editorial
Looking
at the Church to Sustain the Hope of Mankind
We
are living in a terrible time.
Many call
it “a time of war.” Certainly, it is a period of horrible large-scale
massacres, of scenes of hatred that leave us stunned and bewildered. There is
disquiet and fear in the air, and no one is immune to it. We hear analyses thrown
back and forth, and all kinds of conjectures. In many cases, in the newspapers
and in the streets, ideology has once again become the key for interpreting reality,
superficially and violently, while people remain blind to what is really going
on.
On one side, there are those who, stupidly, see terrorism as a kind of just war
by the poor against the rich (declared and waged, in fact, in order to grab power
and to attack moderate Arab countries and the West), while the other side affirms
war to be the only remedy for the world’s ills. In this way, what we get
is only more hatred and a bleaker future for everyone.
“
We love death more than you love life.” With these words, those who claimed
responsibility for the Madrid massacre chose to indicate their presumed position
of strength against European and Christian tradition. The phrase contains the
delirium that recently wrapped explosives around the body of a half-witted child
in Palestine, and that moves the suicide bombers who are covering the world in
blood. It is a provocative phrase, too, asking us how much we love life. For
love for life is put to a tough test in times like these. What prevails is fear,
self-interest, calculation and, in the end, a bleak pessimism that, under the
surface of colorful distractions, permeates the feel of existence, spreading
everywhere the dark shadow of nothingness. We find thousands of symptoms of this
in society, in culture and in many personal choices.
In order to love life, we need a reason for hope; we need it if we are not to
abandon a positive outlook, even amidst all the trials. In order to love life,
we need something that makes it lovable always, even when it has a wounded face,
and when we no longer seem to have the strength for it. We need to have clear
in our minds and our hearts the motive for which death, as St Paul says, has
no “victory.”
Christians believe in Easter, not as a rite, but as the moment in which the victory
of life over death actually happened; the victory that only the power of God
can give to man’s life. Easter is not a fact in the past, but history in
the present, a continuous happening of events that bring reasons for hope into
the life of the world. The fifty years of the life of CL–which the Pope
recalls in his letter to Fr Giussani–have been for many the “movement” with
which Easter entered into the existence of the world and into the way of judging
life.
This is why there is written on the Easter Poster “Life as drama, as striving
for the good, is brought into the world only by Christ. There is no separation
between the materiality of existence and Christ who is in us, who holds us in
His embrace. We are well aware of our human frailty, which we share with all
men, but also of the certainty in Christ, which makes us different from all men,
and therefore of the happiness and optimism that explain the inexorable repetition
of our efforts, always struggling.”
Today, in such hard times, to look at the Church–the locus of Christ’s
victory over death–and to pray with her to Him who is our peace, is the
most adequate way, more loving of live, for driving away nightmares, for judging
the facts that happen with intelligence and openness, and for sustaining human
hope.