50 Years of Passion for the Church
The picturesque setting with mountains all around was a welcoming scene that embraced all the people that went up the Val di Lanzo for the celebration of the 50th anniversary of the founding of the Parish Movement. The event was titled 50 Years of Passion for the Church and was held at the Maria Orsola Centre, which was filled to the brim with people from the area. Among them was Cardinal card. João Bráz de Aviz, Prefect of the Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Apostolic Life; along with Giuseppe Petrocchi, Archbishop of Aquila. In her message, Focolare president, Maria Voce, mentioned how fifty years before, in Vallo, one of the first communities gathered with Archbishop Vincenzo Chiarle to live the Focolare’s spirituality of communion and give “witness to an authentic lifestyle of the Gospel in the context of a parish, renewing spirits and structures.” They were a model of a “living church,” according to the definition of Archbishop Petrocchi, small in size, but great in spirit and in service. An example of holiness emerged from the community, the sixteen year-old Maria Orsola, now on her way to official recognition as a model of holiness.
From the intuition of Chiara Lubich going back to the late 1940s regarding the influence that the spirituality of unity would have on parish communities, to the historic meeting with Paul VI in 1967, which marks the official beginnings, the history of the Parish Movement was described by the first witnesses. The commitment continues. Vallo continues to be a popular destination for groups of young people and communities because of the spirituality of communion that is lived there. Today Vallo welcomes many communities from all the regions of Italy and the world. Bruno and Luisa, one married couple from Genoa, Italy, share their testimony of active involvement in strict unity with their pastor. The experience of Luca was very touching. Thanks to the support of the young people from his parish, he was able to transform the unexpected side effects of a road accident, into a rediscovery of prayer and the precious value of life. As Archbishop of Turin, Cesare Nosiglia commented in his open address, celebrating 50 years of life means to go back to the roots and keep moving on towards the new challenges. Carla Cotignoli
World Food Day
Established by FAO (Food and Agriculture Organization) of the United Nations, World Food Day is celebrated annually on 16 October to raise public awareness regarding poverty, hunger and malnutrition in the world, as well as issues regarding food safety and methods to improve agricultural productivity. This year the theme is focused on: “Change the future of migration. Invest in food security and rural development.”. During an official visit to the FAO headquarters in Rome, Pope Francis reminded everyone this morning that “all human beings have the right to, without having to part from their loved ones.” “Faced with such a goal,” he said, “the credibility of the entire international system is at stake. (…) It is therefore urgent to find new paths, to transform the possibilities available to us into a guarantee that permits each person to look to the future with well-founded trust and not only with desire.” Significantly, In the entrance hall, the sculpture donated by the Holy Father to the FAO was unveiled, depicting the small Syrian who drowned at the beach in Bodrum,Turkey. A warning not to forget.
Reset your world. You’re in control.
Once again this year the Youth Fest that coincides with the start of spring in the southern hemisphere, has made its mark. On September 23 and 24 more than a thousand young people from Uruguay, Paraguay and several regions of Argentina took over the permanent Mariapolis immersed in the Argentinian Pampas, to have an experience of brotherhood. But this year they’re looking farther – to Manila where the 2018 Genfest will be held with young people from around the world.
Using a video game format, the young people gradually confront some of the issues they have to face in their daily lives: appearance, individualism, choices and consumerism. These are the four levels that the four actors on stage have to pass through to overcome and reach the last level with each other’s help. The keys that get them through each level are: values such as self-acceptance, solidarity, effort with regard to what the conscience suggests to every one of us, and sharing. But often you need to take into account the past that draws you back and the future that can paralyse you. Only one option is left: to live the present and, in that moment, take control and reset your history.
The inventor of the game leaves the actors and the Youth Fest participants with a question: Reset, yes or no? The answer is left open. The video game ends and becomes a metaphor for life that places the players in front of the possibility of going through the daily situations of life in order to grow and reach their personal goals. The game becomes real life. Reset your life, you’re in control is the slogan of the event which, with the help of songs that had been composed for the event, planted the message of the 2017 Youth Fest in the hearts of all the participants.
Pasquale Foresi: Fixing our gaze on Mary
“Mary treasured all these things and pondered them in her heart” (Lk 2:19). This statement is from Luke’s Gospel where the evangelist includes it in the wonderful description of the shepherds at the grotto of Bethlehem where Jesus was born. An angel had informed the shepherds of the amazing event: “Fear not! I bring you tidings of great joy that will be for the whole people, for unto you is born this day in the city of David, a Saviour” (Lk 2:10-11). As soon as they reach the place, “they told all that had been said to them concerning the boy; and all who heard it were amazed at what the shepherds said. But Mary treasured all these things and pondered them in her heart” (Lk 2:19). Luke gently contrasts the outward amazement of the others who are at the grotto – shepherds, perhaps townspeople – to the dense loving and faith-filled silence of Mary. The words of those simple pilgrims to the first Marian shrine on earth, enter her soul, taking their place alongside the other revelations that she had received, and they make her understand more and more the mystery that is unfolding before her very eyes, a mystery she shares in as Mother of God. One can only Mary’s instant willingness to respond to God’s word and loving guardianship of the sacred gifts she received, but never disclosed to anyone for many years. Perhaps it was only to Luke that Our Lady personally told about this attitude of her soul during the days around the Saviour’s birth. Only she could have known it. We are so in need of the comforting sweetness of God’s gifts today. In the stressful, frenzied rhythm of these times, we run the risk of materialising everything even the life of the spirit. Silence, humility, reserve, meekness, patience in trial, can seem like obsolete virtues that are no longer viable, no longer able to allow the presence of Christianity to be felt in this century. We believe more in loudspeakers than in an edifying sentence from the Gospel. One believes more in the speeches of orators than in the prayerful silence of souls consecrated to God. First of all, the aggressiveness of the wicked and the power of their possibilities attempts to to leverage the aggressiveness of the good with their capital and power. It’s materialism that seeks to demean the values of the spirit, turning them into external expressions that will no longer carry any weight amidst the deafening deafening noise all around them. Only what is the fruit of the spirit has value in front of a world flattened by materialism; only what is part of our deep and personal love for God. For this reason humankind must once more fix its gaze on Mary.” Pasquale Foresi, “Parole di vita”, (Rome: Ed. Città Nuova, 1963) 15-17.
