MESSAGE OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS
FOR THE 110th WORLD DAY OF MIGRANTS AND REFUGEES
2024
(Sunday, 29 September 2024)
God walks with his people
Dear brothers and sisters!
Last 29 October marked the conclusion of the
First Session of the XVI Ordinary General
Assembly of the Synod of Bishops. This session
allowed us to deepen our understanding of
synodality as part of the Church’s fundamental
vocation. “Synodality is mainly presented as a
joint journey of the People of God and as a
fruitful dialogue between the charisms and
ministries at the service of the coming of the
Kingdom” (Synthesis Report, Introduction).
Emphasizing the synodal dimension allows the
Church to rediscover its itinerant nature, as
the People of God journeying through history on
pilgrimage, “migrating”, we could say, toward
the Kingdom of Heaven (cf. Lumen Gentium, 49).
The biblical narrative of Exodus, depicting the
Israelites on their way to the promised land,
naturally comes to mind: a long journey from
slavery to freedom prefiguring the Church’s
journey toward her final encounter with the
Lord.
Likewise, it is possible to see in the migrants
of our time, as in those of every age, a living
image of God’s people on their way to the
eternal homeland. Their journeys of hope remind
us that “our citizenship is in heaven, and it is
from there that we are expecting a Saviour, the
Lord Jesus Christ” (Phil 3:20).
The images of the biblical exodus and of
migrants share several similarities. Like the
people of Israel in the time of Moses, migrants
often flee from oppression, abuse, insecurity,
discrimination, and lack of opportunities for
development. Similar to the Jews in the desert,
migrants encounter many obstacles in their path:
they are tried by thirst and hunger; they are
exhausted by toil and disease; they are tempted
by despair.
Yet the fundamental reality of the Exodus, of
every exodus, is that God precedes and
accompanies his people and all his children in
every time and place. God’s presence in the
midst of the people is a certainty of salvation
history: “The Lord your God goes with you; he
will not fail you or forsake you” (Deut 31:6).
For the people who came out of Egypt, this
presence manifested itself in different forms: a
pillar of cloud and fire showing and
illuminating the way (cf. Ex 13:21), the meeting
tent that protected the ark of the covenant,
making God’s closeness tangible (cf. Ex 33:7),
the pole with the bronze serpent assuring divine
protection (cf. Nm 21:8-9), manna and water (cf.
Ex 16-17) as God’s gifts to the hungry and
thirsty people. The tent is a form of presence
especially dear to the Lord. During David’s
reign, God chose to dwell in a tent, not a
temple, so that he could walk with his people,
“from tent to tent and from dwelling to
dwelling” (1 Chr 17:5).
Many migrants experience God as their traveling
companion, guide and anchor of salvation. They
entrust themselves to him before setting out and
seek him in times of need. In him, they find
consolation in moments of discouragement. Thanks
to him, there are good Samaritans along the way.
In prayer, they confide their hopes to him. How
many Bibles, copies of the Gospels, prayer books
and rosaries accompany migrants on their
journeys across deserts, rivers, seas and the
borders of every continent!
God not only walks with his people, but also
within them, in the sense that he identifies
himself with men and women on their journey
through history, particularly with the least,
the poor and the marginalized. In this we see an
extension of the mystery of the Incarnation.
For this reason, the encounter with the migrant,
as with every brother and sister in need, “is
also an encounter with Christ. He himself said
so. It is he who knocks on our door, hungry,
thirsty, an outsider, naked, sick and
imprisoned, asking to be met and assisted”
(Homily, Mass with Participants in the “Free
from Fear” Meeting, Sacrofano, 15 February
2019). The final judgment in Matthew 25 leaves
no doubt: “I was a stranger and you welcomed me”
(v. 35); and again “truly, I say to you, as you
did it to one of the least of these brothers and
sisters of mine, you did it to me” (v. 40).
Every encounter along the way represents an
opportunity to meet the Lord; it is an occasion
charged with salvation, because Jesus is present
in the sister or brother in need of our help. In
this sense, the poor save us, because they
enable us to encounter the face of the Lord (cf.
Message for the Third World Day of the Poor, 17
November 2019).
Dear brothers and sisters, on this day dedicated
to migrants and refugees, let us unite in prayer
for all those who have had to leave their land
in search of dignified living conditions. May we
journey together with them, be “synodal”
together, and entrust them, as well as the
forthcoming Synod Assembly, “to the intercession
of the Blessed Virgin Mary, a sign of sure hope
and consolation to the faithful People of God as
they continue their journey” (XVI Ordinary
General Assembly Synthesis Report: Proceeding
Along the Journey).
Prayer
God, Almighty Father,
we are your pilgrim Church
journeying towards the Kingdom of heaven.
We live in our homeland,
but as if we were foreigners.
Every foreign place is our home,
yet every native land is foreign to us.
Though we live on earth,
our true citizenship is in heaven.
Do not let us become possessive
of the portion of the world
you have given us as a temporary home.
Help us to keep walking,
together with our migrant brothers and sisters,
toward the eternal dwelling you have prepared
for us.
Open our eyes and our hearts
so that every encounter with those in need
becomes an encounter with Jesus, your Son and
our Lord.
Amen.
Rome, Saint John Lateran, 24 May 2024, Memorial
of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Help of Christians
FRANCIS
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