1 / 26

Word of Life

Word of Life. April 2007. “I am among you as one who serves”. (Luke 22:27). On the day of Unleavened Bread, the feast of the Passover, Jesus was in the “upper room” with his disciples to share his last supper with them.

aimee
Télécharger la présentation

Word of Life

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Word of Life April 2007 “I am among you as one who serves” (Luke 22:27)

  2. On the day of Unleavened Bread, the feast of the Passover, Jesus was in the “upper room” with his disciples to share his last supper with them.

  3. After he broke bread and passed around a cup of wine, he imparted to them his last teaching: in his community, the greatest would become the smallest, and the one who governs as the one who serves.

  4. In John’s account, Jesus with an eloquent gesture shows the originality of the relationships he came to establish among all his disciples: he washes their feet, going against the expected behavior from a superior or one who is in charge (the apostles during that last supper were asking themselves who could be considered “the greatest” among them).

  5. “I am among you as one who serves”

  6. “To love means to serve, and Jesus gave us the example,” said Chiara Lubich in one of her talks.

  7. To serve may seem degrading. Are not those who serve usually considered inferior to others?

  8. And yet, everyone wishes to be served. Public institutions demand it (are not the people who hold the highest positions referred to as “ministers”?), as well as social services (are they not aptly called “services”?).

  9. We are appreciative when a waiter serves us well, when the clerk efficiently processes our papers, when the doctor and the nurse take care of us competently and with consideration.

  10. If we expect this from others, perhaps they too expect as much from us.

  11. Jesus’ words help us Christians to be aware that we have a debt of love towards everyone. With him and like him, we too must be able to repeat before every person with whom we live or work:

  12. “I am among you as one who serves”

  13. Chiara Lubich reminds us once again that to be Christians means to “serve, to serve everyone, and consider everyone as our master. If we are servants, then the others are masters.

  14. To serve, to serve, to put ourselves below the others, and try to live the primacy of the Gospel… yes, but by placing ourselves at the service of everyone.

  15. Christianity is something demanding; it is not just a superficial glaze, a little compassion, a bit of love, or some charity to the poor. Oh no! It’s quite easy to give alms to the poor and appease our consciences, only then to command or oppress others.” But how should we serve?

  16.    In that talk, Chiara Lubich offered two simple words: “live the other,” that is, “try to enter into the lives of others, to feel what they feel; try to carry their burdens.”

  17. She gave an example: “How can I do this with children? Do I have to please another member of the family who wants to watch television or go out for a walk? The children want me to play with them, then I’ll play!”

  18. You may be tempted to think that it’s a waste of time. “No! It’s not a waste of time, it’s all love, it is all time gained, because we have to make ourselves one with the others out of love.” “Must I really get that person’s jacket who forgot it as he exits the door, or do I really have to set the table?”

  19. That’s right, because “the service that God asks for is not something abstract, it is not a feeling of service. Jesus speaks about concrete service, done with our muscles, our legs, our intelligence; we must really serve.”

  20. “I am among you as one who serves”

  21. We now know how to live this Word of Life — by attending to the needs of others and by responding quickly to them, by loving with facts.

  22. At times it will be a matter of improving our work, which we have to carry out with ever-greater efficiency and professionalism, because this is a way to serve the community.

  23. In other moments, it could be answering requests for help from those far away or nearby and who may be older, unemployed, physically or mentally handicapped, or people who are lonely — perhaps refugees or victims of natural disasters. They may be invitations to adopt a child, or support humanitarian projects.

  24. Those who have positions of responsibility will set aside any hateful attitudes of command, remembering that we are all brothers and sisters to one another.

  25. Then if we do everything with love, we will discover, as an ancient Christian saying goes, that “to serve is to reign.”

  26. “I am among you as one who serves” Text by Fr. Ciardi and Gabriella Fallacara Taken from the “Word of Life,” a monthly publication of the Focolare Movement. Graphic by Anna Lollo with Fr. Placido D’Omina (Sicily, Italy)

More Related