How do different Christian denominations in the United States approach immigration issues? In Immigrant Neighbors among Us, U.S. Hispanic scholars creatively mine the resources of their theological traditions to reflect on one of the most controversial issues of our day. Representative theologians from Roman Catholic, Lutheran, Reformed, Methodist/Wesleyan, Pentecostal, and Independent Evangelical church families show how biblical narratives, historical events, systematic frameworks, ethical principles, and models of ministry shape their traditions' perspectives on immigrant neighbors, law, and reform. Each chapter provides questions for dialogue. "The different denominational perspectives of each chapter are interesting to learn from for all readers and model the ecumenical collaboration that is needed for the pressing social problems of our time. But the individual chapters offer a particularly valuable resource for churches within those traditions. . . . The book is valuable reading for activists, social workers and churches working with immigrants, and deserves priority position in reading lists for courses on migration, social justice and local contextual/Hispanic theology." Excerpt from book review by Darren Cronshaw, International Journal of Public Theology 10 (2016) 510-511. M. Daniel Carroll R. is Distinguished Professor of Old Testament at Denver Seminary, Denver, Colorado, and adjunct professor at El Seminario Teologico Centroamericano, Guatemala City, Guatemala. He is the author of Christians at the Border: Immigration, the Church, and the Bible (2013). Leopoldo A. Sanchez M. is the Werner R.H. and Elizabeth Ringger Krause Professor of Hispanic Ministries and Director of the Center for Hispanic Studies at Concordia Seminary, St. Louis, Missouri. He is the author of Receiver, Bearer, and Giver of God's Spirit: Jesus' Life in the Spirit as a Lens for Theology and Life (2015) and Immigrant Neighbors among Us: Immigration across Theological Traditions [co-edited with M. Daniel Carroll R.] (2015) Juan F. Martinez served as vice president for diversity and international ministries and professor of Hispanic studies and pastoral leadership at Fuller Theological Seminary.