They lived a sentence from the Gospel and the novelty, for that time,  was that Chiara and her first companions, to help one another and to  grow together, told one another of the fruits they had experienced  through living the Word.  Chiara wrote: ‘The War was still raging. Every time the air-raid  siren sounded, all we could take into the shelter with us was one small  book: the Gospel. We opened it and the words, even though we already  knew them quite well, because of the new charism , were lit up as if  they had a candle beneath them, they enflamed our hearts and pushed us  to put them into practise straightaway. We were attracted to them all  and tried to live them one after another. I read for example; “Love your  neighbour as yourself” (Mt 19,19). Our neighbour. Where was our  neighbour?  There, next to us in the all the people who had been hurt by  the War, wounded, without clothes, without houses, hungry and thirsty.  We immediately dedicated ourselves to them in many ways.  ‘The Gospel assured us: “Ask and you shall receive.” (Mt 7,7). We  asked for the needs of the poor – and, extraordinarily for war-time – we  received everything we needed from God! One day, and this story is one  of the first experiences we had and is often told, a poor person asked  us for a pair of shoes size 42. Knowing that Jesus was in the poor  person, I turned to the Lord, in the church of St Clare near to a  hospital of the same name, with this prayer: “Give me a pair of shoes  size 42 for you in that poor person”. I came out and a lady came up and  gave me a parcel. I opened it and it was a pair of shoes size 42.  ‘We read in the Gospel: “Give and you will be given” (Lk 6,38). We  gave and gave and each time we received in return. We had just one apple  left in the house. We gave it to the poor person who asked. And we saw  the next morning, maybe from a relative, a dozen apples arrive. We gave  those to others who were in need, and in the evening a whole suitcases  of apples arrived. That’s how it was, all the time.  ‘These events, one after the other, amazed and enchanted us. We had  great joy and that joy spread. Jesus had promised and still now he keeps  His promise. He is not, therefore, a reality of the past, but of the  present. And the Gospel is true. This discovery gave wings to our steps  on the journey we had just begun. When we explained this to people who  were curious about our happiness in such sad and troubled times; they  understood that they hadn’t simply found a few girls in a young Movement  but Jesus alive.”
Initiative and hard work!
Initiative and hard work!




0 Comments