June 2022

This month’s Word of Life is taken from the Book of Psalms, which contains some of the finest prayers attributed to King David and others. They are fruit of God’s inspiration and teach us how to turn to him and trust.

We can all find ourselves expressed in the Psalms—they touch the soul intimately and express the deepest, most intense human feelings: doubt, grief, anger, anguish, despair, hope, praise, thanksgiving and joy. That is why they can be repeated by every man and woman at all ages, from all cultures and at every moment of life.

“You are my Lord; I have no good apart from you.”

Psalm 16 was a favorite of many spiritual authors. For example, St. Teresa of Avila commented, “Nothing is lacking to those who possess God: God alone is enough for them!”

Father Antonios Fikry Rofaeil, a theologian of the Coptic Orthodox Church, noted: “This is the psalm of the resurrection, so the Church prays it in the early hours... since Christ rose at dawn. This psalm gives us hope in our eternal inheritance, so it is often entitled ‘golden,’ meaning that it is a golden word, a gem of Holy Scripture.”

Let us try to repeat it, thinking about each word.

“You are my Lord; I have no good apart from you.”

The words of this prayer enfold us. We feel that God’s active and loving presence encompasses everything about us and about creation. We perceive that he gathers up our past, our present and our future. In him we find the strength to confidently face the sufferings we encounter and the serenity to lift our gaze and see hope beyond the shadows of life.

So how can we live the Word of Life this month? Here’s C. D.’s experience:

“Some time ago I began to feel unwell, so I underwent a series of medical examinations that required a great deal of waiting. Finally, I found out what was wrong with me: I had Parkinson’s disease... it was a huge blow!

“I was 58 years old: how could I have Parkinson’s? I asked myself why it was happening to me. I taught motor and sport sciences, so physical activity was part of me!

“I felt I was losing something too important. But then I thought back to the choice I had made when I was young: ‘You, Jesus crucified and forsaken, are my only good!’

“Thanks to the medication, I immediately started to feel much better, but I don’t know exactly what will happen to me in the future. I decided to live in the present moment.

“After the diagnosis, quite spontaneously, I wrote a song: I wanted to sing to God, ‘Yes, my soul is filled with peace!’”

The words of this psalm also resonated deeply in the soul of Focolare’s founder, Chiara Lubich. She wrote in a commentary to a Gospel phrase in June 2001:

“These simple words will help us to trust in him and train us to live with love. Continually more united to God and filled with him, we will continually lay down the foundations of our true selves as beings made in his image.”

During the month of June, we can be united in raising a “declaration of love” to God and radiate peace and serenity around us.

Letizia Magri

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Parola di Vita-bambini_2022-06.pdfDownload
Word of Life_2022_06.pdfDownload
Word of Life-children_2022-06.pdfDownload
Palabra de Vida_2022_06.pdfDownload
Palabla de Vida-niños_2022-06.pdfDownload
Parole de Vie_2022_06.pdfDownload
Parole de Vie_enfants-2022_06.pdfDownload
Palavra de Vida_2022_06.pdfDownload
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“You are my Lord; I have no good apart from you.” (Ps 16[15]:2)

5 Comments

  • PdV è sempre la luce per me, specialmente quella di questo mese.
    Da tempo cerco di tradurla nella mia lingua per altri. Recentemente non riesco ad avere il testo mesi in avanti. Come posso averlo adesso in modo di poter tradurlo e inviare la traduzione per altri?

  • OK, Michel!
    C’est toi, Seigneur, mon unique Bien! J’aime à citer ce “témoignage” d’un focolarino âgé, Vittorio, envoyé à Madagascar pour fonder le focolare masculin à Ambatondrazaka (“chez” l’évêque). Il avait une petite tendance à “piccoler”… Comme il se sentait chez lui à l’évêché, en me faisant visiter (pour la première fois), il se sentait tout à fait à l’aise en ouvrant le placard “aux liqueurs”, s’en enfilait une petite gorgée et concluait: “C’est toi, Seigneur, mon unique Bien!” Il n’avait retenu que le mot “merci” en malgache “misaotra” quasi imprononçable pour un non-malgache… Il l’employait facilement, et les gens l’aimaient de tout coeur!!

    • Ci dispiace che non riesci a visualizzarlo. Abbiamo verificato con più dispositivi ed è tutto funzionante. Riprova di nuovo

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