Vatican

Closed doors, hearts cause suffering to innocent migrants, pope says

Pope Francis poses with children during his general audience in St. Peter's Square at the Vatican March 16. (CNS photo/Paul Haring)

Pope Francis poses with children during his general audience in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican March 16. (CNS photo/Paul Haring)

by Junno Arocho Esteves

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Like the people of Israel in exile, migrants forced from their homeland due to war and persecution are often left to suffer because of closed hearts and doors, Pope Francis said.

“In these cases one may ask, ‘Where is God? How is it that so much suffering can come upon men, women and innocent children?'” he said at his general audience March 16.

Continuing a series of talks dedicated to the Year of Mercy, the pope focused on two chapters from the Book of Jeremiah (30 and 31), in which the prophet heralds the return of the exiled people of Israel to their homeland. The experience of exile left their faith “shaken” and seeing their country in ruins made it difficult “to believe in the Lord’s goodness,” the pope said.

“We, too, can live at times a sort of exile, when loneliness, suffering and death can make us think we have been abandoned by God,” the pope said. “How many of our brothers and sisters are living in this time a real and dramatic situation of exile far from their homeland, with the rubble of their homes still in their eyes, with fear in their hearts and often, unfortunately, pain for the loss of loved ones.”

Newspapers and TV programs in Europe have been saturated with images of countless refugees stranded after several countries closed off the so-called Balkan route that allows migration from Turkey through Greece to Northern Europe.

“Today’s migrants who suffer out in the open, without food and cannot enter — they do not feel welcomed,” the pope said. “I really like to see countries and governments who open their hearts and open their doors.”

In the face of suffering, Pope Francis said, Jeremiah’s prophecy of the Israelite’s return to their homeland is an affirmation that “God is not absent” and a reminder that good ultimately triumphs over evil.

“The Lord is faithful; he does not abandon us in desolation. God loves us with a never-ending love that even sin cannot stop. And thanks to him, the hearts of men and women are filled with joy and consolation,” he said.

The joy experienced by the people of Israel upon their return home, he added, is the same joy God wants to give Christians through his forgiveness and is a sign of the consolation given to those who truly convert.

Pope Francis noted that Jeremiah’s prophecy was fulfilled by Jesus and the church will commemorate this in the coming celebration of his resurrection.

“The true and radical return from exile and the comforting light after the darkness of the crisis of faith is fulfilled in Easter, in the full and definitive experience of the love of God, a merciful love that gives joy, peace and eternal life,” he said.

Copyright ©2016 Catholic News Service / U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.

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