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Jesuits Ask Their Parishes to Respond to Plight of Migrants on Feast of the Holy Family

BY ISN STAFF | December 30, 2016

As the Catholic Church celebrates the Feast of the Holy Family, the Jesuit Provinces in Canada and the United States have called on Jesuit-run parishes across North America to discern how they can best respond to the plight of migrants and immigrants. The call to action was issued via a statement issued on December 30, 2016, by the Jesuit Conference of Canada and the United States, which represents the nine Jesuit provinces in the U.S. and Canada as well Belize, Haiti, and Puerto Rico.

“Today many immigrant families live in vulnerable situations,” said the statement, comparing these situations to that of the Holy Family after Jesus’s birth and citing numerous comments from Pope Francis. Furthermore, it noted that Jesuit parishes were in many cases built specifically to care for immigrants and that there is a long history of these parishes serving as a home for the “immigrant and foreigner.”

The Jesuit’s Holy Trinity Parish in Washington, D.C., displays a banner welcoming immigrants and refugees.

 

Citing the work of provincial assistants for pastoral and spiritual ministries at each of the Jesuit provinces in the region, the statement offers a number of ways a parish can respond to the needs of vulnerable migrant populations: including immigrants and refugees in prayer, sponsoring refugee families, speaking out publicly in support of refugees and immigrants, calling for greater legal protections for those marginalized by immigration and refugee policies.

In closing, the statement reiterates the call to respond to the plight of marginalized migrants saying, “In this Christmas season where we continue to contemplate the mystery of the incarnation, let us never stop looking for the face of Christ, particularly in the faces of the poor and alienated.” The full statement can be found below.

This statement comes just a month after 27 Jesuit college and university presidents pledged their support for undocumented students on their campuses, in a statement coordinated by the Association of Jesuit Colleges and Universities.

There are over sixty Catholic parishes administrated by the Jesuits throughout the nine provinces. Many Jesuit parishes are involved in Ignatian Solidarity Network in-person programs and advocacy campaigns including the Ignatian Family Teach-In for Justice, Jesuit Parish Social Justice Gathering, Solidarity on Tap, Ignatian Family Advocacy Month, etc.

[Jesuit Conference of Canada and the United States]

Statement from the Jesuits of Canada and the U.S. on the Feast of the Holy Family

December 30, 2016 — On December 9th Pope Francis offered his annual blessing of the nativity scene in St. Peter’s Square. In his remarks he encouraged the faithful to remember today’s migrants when looking at the crèche. He drew a familiar parallel between the experience of a refugee and the birth of Jesus. “In the painful experience of these brothers and sisters, we revisit that experience of the baby Jesus,” said the Holy Father, “who at the time of his birth did not find accommodation and was born in a grotto in Bethlehem and then was brought to Egypt to escape Herod’s threat.”

Today many immigrant families live in vulnerable situations. Like the Holy Family, they face rejection and often have to flee dangerous threats. Many of us come into contact with these families who live in the shadows, fearing separation, detention, deportation and limited participation in our communities. And on this feast we remember that all families are holy in God’s eyes.

When we hear of the violence and turmoil that a few have provoked around the world, it is understandable why some seek policies and protective measures to calm such fear. But Pope Francis challenges us never to act solely out of fear.

Earlier this year he said, “We must not allow misunderstanding and fear to weaken our resolve … we are called to respect the foreigner, the immigrant and the people of different cultures as worthy to be listened to.” And we witnessed Pope Francis live out this message when he brought three refugee families home with him after a visit to Greece. In so doing, he lived out 1 John 3:18, “Let us not love with word or with tongue, but in deed and truth.”

The Jesuit parish has always been a home to the immigrant and the foreigner. Many of our churches were built to care for immigrants, and they remain one of the few Jesuit ministries that serve the public on a daily basis.

The provincial assistants for Jesuit Spiritual and Parish Ministry, who serve the nine Jesuit provincials in Canada and the U.S., have convened from across North America to respond to the plight of migrants. On this Feast of the Holy Family they are asking parish communities to take Pope Francis’ message to heart and discern how they can best respond to the plight of migrants, remembering that love must be shown in deeds and in words.

There is so much good that a parish can do for the most vulnerable in our communities – from sponsoring refugee families to lifting our voices in the public square, calling for greater protections for our brothers and sisters who are suffering.

As a family united in Christ, please remember refugees and migrants in your prayers and pray that we grow in our awareness of the issue of migration.

In this Christmas season where we continue to contemplate the mystery of the incarnation, let us never stop looking for the face of Christ, particularly in the faces of the poor and alienated.

Be assured of our prayers for you and your family in the New Year.

The Jesuit Conference of Canada and the United States.

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  1. […] immigrant population in the United States. Marking the feast of the Holy Family in December 2016, Jesuits called upon parishes to respond to the plight of migrants in their communities in tangible ways. Earlier in the year, the Association of Jesuit Colleges and […]

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