. Peter M. Donohue Villanova University President ANALYSIS PANEL Terry Moran ABC News Senior National Correspondent Liz Nagy Chicago WLS-TV Reporter Rev. James Martin ABC News Contributor America Magazine Editor Plus, ABC News Chief International Correspondent James Longman reports from Vatican City on the Pope's Inaugural Sunday Mass and ABC News Correspondent Matt Rivers reports from Peru where the pope served as a bishop for many years. And, Raddatz conducts an exclusive interview with Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov in Russia, where she also covered Victory Day events in Moscow marking the 80th anniversary of the defeat of Nazi Germany in World War II.

Controversial ‘Hell has open borders' sign isn't about US immigration, IL church says
Controversial ‘Hell has open borders' sign isn't about US immigration, IL church says

Miami Herald

time12-02-2025

  • Politics
  • Miami Herald

Controversial ‘Hell has open borders' sign isn't about US immigration, IL church says

An electronic sign with a controversial immigration-related message lit up outside of a church in Illinois, but according to the church's pastor, the sign was not about U.S. immigration policy. 'Heaven has strict immigration laws. Hell has open borders,' flashed the sign outside of New Hope Community Church in Palatine, drawing backlash from several community members who took the sign as politically charged commentary against immigration. 'Part of why we moved to Palatine was the diversity — being able to show our kids that,' Katharine Huddleston told WLS-TV. 'Seeing something like this is really upsetting.' The message — which was displayed on the sign for about six days, according to Pastor James Pittman — comes amid new immigration guidelines from President Donald Trump's administration, including one directive that allows immigration officials to enforce laws in places of worship and other previously considered 'sensitive' locations. Twenty-seven religious groups filed a lawsuit Feb. 11 challenging the recent policy change, McClatchy News reported. For the church, however, the sign was meant to give community members an opportunity to examine their relationship with God, not an attack on immigrants, Pittman said in a Feb. 11 YouTube video addressing the controversy. In the video, Pittman pointed to Bible verses in the book of Matthew that reference a 'narrow gate' to heaven. 'We often times take issues of the day and put it up on our sign pointing people to the righteousness of God and who he is,' Pittman said in the video. Later in the video, Pittman stated that the church is 'against illegal immigration' as it teaches that Christians are to 'obey the laws of the land,' but he emphasized that the church's sign was not about that. Still, many thought the message was in poor taste and did not receive the pastor's justification well. His church sign is not only insensitive but also perpetuates harmful stereotypes. It's a thinly veiled attempt to stoke fears and push a divisive agenda, masquerading as a message of faith,' one person commented on Facebook. Some residents made plans to place signs of encouragement around the church, WLS-TV reported. According to a recently released Lifeway Research poll, a majority of evangelical Christians said they believe the U.S. has a moral responsibility to accept refugees and to help immigrants who are undocumented, McClatchy News reported. Palatine is about a 30-mile drive northwest from Chicago — a city that has received some of the most migrants in recent years, with about 40,000 people since 2022, according to the latest data from the Migration Policy Institute.

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