MESSAGE FOR THE
19th NATIONAL MIGRANTS’ SUNDAY
BP. PRECIOSO D. CANTILLAS, SDB, DD BISHOP OF MAASIN/ CHAIRMAN
February 13, 2005, 1st
Sunday of Lent
As we celebrate the 19th Migrants’
Sunday, we renew our appreciation for the great contribution our migrant
workers give not only to our national economy (almost US $ 8 billion in 2003)
but more importantly, to the promotion of the Church’s mission, as we remind
ourselves of their plight and assure them of our prayers and pastoral care.
Widespread poverty and the poor
economic situation of our country make many of our fellow citizens long to seek
greener pastures abroad. A bishop of a remote diocese told of his encounter
with a girl who desperately wanted to work as an “entertainer” in Japan against
the advice of her relatives and of the bishop himself. This girl feels driven—
like thousands of other Filipinos in the country—to work abroad to earn “more
bread”. The pain of physical hunger or the cries of various human wants may be
preventing them from listening to the words of Jesus: “One does not live by
bread alone, but by every word that comes forth from the mouth of God”.
The Episcopal Commission for the
Pastoral Care for Migrants and Itinerant people (ECMI) of the Catholic Bishops’
Conference of the Philippines (CBCP) does not discourage our people from
working for “more bread” abroad, nor does it judge unfavorably the motivations
of those who migrate for work. The ECMI, however, commits itself to providing
pastoral care for migrants and their families, so that the overwhelming need
for “more bread” and the exhausting work it entails may not deaden their sense
and need of God.
The theme for the 19th National
Migrants’ Sunday Celebration is “With Mary, the Migrants and Their Families
Find Life in the Eucharist”. Relying upon the guidance of Mary—she who heeded
the word of God and became an instrument of our salvation—the ECMI endeavors to
heighten the awareness in our society of the plight of our OFWs and to organize
programs which will make them hunger for the “word that comes from the mouth of
God.” Our collective effort to reduce poverty in our country by improving its
economic situation through good governance and the elimination of graft and
corruption should ease the pain of hunger in our people, and, it is hoped, may
also dispose them to trust more in the “word of God.”
The example of Mary, through whose
unconditional trust in God the Word was made Flesh, should inspire migrants and
their families towards trust in the Lord, the source of true life, more than in
their ability to work for the means to sustain life. The pastoral care for
migrants and families will therefore endeavor to lead them into a true devotion
to the Blessed Mother—a devotion which will in turn guide them in discovering
the source of true life and happiness, the Eucharist, the Bread of Life! It is
our prayer and fervent hope that the migrants and their families will work not
only for “more bread” but also for the Bread of Life.
Finally, we congratulate our Filipino
migrant workers who faithfully and courageously live their faith in the
Eucharistic Lord in the midst of difficulties, indifference, and even
persecution in foreign lands. They not only work for “more bread” to feed their
families; by their witness they also “feed” the whole world the Bread—the word
of God made flesh in Jesus Christ.
May our Blessed Mother continue to
keep our Filipino Migrants safe and always alive with faith in the Eucharist!
Bp. Precioso
D. Cantillas, SDB, DD
Bishop of Maasin/ Chairman, CBCP-ECMI