• To bring You the World in my Arms (PortarTi il mondo fra le braccia)

Armando Torno, Rome:  Città Nuova

Experiences told by Chiara’s first friends who accompanied her in her spiritual and human adventure and a large range of unpublished material were Torno’s inspiration when writing this biography on the life of Chiara Lubich (1920- 2008). Whilst being a chronological account, it doesn’t wish to be hagiographic and wants to distinguish the founder and her work.

For the first time in a book that everyone can read, an extraordinary and yet extremely simple existence is mapped out; a life where the undisputed reference point was the Gospel.

  • The Will of God by Chiara Lubich (La volontà di Dio)

Comp. Lucia Abignente, Rome: Città Nuova

A collection of thoughts, diary excerpts, letters and messages where the founder of the Focolare Movement addresses one of the fundamental themes of Christian Living. This book, containing a lot of unpublished material, is just one of Città Nuova’s new publications for March.

Chiara Lubich often spoke and wrote about the Will of God proposing it as a road to sainthood for everyone, as an aspect to be lived  in every moment of our lives, but above all as a possibility to respond to God with our love. “To a God that loves us immensely, we respond by trying to love him immensely. We would have no meaning in the world if we weren’t a little flame in this infinite blaze: love that responds to love”, commented Chiara in her later years describing the experience lived with her first companions at the dawn of the movement.

  • In Trent with Chiara Lubich. Places that speak (A Trento con Chiara Lubich. Le parole dei luoghi)

Franco De Battaglia, Trent: Il Margine

A book inspired by a walk through Trent; a visit to the streets, squares, houses and churches that marked Chiara Lubich’s early experiences. Eighty odd pages which, for the first time, narrate the interweaving of two stories: the history of various architectural landmarks in Trent and the life story of Chiara Lubich and her first companions.  “From the ‘casetta’ (or little house) that saw the birth of the first focolare in Number 2 Piazza Capuccini, to the woodland ‘Gocciadoro’ (Golden Drop); from the Androne neighbourhood where she visited the poor, to the city’s cathedral; the journalist Franco de Battaglia reconstructs the map of Chiara Lubich’s Trent. A unique guide for the discovery of the city’s landmarks wedded with the existential itinerary of one of the most important religious leaders of the 20thcentury”. From her beginnings in Trent, Chiara was an constant builder of unity among Christians and a protagonist of interreligious dialogue across all five continents. Her story and choices have now become a part of millions of people’s lives.

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