ELCA Bishops Pastoral Letter on Houston ICE Shooting

July 14, 2026

To the People of Faith in Texas and to All Who Grieve,

“When one member suffers, all suffer together.” (1 Corinthians 12:26)

On the morning of Tuesday, July 7, 2026, Lorenzo Salgado Araujo was shot and killed by an agent of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Houston’s East End. He was 52 years old. He was a husband and the father of three United States citizen children. For nearly thirty-five years he made his home among us, rising before dawn to build houses across this city and to give honest work to others. His family knew him as “El mundo entero” – the whole world.

We grieve as neighbors, as clergy and lay leaders, and as people who confess that every human being is created in the image of God. A father was killed on a Houston street on his way to a construction site, and his citizen children learned of his death, not from any official, but from a video circulating on social media. This is a moral wound to our whole community, and we will not look away from it.

We extend our deepest condolences and our steadfast prayers to the Salgado Araujo family, to the men detained alongside him – including his brother – and to the Magnolia Park and East End communities now living in fear and sorrow.

What We Know and What We Do Not Know

Federal authorities have stated that Mr. Salgado Araujo failed to comply with commands, struck a law enforcement vehicle, and moved his vehicle toward an officer, prompting an agent to fire in what the agency describes as self-defense. His family disputes this account. They say he was a careful man who knew what to do if stopped, and that he may have feared the unmarked vehicles surrounding him belonged to those who meant him harm. Public records reflect no criminal convictions, and his family says he was actively pursuing a work permit and lawful status.

The Department of Homeland Security has now confirmed that the federal agents at the scene had not been issued body-worn cameras. It remains unclear what other federal video evidence may exist, including any footage from government vehicles or other recording systems. No comprehensive video of the moments before the shooting has been made public.

These new facts raise urgent questions. How did an operation intended to apprehend someone else lead to the stop of Mr. Salgado Araujo’s vehicle? What information did agents have before initiating that stop? What commands were given, how were the agents identified, and how did the encounter escalate to lethal force?

The Harris County District Attorney’s Office has announced that it is conducting an investigation, while acknowledging that key evidence remains under federal control. The public still has little evidence with which to evaluate the federal account of what happened.

We do not stand in judgment of any individual before the facts are known. We stand for the truth. And the truth, in a matter of life and death, belongs to the public.

What We Believe

As (ELCA) Lutherans, we are members of a church with immigrants and with roots in immigrant churches in a nation of immigrants. Our faith shows forth in hospitality for the uprooted and is a way to live out the biblical call to love the neighbor in response to God’s love in Jesus Christ: “I was a stranger and you welcomed me” (Matthew 25:35). Recalling Martin Luther’s admonition, we remember: “How do we know that the love of God dwells in us? If we take upon ourselves the need of the neighbor.”1

The use of lethal force against a human being, our neighbor, is a grave matter that must never be shielded from accountability. When it occurs in our streets, in our neighborhoods, and in the presence of our children, it demands not silence but a full and public reckoning.

What We Call For

In the name and Spirit of Jesus Christ, and out of love for our neighbors of every immigration status, we respectfully but firmly call upon federal authorities and our elected representatives to take the following actions:

1. An immediate, independent, and transparent investigation. We call for a genuinely independent investigation into the death of Lorenzo Salgado Araujo, one not conducted solely by the agency whose officer fired the fatal shot. We welcome the Harris County District Attorney’s investigation and call upon federal authorities to preserve all evidence and cooperate fully with local investigators. We also support credible external, inspector general, or congressional oversight of this case.

2. Full transparency regarding all federal evidence. We call for the prompt public release of all relevant evidence, including any vehicle-camera or other federal video footage, agent statements, radio and dispatch records, surveillance materials, the operational plan for the enforcement action, records explaining the identification and decision to stop Mr. Salgado Araujo’s vehicle, and the autopsy findings, to the fullest extent the law allows.

The Department of Homeland Security has confirmed that the agents at the scene did not have body- worn cameras. Federal authorities should now state clearly and publicly what other recordings exist, including any footage captured by government vehicles or other federal recording systems, and preserve and release that evidence as permitted by law.

The family and the public have a right to know how an operation aimed at someone else resulted in the death of Lorenzo Salgado Araujo.

3. Meaningful policy change in ICE enforcement operations. We call for concrete reforms to prevent the next avoidable death, including:

  • An immediate review and restriction of the use of unmarked vehicles and plainclothes agents in routine enforcement stops, which sow confusion and fear and make peaceful compliance nearly impossible;
  • Clear, enforced limits on the use of lethal force, and an end to vehicle-based enforcement tactics that predictably escalate to deadly outcomes;
  • A binding requirement that federal immigration agents wear activated body cameras and visible identification during all enforcement operations;
  • Prompt and humane notification of families when a loved one is injured, detained, or killed, so that no family again learns of a death through social media;
  • Independent oversight of ICE operations and real accountability when agents violate policy or the law.

4. A restoration of trust and an end to enforcement that terrorizes communities. We call on our leaders to reject enforcement practices that treat entire neighborhoods as targets and that make our immigrant neighbors afraid to drive to work, report a crime, or seek help. We renew our long-standing call for just, humane, and comprehensive immigration reform that keeps families together and honors the dignity of every person.

Our Commitment to Our Neighbors

To our immigrant neighbors, and especially to the Latino communities of Houston and across Texas who carry this grief and fear today: you are beloved children of God. You are not alone. Our congregations remain places of welcome, refuge, prayer, and practical support. We will continue to provide pastoral care, connect families with trusted legal resources, share Know Your Rights information, and stand publicly for your dignity and safety.

We invite the faithful across our synods to pray for the Salgado Araujo family, to accompany immigrant neighbors in tangible ways, and to lend their voices to the call for truth and justice.

May the God of the widow, the orphan, and the stranger comfort all who mourn, strengthen all who seek justice, and turn the hearts of those in authority toward mercy and truth.

“He has told you, O mortal, what is good; and what does the Lord require of you but to do justice, and to love kindness, and to walk humbly with your God?” (Micah 6:8)

In Christ’s peace and with a shared commitment to truth, justice and the dignity of every person,

Bishop Tracey Breashears Schultz, TX-LA Gulf Coast Synod

Bishop Sue Briner Bishop, Southwestern TX Synod

Bishop Erik Gronberg, Northern TX-Northern LA Synod

August Remind: 2025-26 ELCA Federal Policy Priorities for the 119th Congress

A Shared Foundation

As the largest Lutheran denomination in the United States, the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) encompasses major geographical, cultural, ideological and generational differences. We therefore ground our advocacy in our shared foundations: Scripture, the Lutheran theological tradition and, above all, our baptismal identity as belonging to God in the love of Christ and the power of the Holy Spirit.

As we work to make a difference in the shared life of our communities and our country, these values guide our witness in society.

Civic Engagement

  • Facilitate depolarizing conversations and relationships.
  • Foster cultural and political pluralism.
  • Support Lutheran participation in civic life and public witness.
  • Honor and pray for our elected officials and public servants.

Following are policy priorities discerned for ELCA federal advocacy during the 119th Congress, which convened in

Washington, D.C., in January 2025 and will end in January 2027.

Economic Policy

  • Support poor and working families.
  • Expand the supply of affordable housing.
  • Advance a just and sustainable tax code.
  • Reduce bureaucratic and administrative burden.
  • Care for farmers, hungry neighbors, and creation.

Migration Policy

  • Ensure stable families and communities.
  • Maintain a safe and orderly border.
  • Oppose mass deportation.
  • Respect human dignity in immigration enforcement.
  • Protect vulnerable women, children, refugees and asylum seekers.

Civil Rights Policy

  • Prevent discrimination.
  • Protect religious liberty for all.
  • Improve outcomes for disadvantaged groups.
  • Recognize and address historical injustices.
  • Support mental health of high-risk groups.
  • Uphold constitutional rights and promote good governance.

International Policy

  • Restore and support humanitarian aid.
  • Defend human rights and religious freedom.
  • Advance women and girls’ rights and equality.
  • Help prevent conflicts and build peace.
  • Model moral consistency in foreign policy.

Environment & Energy Policy

  • Pursue pragmatic climate solutions.
  • Support impacted communities.
  • Promote community health.
  • Prepare for and respond to natural disasters.

Middle East & North Africa Policy

  • Insist on equal rights and safety for all in the Holy Land.
  • Stabilize the Middle East and North Africa region.
  • Protect civilian life.
  • Defend freedom of religion and religious minorities.

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY + FULL STATEMENT OF ELCA FEDERAL POLICY PRIORITIES FOR THE 119TH CONGRESS

Find the full ELCA Federal Policy Priorities for the 119th Congress with theological foundations and policy priority details through the ELCA Resource Center, by contacting the ELCA Witness in Society staff at washingtonoffice@elca.org, or by clicking the link below. More about ELCA Witness in Society is available from ELCA.org/advocacy.

How can you get involved?

Our ministry of advocacy is a public witness to God’s love for our neighbor, ourselves and for all creation. In addition to activity in Washington, D.C., on federal advocacy priorities, this public witness is also organized by state public policy offices in the ELCA Advocacy Network, through our ELCA Corporate Social Responsibility strategy and by Lutheran Office for World Community representation to the United Nations – plus the advocacy of members, congregations and synods.

Connect with the ELCA Advocacy Network for updates and invitations to action at ELCA.org/advocacy/signup. Find resources at ELCA.org/resources/advocacy and a community with which to engage on social media @ELCAadvocacy.

ELCA Federal Policy

ELCA Federal Policy Statement

Hunger Leaders Network meets 6pm last Tuesday of every month

Calling all hunger champions: join this network of the Grand Canyon Synod! Meet to hear updates on national and local Hunger and Food Insecurity efforts and initiatives, to learn from one another, and to share with the group what’s happening in our congregations. Anyone interested in alleviating hunger is welcome. Prepare to be encouraged and supported! Tuesday, 7/28/2026, 6-7pm MST.

If you have any questions about this group, please contact Solveig Muus (LAMA).

Click here to access the meeting, at 6pm on the last Tuesday of every month.

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Bishop Curry Statement on SCOTUS Immigration Decisions

JULY 8, 2026

Beloved in Christ,

Grace and peace be with you in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ.

Today, I write with a heavy heart.

Recently, the Supreme Court issued a decision that will allow this administration to proceed with terminating Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for more than 330,000 people from Haiti and 3,800 from Syria, many of whom have lived in this country for decades. They are not strangers. They are part of the fabric of our whole society. The termination of TPS threatens to separate families, destabilize local economies and force people to return to countries where they may face severe humanitarian crises, violence and threats to their very lives. 

This ruling comes amid a series of changes in U.S. policy that have increasingly restricted legal pathways for immigrants and those seeking protection. Last week the Supreme Court upheld a policy allowing individuals to be blocked from applying for asylum at the U.S. border. At the same time, we are witnessing the deportation of people with pending asylum claims after perfunctory mass hearings — often without access to legal representation. The refugee resettlement program, once a sign of this nation’s commitment to welcome, remains largely closed to most nationalities and races, with a narrow exception for white South Africans.

We are a people shaped by the Word of God, called by the apostle Paul to “welcome one another … just as Christ has welcomed you, for the glory of God” (Romans 15:7). As Lutherans, we confess a faith that compels us to welcome and protect the vulnerable, to honor the dignity God gives every human being, and to uphold laws and policies that provide refuge to those fleeing violence, persecution and profound hardship. 

In this moment, I invite this church to prayer, lament and action.

As a church, we pray for protection and justice for all TPS holders — from Haiti and Syria, and for the more than 1.3 million people who may be affected by this decision, including those from Venezuela, El Salvador, Myanmar, Ethiopia, Somalia, South Sudan and many other nations. May God’s mercy surround them and sustain them in the days ahead.

As a church, we pray for the churches, ministries and leaders of the ELCA who walk alongside immigrant communities through accompaniment, advocacy and immigration services. May they be granted wisdom, strength and courage for the work to which God has called them.

As a church, we lament the dehumanization of immigrants through rhetoric rooted in racism, white supremacy, xenophobia and fear — particularly against Black and Brown immigrants. We reject the spread of lies and conspiracy theories that falsely accuse these communities of harm. And we recommit ourselves to speaking truth, honoring dignity and recognizing every person as made in the image of God.

As a church, we call on the administration to do what is just — to extend TPS protections where conditions remain dangerous and unstable, and to support comprehensive immigration reform that reflects both justice and mercy, offering welcome to those who seek safety within our borders.

And I ask each of you, faithful people of God, to continue the work of love: through prayer, through advocacy, through accompaniment and through faithful witness in your communities.

Beloved, in times like these, it is easy to grow weary. But we are not alone. The God who calls us is faithful. The risen Christ invites us forward. The presence of the Spirit fills us with the power and courage to act.

Together, we walk the way of Jesus — with courage, with compassion and with hope.

May the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, guard your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus.

Amen.

In Christ,

The Rev. Yehiel Curry
Presiding Bishop
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America 

I invite you to connect with AMMPARO, our church’s strategy for accompanying migrants with protection, advocacy, representation and opportunities, to support accompaniment with immigrants and those forcibly displaced. And you may engage through an Action Alert on TPS through ELCA Witness in Society.

ELCA Action Alert: Support Temporary Protected Status Holders

Ask your senators to pass legislation to protect Temporary Protected Status (TPS) holders.


On June 25, 2026, the Supreme Court issued a decision that will allow the U.S. administration to proceed with terminating TPS – a legal immigration status intended to protect people from returning to countries where they face harm – for more than 330,000 people from Haiti and 3,800 from Syria.

The termination of legal status threatens to separate families, destabilize local U.S. economies and force people to return to countries where they may face severe humanitarian crises, violence and threats to their lives. The decision will likely also impact more than 1.3 million TPS holders from nations including Venezuela, which is faced with recovering from a devastating earthquake.

The Rev. Yehiel Curry, ELCA presiding bishop, shared a statement on SCOTUS immigration decisions. As Lutherans, we confess a faith that stirs us to welcome and protect the vulnerable, to honor the dignity God bestows on every human being, and to uphold laws and policies that provide refuge to those fleeing violence, persecution and profound hardship. 

The ELCA has called on the administration to do what is right – to extend TPS protections where conditions remain dangerous and unstable and support comprehensive immigration reform that reflects both justice and mercy. The House of Representatives has already passed a bipartisan bill to extend protections for Haiti TPS holders.

Use this Action Alert to ask your senators to co-sponsor the Senate version of the House bill, S. 4814, and to urge the administration to protect TPS holders who face loss of legal status and deportation to countries where they are not safe.

Customize this message with your faith convictions and connections to immigrants or TPS holders in your community.

Contact your lawmakers today. Customize your message with your experiences and values.

Find your Member of Congress Here

Senator Catherine Cortez Mastro, 202-224-3542https://www.cortezmasto.senate.gov/

Senator Jackie Rosen, 202-224-6244https://www.rosen.senate.gov/

Rep. Dina Titus, (202)-225-5965https://titus.house.gov/

Rep. Mark Amodei, (202)-225-6155https://amodei.house.gov/

Rep. Susie Lee, (202)-225-3252https://susielee.house.gov/

Rep Steven Horsford, (202)-225-9894https://horsford.house.gov/

If you would like to schedule time with your legislator, please reach out to Pastor Paul,and he is willing to work with ELCA Advocacy Partners to secure a time.

Act Now!