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Under Abbott, Texas has lined up behind the immigration priorities of the Trump administration, which has increased immigration-related arrests and promised to try to speed up deportations. Houston and Dallas were in the top three cities for arrests by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement from January to April. Reports of raids and stakeouts, including at least one near a church shelter in Virginia, have created more fear in immigrant communities. A handful of churches are housing families to shield them from deportation.

Abbott spokesman John Wittman said Texas’ new law “squares directly with Gov. Abbott’s Christian values to protect all innocent lives” by empowering law enforcement to detain “known criminals.”

“The law makes clear that no one attending Sunday Mass has anything to fear,” Wittman said.

The nonprofit Catholic Legal Immigration Network is encouraging local affiliates to identify people who could apply for a visa or legal protection from deportation. The group estimates as many as 1.6 million of the 11 million people living in the U.S. illegally could quality for some form of legal status.

World Relief, which works with evangelical churches nationally, said about 35 percent of regional leaders in a recent survey said pastors they supervise were concerned about declines in church attendance. A spokesman for the group, Matthew Soerens, said local leaders were trying to prepare members “for any circumstance,” while also pointing out that most immigrants are unlikely to face deportation.

Barquero and his wife, Lucy, conduct weekly meetings by telephone with people who are afraid or unable to go to church. They also make occasional home visits around Houston.

“My message is to continue living your life normally,” he said in an interview. “Participate in defending your rights, yes, but don’t take unnecessary risks.”

Guillermo Peña, a pastor at Living Word, a Houston church that offers services in English and Spanish, said the majority of the members of the Spanish-speaking congregation are in the U.S. illegally.

Peña and his wife, fellow pastor Luz Maria Coto, spent a recent weeknight sitting with several church members who said they felt more threatened and concerned about their families’ well-being. A carpenter from central Mexico said people shouted profanities at him recently at a supermarket. A construction worker from El Salvador said he was afraid he would be separated from his wife and two children, all U.S. citizens, and sent back to a neighborhood controlled by gangs that dictate what color clothing residents can wear and what hours they can leave their homes.

Peña says he worries other churches and politicians aren’t fully aware or don’t care about the plight of immigrants without documentation.

“The migrants are practically alone inside a white structure,” Peña said. “At this point, I believe the church needs to understand that we are a church of migrants, so we can better understand the problem.”