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MESSAGE OF POPE LEO XIV
FOR THE 111th WORLD DAY OF MIGRANTS AND REFUGEES
2025
[4-5 Octobre 2025]
Migrants, missionaries of hope
Dear Brothers and Sisters!
The 111th World Day of Migrants and Refugees,
which my predecessor chose to coincide with the
Jubilees of Migrants and of the Missions, offers
us an opportunity to reflect on the connections
between hope, migration and mission.
The current global context is sadly marked by
wars, violence, injustice and extreme weather
events, which force millions of people to leave
their homelands in search of refuge elsewhere.
The widespread tendency to look after the
interests of limited communities poses a serious
threat to the sharing of responsibility,
multilateral cooperation, the pursuit of the
common good and global solidarity for the
benefit of our entire human family. The prospect
of a renewed arms race and the development of
new armaments, including nuclear weapons, the
lack of consideration for the harmful effects of
the ongoing climate crisis, and the impact of
profound economic inequalities make the
challenges of the present and the future
increasingly demanding.
Faced with frightening scenarios and the
possibility of global devastation, it is
important that there be a growing desire in
people’s hearts for a future of peace and of
respect for the dignity of all. Such a future is
essential to God’s plan for humanity and the
rest of creation. This is the messianic future
anticipated by the prophets: “Old men and old
women shall again sit in the streets of
Jerusalem, each with staff in hand because of
their great age. And the streets of the city
shall be full of boys and girls playing in its
streets... For there shall be a sowing of peace;
the vine shall yield its fruit, the ground shall
give its produce, and the skies shall give their
dew” (Zech 8:4-5, 12). This future has already
begun, since it was inaugurated by Jesus Christ
(cf. Mk 1:15; Lk 17:21), and we believe and hope
in its full realization, for the Lord is always
faithful to his promises.
The Catechism of the Catholic Church teaches:
“The virtue of hope responds to the aspiration
to happiness which God has placed in the heart
of every man and woman; it takes up the hopes
that inspire human activities” (N. 1818). What
is more, the search for happiness, and the
prospect of finding it beyond one’s place of
origin, is certainly one of the main motivations
for the movement of people today.
This link between migration and hope is clearly
evident in many contemporary experiences of
migration. Many migrants, refugees and displaced
persons are privileged witnesses of hope.
Indeed, they demonstrate this daily through
their resilience and trust in God, as they face
adversity while seeking a future in which they
glimpse that integral human development and
happiness are possible. Moreover, we can see the
itinerant experience of the people of Israel
repeated in their own lives: “O God, when you
went out before your people, when you marched
through the wilderness, the earth quaked, the
heavens poured down rain at the presence of God,
the God of Sinai, at the presence of God, the
God of Israel. Rain in abundance, O God, you
showered abroad; you restored your heritage when
it languished; your flock found a dwelling in
it; in your goodness, O God, you provided for
the needy” (Ps 68:7-10).
In a world darkened by war and injustice, even
when all seems lost, migrants and refugees stand
as messengers of hope. Their courage and
tenacity bear heroic testimony to a faith that
sees beyond what our eyes can see and gives them
the strength to defy death on the various
contemporary migration routes. Here too we can
find a clear analogy with the experience of the
people of Israel wandering in the desert, who
faced every danger while trusting in the Lord’s
protection: “he will deliver you from the snare
of the fowler and from the deadly pestilence; he
will cover you with his pinions, and under his
wings you will find refuge; his faithfulness is
a shield and buckler. You will not fear the
terror of the night, or the arrow that flies by
day, or the pestilence that stalks in darkness,
or the destruction that wastes at noonday” (Ps
91:3-6).
Migrants and refugees remind the Church of her
pilgrim dimension, perpetually journeying
towards her final homeland, sustained by a hope
that is a theological virtue. Each time the
Church gives in to the temptation of “sedentarization”
and ceases to be a civitas peregrine, God’s
people journeying towards the heavenly homeland
(cf. Augustine, De Civitate Dei, Books XIV-XVI),
she ceases to be “in the world” and becomes “of
the world” (cf. Jn 15:19). This temptation was
already present in the early Christian
communities, so much so that the Apostle Paul
had to remind the Church of Philippi that “our
citizenship is in heaven, and it is from there
that we are expecting a Savior, the Lord Jesus
Christ. He will transform the body of our
humiliation that it may be conformed to the body
of his glory, by the power that also enables him
to make all things subject to himself” (Phil
3:20-21).
In a special way, Catholic migrants and refugees
can become missionaries of hope in the countries
that welcome them, forging new paths of faith
where the message of Jesus Christ has not yet
arrived or initiating interreligious dialogue
based on everyday life and the search for common
values. With their spiritual enthusiasm and
vitality, they can help revitalize ecclesial
communities that have become rigid and weighed
down, where spiritual desertification is
advancing at an alarming rate. Their presence,
then, should be recognized and appreciated as a
true divine blessing, an opportunity to open
oneself to the grace of God, who gives new
energy and hope to his Church: “Do not neglect
to show hospitality to strangers, for by doing
that some have entertained angels without
knowing it” (Heb 13:2).
The first element of evangelization, as Saint
Paul VI emphasized, is that of witness: “All
Christians are called to this witness, and in
this way they can be real evangelizers. We are
thinking especially of the responsibility
incumbent on migrants in the country that
receives them” (Evangelii Nuntiandi, 21). This
is a true missio migrantium, a mission carried
out by migrants, for which adequate preparation
and ongoing support must be ensured through
effective inter-ecclesial cooperation.
At the same time, the communities that welcome
them can also be a living witness to hope, one
that is understood as the promise of a present
and a future where the dignity of all as
children of God is recognized. In this way,
migrants and refugees are recognized as brothers
and sisters, part of a family in which they can
express their talents and participate fully in
community life.
On this Jubilee, when the Church prays for all
migrants and refugees, I wish to entrust all
those who are on the journey, as well as those
who are working to accompany them, to the
maternal protection of the Virgin Mary, comfort
of migrants, so that she may keep hope alive in
their hearts and sustain them in their
commitment to building a world that increasingly
resembles the Kingdom of God, the true homeland
that awaits us at the end of our journey.
From the Vatican, 25 July 2025
Feast of Saint James, Apostle
LEO PP. XIV
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Libreria Editrice Vaticana
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