Monday, September 12, 2016

TO BE A PILGRIM



In 2004 the Catholic Church published an Instruction entitled The Love of Christ Towards Migrants (Erga Migrantes Caritas Christi, EMCC). It received Papal Authority on the Feast of St. Joseph the Worker:

In migrants the Church has always contemplated the image of Christ who said, “I was a stranger and you made me welcome.” Their condition is, therefore, a challenge to the faith and love of believers, who are called on to heal the evils caused by migration and discover the plan God pursues through it even when caused by obvious injustices.

Mary, the Mother of Jesus, can be well contemplated as a symbol of the woman emigrant. She gave birth to her Son away from home and was compelled to flee to Egypt. Popular devotion is right to consider Mary as the Madonna of the Way. (EMCC)

From the day Abraham left Ur to the night the Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) and his followers began the Hijrah from Mecca to Medina migration has been front and center as an image of spiritual growth, from dead ends to new beginnings, moving out of the darkness into the light. Holy Scripture is full of believers who became migrants for a number of reasons. Hagar and her son Ishmael were banished, thus beginning their migration. Israel was forced to take up residence in Egypt when faced with starvation, and then four hundred years later, they were homeless strangers again wayfaring through Canaan. In fact the Hebrew Law reflects a firsthand sympathy for refugees and sojourners and directs the faithful to feed, clothe, and help them, remembering how we are all the descendants of such brave, sturdy stock. Sometimes people became migrants because their lives were in danger. Jesus, Mary, and Joseph fell into this category when they fled to Egypt rather than face the wrath of jealous power.
I am related to migrants on both sides of my family. The ones on my Mother’s side were refugees. They were the Acadians of whom Longfellow wrote, driven away from their home in “the forest primeval.” Exiled from the only life they knew, those poor souls wandered “in want and cheerless discomfort, bleeding, barefooted, over the shards and thorns of existence.”  (Evangeline) I can see them even now; the women with their heads covered in imitation of Mary, favoring blue, our Lady’s color. So many places refused to allow the Acadians to take up residence. They were the despised outcasts of their day; the objects of hate, ridicule, fear, and loathing.

The term ‘refugee’ is derived from the concept of refuge. Among the ancient Hebrews certain priestly cities were appointed as ‘Cities of Refuge’. Someone responsible for taking a life but who did so unintentionally could flee to such a city. The wrathful cry of blood for blood could not reach you in a City of Refuge. That this pertained to priestly cities where worship was offered speaks to the connection between mercy and sacrifice. To this day churches still act as houses of refuge. It is why many of them paint their doors red.
The ancient Hebrews understood the connection between clemency and community. It’s not for nothing that Cain, the builder of the first city, was a murderer against whom vengeance was forbidden. From the beginning there was the recognition that there can be no living together without prevenient mercy seasoning our friendships and agreements. We cannot find our way together when each of us demands our pound of flesh, or as Gandhi put it, “an eye for an eye ends up making the whole world blind.”
                                                 
Though justice be thy plea, consider this;
That, in the course of justice, none of us
        Should see salvation: we do pray for mercy;
                                        And that same prayer doth teach us all to render
                                                The deeds of mercy.
                                                (The Merchant of Venice, Act IV, Scene 1)

 Not only did the ancients grasp the relation of mercy and sacrifice, they also understood the way mercy reinforces liberty. They knew that living together as free people means being informed by history but not controlled by it; that although they had been oppressed and taken advantage of in the past there was no need for them to treat others the same way. I suppose this is why a free Country once saw fit to summon the tired, poor, homeless, and tempest-tossed to her shores, and why a still great nation may continue to welcome wayfarers even today; and be a blessed home for Isa, Maryum, and Yusuf, as they come seeking refuge.