A Bible Event Shows How Christians Should Feel About Illegals & Multiculturalism

Genesis 11:1-9 explains how humans tried to reach Heaven by building the Tower of Babel, or “the city and the tower.” However, the Lord was displeased and responded by confounding their language and scattering them across the earth.

The intended effect may be that God wanted humans to live differently, with their various languages, and in different places, permanently. Today, in modern American politics, the question about these differences remain, especially if the issue is about illegal immigration or the wider globalization trend.

“Illegal immigrants forcing their way into a border would a violation of what the Lord intended then,” stated Joesph McAllen, a conservative priest from Jackson, Mississippi. “I wonder how the Pope would interpret [Babel] in today’s context.”

Pope Francis is often known for pressing wealthy Christian-majority nations to adopt a pro-migrant stance. He has went as far as to traveling to Muslim-majority nations, such as the Central African Republic, Morocco, the United Arab Emirates, despite the region’s centuries-old opposition to Christianity that peaked during the Crusades and still lasts to this day.

Pope Francis goes to the Koudoukou mosque in Bangui, Central African Republic (Reuters)

Not only is pro-migration the issue, but so is the forced multiculturalism that often accompanies it. If God meant to separate humans by their languages, then the “press 1 for English, press 2 for Spanish” should worry Christians about the multiculturalism forced onto them by revisionists on the left.

In fact, some have even begun to interpret it as a First Amendment violation, since the overbearing leftist pressure to whitewash tradition, including religious ones, for multiculturalism is a violation to the freedom of religion.

Could it just be that God intentionally made us so differently to the point where the only way to co-exist with radically different cultures on earth is to live separately?

Perhaps, since modern statistics have confirmed that the ancient is correct: more homogeneous nations and individual cities have less poverty, less income inequality, less crime, and better infrastructure, and better life expectancy.

Despite rapid transportation, instant communication devices, and Google Translate, man’s modern technology is nowhere close to undoing God’s actions after the Tower of Babel. In fact, the closest symbol of multiculturalism and unity of modern mankind would be the United Nations and Communism, both of which has a laughable track record of creating globalization.

A Communist China poster urging workers of the world to unite. Note the multiculturalism of people’s faces.

Maybe the globalists should ask themselves if they, by some lucky shot, manage to succeed:

“Devout Christians should ask themselves and the Pope, ‘If all the world’s cultures reunited into one, would God scatter us again?”, said McAllen, “Should we risk letting history repeat itself?”

“Be careful for what you wish for,” McAllen warned, “the result won’t always be good. The Lord works in mysterious ways.”

However, that certainly hasn’t stopped modern technology, illegal immigrants, and globalist ideologies and organizations from trying to undo God’s will. 

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