In many religious traditions, the concept of God is tied closely to a sense of resilience. This enduring divine resilience is evident in God's covenantal relationships, providential presence and purpose for humanity even when individuals turn away from God. On their own, human beings as imago Dei also exhibit a remarkable capacity for resilience, particularly in the face of adversity. Faced with the global phenomenon of migration, the human capacity to endure and to hope for fulfilment indisputably reveal the profound resilience of the human spirit in the face of an ever-changing reality. Drawing from Gabriel Marcel's Homo Viator and Daniel Groody's notion of migration as a theological journey, this paper seeks to understand the resilience of God and humans in the context of migration. In so doing, the paper attempts to illuminate the profound connection between divine and human resilience, and to foster a deeper awareness of God's resilient presence to migrants as they face the complex realities of life on their way towards social transformation, homecoming and fulfilment in God.