Focolare Movement

March 2014

Feb 26, 2014

If you keep my commandments, you will abide in my love, just as I have kept my Father’s commandments and abide in his love. (Jn 15:10)

If you keep my commandments, you will abide in my love, just as I have kept my Father’s commandments and abide in his love.

Abide, therefore, in his love. But what does Jesus mean by this? Undoubtedly, he means that keeping his commandments is the sign, the proof that we are his true friends. It’s the condition for Jesus to reciprocate and assure us of his friendship. But he seems to mean something else as well: namely, that keeping his commandments builds up in us the same love that Jesus has by nature. Keeping them communicates to us the particular way of loving we see displayed in all of Jesus’ earthly life. It is a love that made Jesus one with the Father and at the same time urged him to identify with and be completely one with all his brothers and sisters, especially with the least, the weakest, the most marginalized. Jesus’ love was a love that healed every wound of the soul and of the body, gave peace and joy to every heart, overcame every division, rebuilding fraternity and unity among all. If we put his word into practice, Jesus will live in us and will make us too instruments of his love.

If you keep my commandments, you will abide in my love, just as I have kept my Father’s commandments and abide in his love.

How then shall we live this month’s Word of Life? By keeping in mind and aiming decisively at the good it proposes: a Christian life that does not rest content with keeping the commandments in a minimal, cold and outward way, but that is full of generosity. The saints acted like this. And they are the living Word of God.

This month let’s take just one of his words, one of his commandments and try to translate it into life. Since Jesus’ New Commandment (‘love one another as I have loved you’ (Jn 15:12)) is like the heart, the summary of all his words, let’s live it in an utterly radical way.

Chiara Lubich

First Published in May 1994

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Subscribe to Newsletter

Thought of the day

Related post

New publication: “A Magnificent Garden”

New publication: “A Magnificent Garden”

Religious men and women in the history of the Focolare Movement: a contribution to the spread of the charism of unity, told in the pages of a book just published by Città Nuova

With strong commitments made, Raising Hope concluded

With strong commitments made, Raising Hope concluded

Around 1,000 participants from 80 countries gathered at this unprecedented conference in Castel Gandolfo, Rome, to mark the tenth anniversary of the encyclical Laudato Si’ and to address some of the most pressing issues surrounding the climate crisis.

Chiara Lubich at Genfest 1990

Chiara Lubich at Genfest 1990

“What would Jesus say? What would Jesus do at this moment?” And it is precisely this question that Chiara Lubich started from in this excerpt taken from Genfest 1990.