Bishop Rob Hirschfeld within the chapel on the Episcopal Church of New Hampshire in Harmony on Jan. 13, 2026.
Elena Eberwein/NHPR
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Elena Eberwein/NHPR
A New Hampshire Episcopal bishop’s stark warning to his clergy is resonating throughout the nation, drawing fervent reward from some and rebukes from others.
Bishop Rob Hirschfeld was considered one of a number of neighborhood and religion leaders gathered in Harmony, N.H., for a vigil for Renee Macklin Good simply days after she was fatally shot by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent in Minneapolis.
Hirschfeld known as out the “cruelty, the injustice and the horror … unleashed in Minneapolis,” and warned his clergy to organize for “a brand new period of martyrdom.”
“I’ve requested them to get their affairs as a way to be sure that they’ve their wills written,” he stated, “as a result of it might be that now’s not the time for statements, however for us with our our bodies to face between the powers of this world and probably the most susceptible.”
Hirschfeld’s feedback shortly went viral.
“I used to be really fairly shocked to open up my cellphone and discover my social media blowing up with my very own bishop on it,” stated Reverend Jason Wells of St. Matthews Epsicopal Church in Goffstown, N.H.
Wells, a neighborhood organizer who usually prays exterior ICE places of work, stated he and plenty of others took it as an important reduction – and a validation of types – to listen to the bishop talking brazenly in regards to the mounting anxiousness felt by religion leaders across the nation who’ve been stepping up their public prayers and protests in opposition to ICE, and getting pelted with pepper rounds, roughed up and arrested.
“Folks really feel like he is giving voice to a sense within the pit of their abdomen about what’s going on,” stated Wells. “It is a reduction to listen to him naming a priority that I’ve had on my thoughts for some time.”
The Reverend Betsy Hess of St. Barnabas Episcopal Church in Berlin, N.H. added her voice to the refrain of “amens” and instantly emailed the bishop to thank him.
Hess believes clergy “must give up simply being well mannered Episcopalians, and get on the market and do stuff.” However precisely what she would do, and what stage of threat she’s keen to take, is one thing she’s nonetheless determining.
“It was that … you would possibly go to jail, and now you would possibly get shot! So it makes us should be much more courageous,” she stated. “I hope I’d be courageous, however I can not promise that I’d have the ability to. However positively, it is time to transfer past ‘I will not do something that has any threat in anyway.'”
A priest claps as protesters conitnue anti-ICE demonstrations in Los Angeles, California, on June 9, 2025.
David Pashaee/Center East Pictures/AFP through Getty
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David Pashaee/Center East Pictures/AFP through Getty
Others, nevertheless, took difficulty with the bishop’s phrases.
“My preliminary response is ‘Oh boy, this is not diffusing pressure in any respect. This looks like a battle cry,” stated the Reverend Tom Gartin of Religion Episcopal Church who heard in regards to the bishop’s feedback from his parish in Cameron Park, California.
“I did not signal as much as be a martyr,” he stated. “I’ve a household and a congregation who depend on me. If I used to be gone tomorrow what would occur to them?”
Gartin additionally bristled on the concept of a preacher making the case for bodily resistance. Based mostly on his evaluation, mere statements haven’t “moved the needle one bit.” He sees the bishop’s message as “inflammatory,” and at odds with considered one of Episcopalians’ guiding tenets – Through Media – that calls for locating a center path between extremes.
Demonstrators, together with many clergy, protest close to the immigration processing and detention facility on Oct. 10, 2025 in Broadview, Illinois.
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Scott Olson/Getty Pictures
Gartin stated the main target of church management must be “to do the work of peacemaking and to deescalate the strain we have seen throughout us.”
“We’re known as to do the work of peacemaking and to deescalate the strain we see throughout us as a result of it does not serve anybody to grow to be the following sufferer,” he stated, “nevertheless it does serve everybody to construct the following bridge.”
Hirschfeld stated he was shocked by the stir his feedback created.
“I do not really feel like I stated something that was new,” he stated in an interview with NPR. “By no means did I intend something I stated to be inciteful of violence or to ask it.”
Hirschfeld stated he understands how some could also be listening to his phrases in methods he did not intend, however he stands by his message.
“What I stated to the clergy (was) ‘I am simply asking you to stay your life with out concern of dying. Be ready. I am not asking you to go look for that bullet,'” He stated. “I am merely saying be prepared, have your affairs so as, have your soul prepared, in case you end up in bother.”
That, Hirschfeld stated, is the Episcopal custom. On the vigil the place he made his preliminary remarks, he listed a number of church activists who turned martyrs, together with Jonathan Daniels, a New Hampshire native and seminary pupil who travelled to Alabama in 1965 to assist combine public locations and register Black voters. He took a bullet to guard a black teenager he accompanied.
“Not everybody could be a Jonathan Daniels,” Hirschfeld stated, however “we’re more and more known as to enter locations that really feel harmful.”
That may very well be something, he stated, from his enterprise into the house of a neighbor whose political yard indicators made him really feel unsafe, to attending public demonstrations in opposition to ICE.
“I more and more surprise after I go to those rallies or perhaps a peaceable vigil. There are individuals driving by, honking their horns,” he stated. “I see individuals with weapons in New Hampshire, that is an open-carry state, and it does not essentially lend itself to a sense of safety and security. However does that imply I should not present up? I do not assume so. I believe it means I am going and I must be ready for no matter occurs.”
In an announcement to NPR, White Home spokeswoman Abigail Jackson stated interfering with federal regulation enforcement is against the law and shall be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the regulation. The administration maintains the ICE agent who shot Renee Macklin Good was performing in self-defense.
DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin known as Hirschfeld’s feedback about martyrdom “absurd,” saying if he “actually needed to take a stand for the susceptible” he would stand by the ICE brokers who more and more are below assault.
Hirschfeld stated he does really feel compassion for these brokers.
“It is positively our Christian accountability to increase love even to our enemies,” he stated, and to like all God’s youngsters, even those that could also be “swept up in a maelstrom of hatred and concern and energy that’s not godly.”
Hirschfeld added, “I pray for everybody’s conversion of coronary heart.”