Focolare Movement
With representatives from various Christian Churches in the Holy Land

With representatives from various Christian Churches in the Holy Land

Patriarch Mons. Foud Twal set the tone of the appointments that Maria Voce had in her diary for her visit to Jerusalem which began on 11th February: He expresses his view, “The concerns of the people are our concerns. It’s as if the ascent to Calvary has never ended here in the Holy Land”. We must not become discouraged. “Hope never dies. For example, I notice recently that there are 100 or more associations that bring together Jews, Christians and Muslims in this region. People want dialogue. I also see that little by little, perhaps because of the many sufferings, we begin to speak of ‘neighbours’ rather than ‘enemies’”. Maria Voce joined in: “If a drop of love enters within instinctive self-defence, another step can be taken, and one can go ahead”, without falling into despair. The Patriarch concluded; “This is the speciality we Christians have, to sow love and go ahead”. This same background of suffering and came through in the conversation that the president had with Bishop Munib Younan, President of the World Lutheran Federation: “I see in people a strong temptation to be concerned only with material goods. But no, here we have need of God.” And he explained further: “We need a deep spirituality, for our children and for ourselves, a spirituality that is deeply evangelical”. Maria Voce understood the spirituality the Bishop hopes for would naturally be ecumenical. At the Armenian Apostolic Patriarchate, Maria Voce spent time with Bishop Aris Shirvanian. “We must be united so as to defend the Christian Church – he said -, but we cannot say that there specific problems foe we Armenians, we continue to live to keep up our faith, our heritage”. Maria Voce underlined the greatness of this vocation. “Yes – continued the Bishop – we need to defend ourselves, but even more we need to build ‘bridges’ between the Churches, bridges between religions, bridges between peoples.” There was a very warm Lebanese welcome at the Holy Land residence of the Marionite Archbishopric, a community of about ten thousand faithful, above all in Galilee, with Bishop Mons. Paul Nabil Sayah. This Marionite Bishop underlined the importance of the pastoral aspect and actions of the Christian churches in the Holy Land, especially with and for families: “There is never enough space for education, which is a real priority for us. With good education you can hope to reach peace”. The desire to co-operate was also confirmed by Maria Voce. Finally, an important meeting with the Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Jerusalem: His Beatitude Patriarch Theophilos III, who received Maria Voce and her collaborators. The historical difficulties between the Christian churches in the Holy Land are well known. The climate has certainly improved, and now one can speak of a ‘real ecumenism’ even though there are still difficulties. In the conversation between the Patriarch and the president of the Focolare there was a common desire to ‘raise the tone of the discussions’, anchoring, Theophilos III emphasised, into ‘the unity of Christians “in Christ”, in His love’. Maria Voce explained what ‘unity’ means for the focolarini, “the unity Jesus asked of His Church”. From Michele Zanzucchi The full Italian version of this report can be found on Citta Nuova site: http://www.cittanuova.it/contenuto.php?TipoContenuto=web&idContenuto=31501

With Rabbi Kronish: Peace now! Peace afterwards!

I have been in Jerusalem since yesterday. Maria Voce’s busy schedule has also included appointments with some people from Jewish and Muslim traditions. These meetings are a re-affirmation of the commitment to dialogue at all levels. Today the first of these encounters was held with Rabbi Ron Kronish, founder and director of the Interreligious Coordinating Council of Israel (ICCI). We met at 15:00 with Rabbi Ron Kronish who refers to himself as old friend of the Focolare. ICCI office (http://english.icci.org.il/) is located in a neighborhood not far from the center of Jerusalem, on the old road to Bethlehem, which is still very crowded and bustling with life. The ICCI was founded in 1991, on the evening before the outbreak of the first Gulf war. It was 16 January and everyone in Israel was wearing gas masks; there was an atmosphere of fear because of the coming war. In Ratisbonne, the center that we visited this morning, some men of dialogue gathered who, in spite of the war, had decided that the world needs peace. The center works on different levels, but primarily for youth and women. Its goal is to train people for peace. They try to create a basic mentality which has at its basis the awareness that there are conflicts – here Kronish referred especially to the conflict between Israeli and Palestinians – and these conflicts are not easily resolved, but we can, nevertheless, continue to work for the peace of tomorrow. Their slogan isn’t so much “Peace now!” but “Peace later!” For this reason, young people especially, need to be engaged in recognizing the other, listening to the other, discovering the other and, in the end, seeing the other not as an enemy, but as a neighbor to be accepted with his or her diversity. The experiences of the twenty years of these courses which have been taking place within Israel with Muslim, Jewish, and Christian teens and young adults, have been fruitful and enriching. Only 5% of those who enroll choose not to finish the course, while all the others reach the end. This is a sign of the interest and commitment, but also a source of hope because by now thousands have benefited from this new vision. In speaking to Maria Voce, Ron Kronish doesn’t hide the fact that the world has changed since 1991. Peace seemed near, it seemed already possible. Today it is much farther away. We need to be aware of this, but never lose hope. Maria Voce talked about the Focolare’s involvement in the field of formation and of the similarity of ideas and methodology that we share with the ICCI. Kronish asked that our collaboration continue and that we especially carry it out among young adults and teenagers. Roberto Catalano (extract from Italian magazine, Città Nuova: www.cittanuova.it )

Bishops: God is near

Benedict XVI greeted them joyfully during the audience of 9 February: “I am glad for the opportunity you have been offered to compare ecclesial experiences from different areas of the world, and I hope these days of prayer and reflection bear many abundant fruits for your communities.”

Their reflections were conducted within “the light of the charism of Chiara Lubich,” as Cardinal Miloslav Vlk, moderator of the gathering, said in his opening remarks, “which is in deep harmony with the charism of the bishop.” He went on to say: “It’s a matter of knowing how to accept the Love of God who wants the good of humankind as He draws near to every human person.”

“The spirituality of communion, an echo of the Second Vatican Council which is all centered on the Church as a mystery of communion. . . is brought forward in a charismatic way by the Focolare Movement,” underscored Cardinal Marc Oullet, Prefect of the Congregation for Bishops.

Before the challenges that the Church is facing today especially in lands with ancient Christian traditions, but also in many other parts of the world, the bishops wanted to give voice to the answers the Holy Spirit has generated in recent years, like the communion and the collaboration between new and ancient charisms, the ecumenical and interreligious dialogue, the dialogue with the so-called secular culture.

Cardinal Gianfranco Ravasi, president of the Pontifical Council for Culture, highlighted the passage from a multicultural society to an intercultural one which integrates the diverse cultures and faiths, as is shown by the launching of the recent Court of the Gentiles,” a phrase coined by Benedict XVI in reference to the dialogue between faith and culture. The roundtable discussion which preceded Cardinal Ravasi’s presentation related the various dynamics present in modern society, seen from the perspective of the economy (Dr Stefano Zamagni), of mysticism (Father Fabio Ciardi), of social relations (Dr Vera Araujo) and international relations (Dr Vincenzo Buonomo).

Maria Voce, president of the Focolare Movement focused her presentation on God’s Plans in the Thought of Chiara Lubich, which was in line with the theme of the gathering.

At the conclusion of the meeting, 25 bishops went for two days to the international Focolare town of Loppiano, near Florence, which, with its 900 inhabitants witnesses that society can be guided by the Gospel. Among other places, they visited Sophia University Institute which is already in its third year of interdisciplinary courses.

With representatives from various Christian Churches in the Holy Land

1956: I saw the Holy Land

Dome of the Rock – (…) As I beheld the city from the bright blue coastline near to the hills that are dotted with thousands of houses, as our plane soared out over the water so that we could catch a first glimpse of the Palestine hills, I didn’t believe that Jerusalem and the Holy Places were going to make such a deep impression on my mind.

My stay in Palestine lasted seven days.

I don’t recall the schedule of our visits, but the places are deeply impressed in my mind: Bethpage, the Church of Saint Peter in Gallicantu, the stone steps of Jesus’ testament, Gethsemane, the Antonia Fortress where Pilate stood Jesus before the people and said: “Behold the man!” the site of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin; the site of the ascension enclosed in a small kiosk; then there was Bethany and the road that leads from Jerusalem to Jericho, which is mentioned in the parable of the Good Samaritan; Bethlehem. . . a long list of such sweet names that neither life nor death will ever erase. At evening’s fall, raising my eyes to the sky, there were stars dripping light, skies that we never even dream of here in Italy, and I felt a strange and logical affinity between that firmament and those holy places.    (…)

An old road to Jerusalem, an uphill climb, perhaps three meters wide, echoing the cries of merchants who are selling their goods on the left and on the right. People elbowing each other as they come and go, dressed in the most varied types of eastern designs.

You keep climbing and, as you pass through this bazaar – this is what the local people call it – you now and then come upon a doorway that you’re not sure belongs to the house or to a chapel: “Here is a station of the Cross, here’s the third station, here’s the fourth. . . Here is where Jesus met his Mother, here is where he met Simon of Cirene. . .” It was the road of the Via Crucis, the path that Jesus followed.

A few meters higher we are informed: “We’ve reached the sepulcher. Here in this church, held up with these powerful unsightly beams is the most sacred place imaginable: Calvary and the sepulcher.”

There was a living sense of pain in my soul, almost fear or dismay.

We went inside and filed up a narrow, narrow staircase whose marble had been worn down by the millions of pilgrims who’ve climbed it. And we found ourselves before an altar where the Greek Orthodox and Armenians could celebrate.

A guide showed us a rock that could be seen through a glass window, a hole, and then he told us: “The cross was planted in this hole.”

Inadvertently, without saying a word, we all went to our knees.

It was a moment of deep recollection for me.

The cross was planted in that hole… the first cross.

If there hadn’t been this first cross, my life and the life of millions of Christians who follow Jesus by carrying their cross, the millions of sufferings, the pain of millions, would not have had a name, they would not have had any meaning. Jesus raised upon the cross like a criminal, gave meaning and value to the sea of anguish which touches and, at times, submerges humanity, and often every individual.

I didn’t say anything to Jesus in that moment. The perforated stone had spoken.

I only had to add like an ecstatic child: “Here, Jesus, I want to plant, once more, my own cross, our crosses, the crosses of all those who know you and all those who don’t.”

Extracts from Essential Writings, “The Attraction of Modern Times”, by Chiara Lubich.

With representatives from various Christian Churches in the Holy Land

Visit to the Holy Land

It was a gathering of some representatives of the ecclesial movements and new communities present in Jerusalem. Here where the Universal Story had a new beginning, and also the small “sacred story” of each group concerning its place and its individual way.

Some hundred people were present in a hall of the Curia in the Custody of the Holy Land, just behind the New Gate.

Chemin Neuf, the Community of the Beatitudes and the Emmanuel Community of France; Cançao nova, the Sons of Mary, the Obra de Maria and Shalom Communityfrom Brazil; Regnum Christi from Mexico; John XXIII Association, Communion and Liberation and the Focolare from Italy (with international dimensions) told of their adventure with simplicity, each of them very original and yet quite similar to one another. Almost all of them shared common approaches: providing hospitality; meeting pilgrims; working to making the treasures of the Holy Land known (also at an ecumenical and interreligious level), and promoting tourism to the holy sites. Numerous movements and communities specialize in the field of evangelization through the media. There were also many examples of communities who worked together.

Like everything in Christianity, this meeting in Jerusalem  was not noteworthy for its numerical dimensions, but but for its qualitative dimensions. It was the quality of relationships which was the highlight. “Perhaps one task of the movements and new communities is to bring to the Catholic Church and more generally to all of Christianity, the only primacy found in the Gospel, the primacy of love,” explained a young woman from the Chemin Neuf Community.

Some movements have been present on location in the Holy Land for years, others for just a few months. The joy and fellowship was what made everyone take note at this meeting that was begun by Maria Voce with the simple sharing of her activities.

In the course of a frank dialogue with those present, Maria Voce explained the meaning of the dialogue between movements and new communities: “I find myself before people and groups who desire to witness that mutual love which constructs the Church.”

In particular, responding to a question from a representative from Communion and Liberation, she said: “Certainly, following the Vigil of Pentecost 1998,” in Saint Peter’s Square, in answer to the call of John Paul II, “we felt linked, united to the Pope’s appeal as he invoked the Holy Spirit. From that time on, Chiara Lubich noticed in the Pope a desire that the movements be in communion among themselves.” To favor “that charismatic, marian presence which is “coessential” to the petrine dimension.” And so, since then,  “wherever you find the Focolare Movement, you meet this desire for unity between movements and new communities.” Each with its own charism, “which complements the charism of the others. Communion isn’t uniformity. . .  If (each of) our charisms is the most beautiful one, then, in the end, the Church is more beautiful, because the charisms are gifts that are to be submitted to reciprocity.”

“How can you live ecumenical and interreligious dialogue in the Holy Land?” asked one young Brazilian woman. “Dialogue is a lifestyle,” Maria Voce responded, “more than a thing that you “do”. It means placing yourself before another person out of love.” Loving without interests, always, being the first, both with other Christians and with the faithful of other religions. “For us, dialogue has always meant a dialogue between people, not between ideologies or religions. . . Because there is love in every person on earth.” Besides, “Unity comes from God, who only asks people to love each other.”

By Michele Zanzucchi

With representatives from various Christian Churches in the Holy Land

Mariapolis Peace

The little towns, through the life style they promote, can offer new ideas for life in bigger towns and cities. They are models of a new kind of society, whose law is mutual love, the law of the Gospel, with the full communion of cultural spiritual and material goods that this entails. Through the life that circulates, their outreach in the world has remained constant. Each year they have thousands of visitors.   “This place is really nice; maybe we can build our Mariapolis Center here!” Touring Tagaytay in May 1966, Cengia and Silvio had just discovered a spot on top of the hill overlooking Taal Lake. And so… they prayed: “Jesus if it is according to your will, we’d like to ask you for this piece of land for the Mariapolis Center.” Then they took a small medal of our Lady and buried it underground. It was a custom followed in many other parts of the world. Read more

With representatives from various Christian Churches in the Holy Land

Lia Brunet

Lia Brunet met Chiara Lubich in Trent, Italy in 1945. In 1958, together with Fiore Ungaro, a focolarina from Rome, and Marco Tecilla, the first focolarino, she made the first trip outside European boundaries. They were years of great social unrest throughout Latin America. During that trip the first knots were tied of a network of love that would produce spiritual and social renewal in those countries where Lia went on to spend 44 years of her life in limitless self-giving. On Christmas Day 2004 Lia turned 87. On the following February 5th she left for the next life. The first trip to Latin America was a leap into the unknown. Visiting the poor districts of Trent together with Chiara, Lia had experienced the Gospel’s transforming and propelling force on society. During their first12 intense months in Latin America, Marco, Fiore and Lia visited Recife, Sao Paulo, Rio de Janeiro and Belo Horizonte, Brazil; Montevideo, Uruguay; Buenos Aires, Argentina; and Santiago, Chile. Lia described their strategy in her book “Diario di un Viaggio” (translated as “Diary of a Journey”) with these words: “Ours is also a revolution, which makes use of the most powerful weapon – the Love brought by Jesus on earth. As did St Paul, we speak of putting on the “new man,” and doing away with our “former selves.” Ours too is a matter of life and death: its aim is: “that all may be one.”

With representatives from various Christian Churches in the Holy Land

Economy of Communion in Africa: hopes for the future

African challenges were looked at with rationality and truthfulness. Geneviève A. Sanze, specialist in Business Ethics and Sustainable Development, underscored some stumbling blocks to development in Africa.

There was a strong emphasis on concrete experiences of entrepreneurs and economists from all around the world, like Teresa Ganzon, Managing Director of Banko Kabayan (Philippines), who recounted her experience in microfinance. Present also was John Mundell, president of Mundell & Associates, who shared his day-to-day experience in a highly competitive business environment in the United States of America.

The Apostolic Nuncio in Kenya, Archbishop Paul Alain Lebeaupin, was presented and commented, “I am happy that the Focolare Movement has been able to give this message of the EOC that the Pope feels so strongly about”.

Prof. John C. Maviiri (Vice chancellor, Cuea) underlined at the end, “A true African development must carry with it the spirituality of communion, a concern for others and solidarity with the needy. This is great opportunity to introduce a new dimension in the curriculum of studies on economics and human development.”

In the days preceding the conference, 23 – 25 January, “Mariapolis Piero”, the little town of the Focolare in Kalimoni (Nairobi), hosted the first “Economy of Communion School” for young entrepreneurs from all over Africa.

“As far as EoC events go, this Pan African school has had the most impact,” Professor Luigino Bruni said.

Some concrete details:

The first 15 associates of the future business park at Mariapolis Piero have come forward, and the first funds have also arrived.

Ten entrepreneurs present formally adhered to the EoC with their businesses. They outlined some concrete projects, starting with themselves. With one business in Burundi, the Bangco Kabayan will join as partner in a micro-credit program, starting the bank’s first activity outside the Philippines.

“Here, people want to live,” Luigino Bruni commented at the end of the school. “I was touched by how much the young people here love to study. For them, getting into college is the goal of their life, because it means future. You see people studying at night, below street lamps because they have no light at home. Without this desire and hunger for future, our movement cannot grow”.

With representatives from various Christian Churches in the Holy Land

Positive RevolutiON! Young people in Spain

Many experiences were shared by the young people of the Focolare who told how they live their daily lives: in school, on weekends, organizing solidarity concerts, building “bridges of brotherhood” (like with some Muslim youths from Tangeri). The experiences of suffering were both powerful and profound. These were shared by a young woman with a serious illness, who gave the chance to Maria Voce – who had been invited to Spain by the youths themselves – to say something about the key to building unity: Jesus Forsaken, the culmination of God’s love for humankind. She invited the youths to take upon themselves the sufferings of others, the divisions, the difficulties. . . and to transform them into love as Jesus had done.

The Focolare’s president addressed the youth with her usual directness and depth: “In archery, when you want to center the target, you have to look higher, because the arrow descends during its trajectory. You need to look higher in order to hit the target. Look higher, don’t be afraid, you are the protagonists of your life. You all are. And you’ve already begun. How? Like the youths told us earlier: taking up the words of the greatest revolutionary, Jesus Christ. His revolution began two-thousand years ago and it isn’t over yet. Each one of us has to play his part in this revolution, beginning with the word love. Living in love, being love alive for all the people you will meet. Do be satisfied with anything less.” And she concluded with a challenge: “This evening was the beginning of something great. Now carry on, without fear. The world is yours. The positive revolution has begun.”

RevolutiON! also involved thousands of youths from around the world who already live and work for a more united world in the different zones of the world. The many messages they sent  bear witness to this.

The event concluded at midnight with an “explosive” celebration prepared by the Youth for a United World. Everybody left with joy on their faces, committed to begin right away with the “positive revolution” as a concrete way of responding to the difficult situation of all young people, not only in Spain.  Upcoming events for everyone: The “International Meeting of Youth for a Unite World” in Castelgandolfo, Rome, preceding the beatification of John Paul II; and the World Youth Day in August 2011 in Madrid, Spain.

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February 2011

“Those who are led by the Spirit of God are children of God”. These words speak to our Christian life, into which the Spirit of Jesus introduces a dynamic tension that Paul summarizes as the contrast between flesh and spirit. By the word flesh, he means the whole person (body and soul), with all our inherent fragility and selfishness. These are constantly opposed to the law of love, and indeed, to Love itself, which was poured into our hearts (cf. Rm. 5:5). In fact, those who are led by the Spirit must face the “good fight of the faith” (1 Tim 6:12) in order to curb all the inclinations to evil and to live in accordance with the faith professed in baptism. But how? We know that for the Holy Spirit to act we need to do our part. In writing these words, St. Paul had in mind, above all, a certain duty that we have as Christians, that of denying ourselves and winning the battle against selfishness in its many and varied forms. It is this dying to ourselves that produces life, so that every self-denial, every renunciation, every “no” to our selfishness is the source of new light, peace, joy, love and inner freedom. It is an open door to the Spirit. Giving more freedom to the Holy Spirit, present in our hearts, will enable him to bestow upon us a greater abundance of his gifts and lead us along the journey of life. “Those who are led by the Spirit of God are children of God”. How can we live these words? Above all we have to become increasingly aware of the presence of the Holy Spirit within us. There is an immense treasure in the depths of our being, but we are not as conscious of it as we could be. We possess an extraordinary wealth, but for the most part, it lies unused. In order to hear and follow his voice within us more readily, we have to say no to everything that is against the will of God and yes to everything that is his will: no to temptation, with a clear-cut refusal of its suggestions; yes to the tasks that God has entrusted to us; yes to loving every neighbor we meet; yes to the trials and difficulties we encounter … If we do this, the Holy Spirit will guide us, giving our Christian life that vigor, that savor, that zest and that brightness that naturally follow when it is authentic. People around us will realize we are not only children of our own natural family, but sons and daughters of God. Chiara Lubich

Gennaio 2011

“The community of believers was of one heart and mind, and no one claimed that any of his possessions was his own, but they had everything in common.” Let’s take a closer look at what this unity was like. Above all, in the dynamics of mutual exchange, the Holy Spirit united the believers in heart and mind by helping them to overcome those attitudes that make this difficult. In fact, the greatest obstacle to unity is our individualism, the attachment to our own ideas and to our personal viewpoints and tastes. Our selfishness builds barriers that isolate and exclude us from those who are different.

“The community of believers was of one heart and mind, and no one claimed that any of his possessions was his own, but they had everything in common.” As a result, the unity brought about by the Holy Spirit was reflected in the life of the believers. Unity of mind and heart was lived out and expressed concretely by sharing goods with those in need. Precisely because their unity was genuine, it did not tolerate having some in the community lacking in their basic needs while others were living in abundance.

“The community of believers was of one heart and mind, and no one claimed that any of his possessions was his own, but they had everything in common.” How can we live this month’s passage? It emphasizes the communion and unity so strongly advocated by Jesus, who gave us the gift of His Spirit to accomplish it. For this reason then, we will seek to grow in this communion on all levels by listening to the voice of the Holy Spirit — on the spiritual level, above all, by overcoming the seeds of division that we have within us. It would be a contradiction, for example, to want to be united to Jesus and at the same time to be divided among ourselves, behaving in an individualistic way, each one walking alone, judging one another and perhaps excluding one another. So we need to make a renewed conversion to God, who wants us to be united. Furthermore, this Word of Life will help us to understand more clearly the contradiction that exists between Christian faith and the selfish use of material goods. It will help us to achieve an authentic solidarity with those who are in need, within the limits of our possibilities. Since this is also the month in which we celebrate the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity, these words urge us to pray and to strengthen our bonds of unity, loving and sharing with our brothers and sisters of different churches, with whom we have in common, through baptism, the one faith and one spirit of Christ. Chiara Lubich

With representatives from various Christian Churches in the Holy Land

Video: Mass media: “The Media and the Unity of Peoples”

The mass-media is that wonderful phenomenon familiar to all of us and in a sense characteristic of our times, but also because the media have always been closely associated with and fundamentally important to our Movement. I had the opportunity to underline this in a discourse in Bangkok, Thailand, in January, 1997 when the prestigious St. John’s University conferred upon me and, through me, upon the Movement I represent, an honoris causa degree precisely in the science of social communications.

In fact, a double affinity profoundly links the communications media to us and prompts us to speak of them. There is first of all an affinity in relation to goals.

The goal of the Focolare Movement is to contribute toward accomplishing what our young people describe as the dream of a God, that is, the heartfelt request that Jesus made to the Father shortly before he died: “May they all be one” (Jn. 17:21).

What is the purpose of the media? The collective sense of their vocation is clear: they too are aimed at helping people to live together.

But it is not only the purpose for which the Movement works that makes the media so close to our life. There is a second affinity, related to its method: the spirituality of unity, characteristic of the Movement, is lived not only in a personal dimension, but in a communitarian, collective dimension. In the birth and development of the communications media we can discern a new step in the evolutionary process of humanity. This development introduces an irreversible thrust, so to speak, from complexity to oneness, from fragmentation to the search for unity in real time.

In examining our spirituality we realize that precisely because it is the way of unity, it is a way of communion.

In a world pervaded by individualism, in a Church which fostered and proposed traditional, though always admirable individual spiritualities, the Holy Spirit impelled our Movement, twenty years before the Council, to change direction and make this very decisive move towards our neighbors.

This is not the moment to give you an in-depth analysis of the key ideas upon which our spirituality is based, but we can affirm that in each one of them there is a clear communitarian dimension. It is a collective way. We go to God through our neighbor, or better, we go to God with our neighbor, with our brothers and sisters whom we love.

And because this love is reciprocal, it is possible to pattern our lives on the life of the Trinity, becoming one as God is one, without ever being alone, as God who is triune. And Christ is in our midst, as he promised: “Where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst of them” (Mt. 18:20).

This spirituality gradually proved to be a spirituality of the people. It is the animating spirit of an evangelical revolution of love capable of spreading quickly all over the world. And not only among Catholics, but also among Christians of other Churches, among faithful of other religions, among men and women of good will who aspire to a more united world. It is a phenomenon of universal brotherhood among millions of people, present now in 184 nations and animated by a deep need: to feel that they are “one” with all.

This thirst to feel united has always been a characteristic of ours, from the very early days, when a constant exchange of letters put the work God was beginning to do within each one of us into communion. And this work of God became evermore fruitful as it was shared with others. …

The Movement has had an official web site on Internet, where ideal contents are presented, as well as the history and spreading of the Focolare with links to similar sites of other nations and pages of updated news. …

As we said, our use of the media was born from concrete needs, from simple circumstances, like the desire to keep in touch or the need to update those who were not present for certain events we felt were important, or from the responsibility to give spiritual support to those in difficulty.

For many years we did not publicize the Movement or its exciting spread. Even now publicity does not come so much from the Movement itself but spontaneously from circumstances.

Above all, we want everything to keep on flourishing from life, even though we are ever more convinced that the communications media are, so to speak, made especially for us, given their vocation to the unity of peoples. Besides, the early Christians did not have the media. They had their hearts overflowing with the message of Christ, and they passed it on by word of mouth to such an extent that, as Tertullian said, although they were born yesterday, they had already invaded the world. Jesus used words, he spoke; the Gospels don’t speak of him writing down anything, expect when he wrote on the ground (cf. Jn. 8:6).

If we take a quick glance at the modern communications media, we cannot hide the fact that, along with a rapid development which makes them increasingly more useful and fascinating, they present a series of new and weighty problems for society, families and individuals. Therefore, it is a panorama of lights and shadows.

To cite only a few of these problems: there is globalization which leads to a leveling of cultures suffocating their inherent riches; ethical relativism which mixes authoritative messages with others that are superficial or biased; sensationalism, at the cost of intruding upon the suffering and privacy of others; an exaggerated atmosphere of competitiveness within the productive structures of the communications media; excessive intrusiveness on the public… How can we use the media without being used by the media?

Lights and shadows, I said… in some cases, the media today are dogmatically accepted without an attitude of objective criticism; in other cases, they are blamed for the amorality, violence, and superficiality they propose; and in still others they are over-estimated as infallible instruments of power, almost as new idols of a humanity which has lost other certainties. We know that they are simply means, but we want to appreciate this “sleeping giant of potential evangelization”[1] according to a well-chosen expression of the Pope, and we invite everyone to use them well, faithful to the prophetic message they contain.

The message is one of “unity”. At this point I would like to raise a prayer of thanksgiving to God for the way he is present even in modern discoveries and new technologies, for the way he leads history.

At the very moment in which humanity seems to be wandering in the dark after the fall of strong ideologies and the blurring of many values, at the very moment in which there is a longing for a more united world and a demand for universal brotherhood, at this very moment we find ourselves equipped with these powerful means of communication, a sign of the times which says “unity”. Can we not see the hand of God in all this?


[1].             John Paul II, Address to Bishops’ Conference of Poland, February 14, 1998, in L’Osservatore Romano, Weekly Edition in English, March 4, 1998, p. 8.