Card. Tagle invites all to
'share' the migrant journey for Easter
Pope Francis at the General Audience in September, 2017 during which he backed the Caritas "Share the Journey". |
As Easter approaches, Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle is
inviting all Christians to join the Caritas family in its journey of faith,
hope and love with migrants.
The President of Caritas Internationalis, the
Church’s worldwide humanitarian confederation, has released an Easter message
urging men and women of goodwill to join the Caritas “Share the Journey”
campaign that aims to reaches out to migrants, tackle prejudice by changing
perceptions and help people open their hearts and their minds.
The Caritas “Share the Journey” campaign was launched
in September 2017 with the backing of Pope Francis.
In his message, Cardinal Tagle said he hopes to involve
people to create a wave of global solidarity and harness collective global
energies to “set the world on fire with God’s love”.
His is an invitation to join the Caritas family in making
"small gestures of compassion towards the migrants you meet on your daily
journeys" and to “see Jesus in the migrant and in yourself”.
The Cardinal also looks ahead to the week of 17-24th
June 2018 during which Caritas organizations across the world will
promote activities and initiatives geared to help us remember and put into
practice “our unity as one global family and our need for each other”.
Please find Cardinal Tagle’s Easter message below:
This Eastertime, we at Caritas would like to invite you to
join us on a journey of faith, hope and love with migrants*.
Jesus undertook many journeys during his life. As an unborn
child he went from Nazareth to Bethlehem. As a child refugee he went to Egypt.
As a preacher he travelled the roads of Galilee. His seemingly final journey
was to travel up Calvary carrying the heavy wooden beam of a cross.
But what appeared to be the end of Jesus’ journey was really
a beginning. By leaving the tomb, Christ shatters the boundaries of what we
thought we knew. By rising from the dead, Christ invites us to roll away the
stones that are blocking our own hearts and imagination and to share the
journey with each other – in particular with the most vulnerable people, such
as migrants.
In September 2017, Pope Francis launched our Share the
Journey campaign and invited us to open our hearts to hope, as that is what
drives migrants to leave their lands. It is also in the hearts of those who
welcome them: “Hope is the force that drives us “to share the journey”, because
the journey is made jointly: by those who come to our land, and by us who go
towards their heart, to understand them, to understand their culture, their
language.”
Not long after his death, Jesus appeared to two disciples on
the road to Emmaus. They were full of fear following Jesus’s death. They didn’t
recognise Jesus until they sat down for a meal together and he broke bread.
How many times in a day do we not recognise Jesus in the
people who cross our paths? We may be busy or distracted, or we may be closed
in the tomb of our own fears and misconceptions.
But there are specific moments in our lives when we need to
be reminded of a fundamental truth: we were given each other so that we would
have someone with whom to share our journeys.
A small gesture like reaching out with your arms to somebody
else means a lot as it touches different levels of human existence. This is the
gesture we are encouraging people to do as part of Share the Journey.
I reach out and if a person feels alone and isolated, my
reaching out is a gesture of solidarity. If I reach out and that person is
wounded, it could be a sign of healing. If I reach out and the person is lost,
it could mean an offer of guidance. If I reach out and the person feels like
nobody cares, then it will be a sign of friendship. That small gesture means
different things in different stages of people’s life journey.
Christ performed the ultimate gesture of reaching out to
others on the cross. He opened his arms and emptied himself out to receive
God’s will.
We do not necessarily need to do extraordinary and extravagant things to make a difference in the lives of people. Small gestures, ordinary gestures, when done with sincerity, with the light of human understanding and compassion, can do extraordinary things.
We do not necessarily need to do extraordinary and extravagant things to make a difference in the lives of people. Small gestures, ordinary gestures, when done with sincerity, with the light of human understanding and compassion, can do extraordinary things.
We invite you all to join us in making small gestures of
compassion towards the migrants you meet on your daily journeys. We invite you
to see Jesus in the migrant and in yourself.
In the week of 17-24th June 2018, we will hold a global week
of action for Share the Journey. You can join Caritas organisations and
migrants around the world in the activities we organise that week. In
particular, like Jesus and the disciples in Emmaus, we invite you to share a
meal with migrants as a reminder of our unity as one global family and of our
need for each other.
We hope that through these small actions of understanding
and communion, we create a wave of global solidarity which rolls away the
stones which are blocking us and takes us on a journey which ignites our
imagination. By harnessing our collective global energies – migrants, refugees
and communities together – we will set the world on fire with God’s love.
*To Caritas, a migrant is a person on the move, who needs
accompaniment, support and protection. We use this broad term for migrants in
our campaign. They may be refugees, or asylum seekers. They may be internally
displaced within their own country by a conflict or a natural disaster, or may
have moved to seek work. They may be adults or children, on their own or with
their families. They may have been trafficked.
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