Letter to the Whole Movement
"The Pope's Challenge and Our Responsibility"
EditorialMilan, March 28, 2007
Dear Friends,
The impressive event that we lived on Saturday, March 24th in St. Peter’s
Square will mark our history for ever. Only if we identify ourselves with what happened
will we discover, in time, its whole import.
The people that we are, aware of its own frailty, but also of its fortune for the
grace we have received, welcomed and let itself be embraced by Benedict XVI.
I find no better way to express what happened than these words of Fr. Giussani,
which we listened to once more last Saturday: “If God became man and came
among us, if He came now, if He slipped into our crowd, and were here now among us,
recognizing Him, I say a priori, should be easy: easy to recognize Him … Because of
an exceptionality beyond compare.” And one of you commented, “How the heart leaps
at having recognized Him, having been able to say: ‘It’s You’! Yesterday, amongst the
crowd He became present again! And with that unmistakable exceptionality of a Beauty
and Truth become flesh.”
We were all witnesses of what Christ is able to do, if we let ourselves be attracted
by Him. For it is His attractiveness that showed itself victorious once again. But
all this beauty would not have been enough if there had not been the “I” of each one of
us, ready to let ourselves be drawn by that beauty to the point of recognizing Christ present.
Once more, it was His beauty, favoured by simplicity of heart, that generated the
people that everyone saw in Rome. Thank you, my friends, for the witness you gave
me!
I invite you to look at the way the Pope was amongst us, and to take up again
and again what he told us – paying attention to how he said it. I want to stress three
points:
1) a recognition of the personal origin of the charism – “Through him the
Holy Spirit aroused in the Church a movement, yours, that would witness the beauty of
being Christians in an epoch in which the opinion was spreading that Christianity was
something tiresome and oppressive to live.” This happened first to Fr. Giussani, wounded
by the desire for Beauty, and his experience became a method: “To re-propose the
Christian event in a fascinating way”;
2) a confirmation of the permanence of the charism in the experience of the
Movement. “The event that changed the life of the Founder also ‘wounded’ the lives of
a great many of his spiritual children.” This is why Communion and Liberation “a communitarian
experience of faith, originated from a renewed encounter with Christ …, offers
itself today, as an opportunity to live the Christian faith in a profound and up-todate
way.” The continuity is witnessed by the change brought about in us by the same
event that changed Fr. Giussani.
3) a re-launching of the mission: “‘Go out into the whole world to bring the
truth, the beauty and the peace that are met in the encounter with Christ the Redeemer.’…
Today I invite you to continue on this path.” The Holy Father gave us a precious indication
of method for carrying out this task: it will be possible only “with a deep, personalized
faith, solidly rooted in the living Body of Christ, the Church which guarantees
Jesus’ presence with us in this moment.” It is an invitation to continue the educative journey
that may win for us such a deep, personalized faith, in “total fidelity and communion
with the Successor of Peter and with the Pastors,” and enable us to be present in reality
“with a spontaneity and a freedom that permit new and prophetic apostolic and missionary
endeavors.” This is how we shall be able to collaborate with our charism, along
with our Pastors, “to make present the Mystery and the salvific work of Christ in the
world.”
Let us ask Our Lady, all together, to be more worthy of this task, supporting
each other in the entreaty of our “yes”, which will be all the more true, the more we are
aware of our disproportion.
Let us go on praying for the Pope, the passionately devoted witness to Christ
before us.
Best wishes for Easter,
Julián Carrón
Traces, n. 4, 01-04-2007