01-07-2013 - Traces, n. 7
EDITORIAL What is our task? What are we Christians called to do here in the world? Usually, this is not the kind of question one asks before heading out on vacation. At least, not if the idea of vacation is a total break from our usual life. But the weeks ahead are not for this. They are not a parenthesis in daily life; they have never been this for us. We were never educated to this. This is a question Fr. Julián Carrón recently asked a group of responsibles of the Movement during a vacation. Obviously, this is not something one can answer in a few lines. It will be the focus of work for the upcoming months, and an intense work at that. But here perhaps it is worthwhile to remember at least a passage referred to in that dialogue: lived Christianity brings a difference to the world, a gusto and an intensity in doing things that “disturbs our surroundings,” as Fr. Giussani said–any surroundings, even perhaps where we spend a few days of vacation. “The question is whether we take advantage of this moment to communicate something of the beauty that we live,” Fr. Carrón said in those days. “It is as if we were asked this very simple question: What would we like a new friend who comes with us to see? What would we desire that he bring home with him?” So then everything–hikes, a moment of testimony, the presentation of a book, a dialogue, Mass, morning prayer–becomes “an opportunity for seeing vacation as a paradigm of living, a model for a day lived in Christ, for what life is like for a person who has encountered Christ. Therefore all the gestures contain this promise, the opportunity to verify faith in experience.” |