'The Cabrini Pledge' Calls Faithful To Be Keepers of Hope for Migrants and Refugees

| 09/23/2025

By: Our Sunday Visitor

Initiative named for St. Frances Xavier Cabrini invites Catholics to be “guardians of hope”

A group of migrants crosses the Rio Grande to try to seek asylum in the U.S., as seen from Piedras Negras, Mexico, on September 28, 2023.
A group of migrants crosses the Rio Grande to try to seek asylum in the U.S., as seen from Piedras Negras, Mexico, on September 28, 2023. (OSV News photo/Daniel Becerril, Reuters)

At the start of National Migration Week, taking place this year from September 22-28, the chairman of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops‘ (USCCB) Committee on Migration invited the faithful to join “The Cabrini Pledge” and be guardians of hope for migrants and refugees.

Named after St. Frances Xavier Cabrini, patron saint of immigrants and the first U.S. citizen to be canonized, the pledge was launched “as a reminder of our Church and nation’s immigrant heritage and a call to deeper engagement with our faith in response to current events,” according to a webpage explaining this initiative.

In a video message, Bishop Mark J. Seitz of El Paso, Texas, recalled that “during her life of service, Mother Cabrini often faced great trials as an immigrant, a woman, and an advocate for the poor, but she never relented in her determination to build an empire of hope, sustained by her relationship with Christ in the Eucharist and in the face of those she served.”

An Italian immigrant who adopted this country as her own, Mother Cabrini also faced “discrimination and seemingly impossible odds, yet she never succumbed to hopelessness. With relentless faith, she accompanied her fellow immigrants and others living on the margins of society with a great missionary zeal,” the pledge’s webpage reads.

“Mother Cabrini’s challenges, and the challenges of those she served, are not unique among the generations of Catholics and immigrants in general who have come to this land,” said the initiative, and her witness can help in the “present reality in the life of our Church and nation.”

Launched in English and Spanish, the pledge-signing initiative’s call to be guardians of hope also resonates with Pope Leo XIV’s message for World Migrant and Refugee Day, in which he said that “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.”

In addition to offering resources — including USCCB documents on Catholic social teaching, prayers, and information about migration policies — the actions the pledge invites people to take include “to affirm, in word and deed, the inherent dignity of every person, regardless of immigration status or country of origin, seeing each as a child of God before all else.”

The pledge also invites people to make a commitment to fraternal encounter, civic dialogue, and prayer for all those who are searching for a new home, as well as to listen to the realities of migrants and refugees and the circumstances they face and to consider how they are called to “reflect the love and hope of Christ to others.”

The week prior, the USCCB reiterated its longstanding efforts to show solidarity with immigrants “amid the fear and anxiety prompted by current immigration enforcement efforts.” In a September 28 statement, the bishops also said that “National Migration Week invites Catholics across the country to reflect on how hope can shape and inform our collective response to migration.”

In his video about “The Cabrini Pledge,” Bishop Seitz invited people to “make an intentional commitment to living out the Gospel not in abstraction but through acts of solidarity that affirm the human dignity of every person.”

“Through prayer, encounter, and civic engagement, we can transform fear into compassion and create a world where no one feels less than human because of their immigration status,” Bishop Seitz said.

During this holy and penitential season, fasting is required of adult Catholics between the ages of 18 and 59.

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