Tuesday, March 5, 2024

Apostles for Today - March 2024

Apostlesfor Today
March - 2024

RENEW OUR TIRED HEARTS AND TRANSFORM OUR HORIZONS!

In this March reflection of Apostles for Today, we continue to move within Chapter 24 of the Gospel according to St Luke, which, so to speak, has been accompanying us since the beginning of the year. In the light of this text, we also wish to experience the Fourth General Congress of the Union of the Catholic Apostolate, which is rapidly approaching. For a moment let us linger on the well-known story of the disciples on their way to the village of Emmaus. In its immense richness, it reveals the path to the transformation of our hearts.

The beginning of the pericope shows two resigned, tired, and certainly greatly disappointed disciples leaving Jerusalem with a sense of failure. They had hoped for something more. They had expected that Jesus' victory would bring order to their existence: “… but we were hoping” (Lk 24:21). Perhaps they had hoped they would be triumphant with Him and share His kingdom. Instead, they saw His ignominious death and now heard of His alleged resurrection, such a rather unlikely thing, if not distinctly strange. 

Yet, this encounter proved to be far more important than their fears and the road they eventually chose to take became their transformative journey from hopeless people to bearers of hope.

The disciples' transformation begins with an encounter, with being listened to and at the same time with their opening up to a different perspective, one that transforms and empowers them to look beyond their present horizon, beyond what has seemed right up to now. The encounter with Jesus, is indeed much more than an accidental stage of their journey. It is a turning point. The two disciples are called to compare their ideas about what victory humanly means for them and what it means for God. Thanks to the patience of Jesus who, beginning with Moses and all the prophets, interpreted to them what referred to Him in all the Scriptures (Lk 24:27), they learn afresh how God works, so that in the end they are able to see and receive Him as he breaks the bread.

It appears that this Gospel, especially in the perspective of recent years, takes on a new meaning. After all,“But we were hoping"(Lk 24:21) is the very cry of so many of us in every corner of the world. Everyone experiences disappointment at different stages of their life. The last few years have shown this very clearly: armed conflicts, world hunger, lack of empathy, sex scandals - including those involving the church - all accompany us. We have more and more comforts and less and less time for others. It is not uncommon that we live together in a way as if we are astray. Many of us may be asking ourselves this important question: where is He who was meant to reign? Where is the Church, His mystical body that should make Him present here on earth? These questions, though important, do not help us at all if they are poorly lived out; they deprive us of hope and lead us to a sense of bewilderment. It is not that we should not ask questions, but we must seek the answers in the right way, that is, with Him, the One who has definitively conquered death and to whom the final say belongs. Are we ready for this?

Let us look once again at the disciples on the road to Emmaus. Their transformation was not only caused by Jesus' tenderness and patience, but also by their willingness to listen to Him; a healthy curiosity was enkindled in them that eventually renewed their enthusiasm. This is our journey as Christians. We are a people constantly journeying, struggling with hardships and disappointments, but if we seek answers in the Risen One, no one can deprive us of hope. “Redemption is offered to us in the sense that we have been given hope, trustworthy hope, by virtue of which we can face our present: the present, even if it is arduous, can be lived and accepted if it leads towards a goal, if we can be sure of this goal, and if this goal is great enough to justify the effort of the journey.” (Spe Salvi, 1). So says Pope Benedict in his encyclical letter on Christian hope. Do these words not contain the whole secret of continuity? 

In the perspective of Chapter 24 of the Gospel of Luke, it is also worth looking at the Synod on Synodality, which is currently taking place in the Church. For us, just as for the disciples of Emmaus, this is a time of journeying together and, like them, we have two options: either to be content with our own ideas about the synod and our disillusionment with the Church - which is justified in many places - or to embark on this beautiful journey to which we are invited by Pope Francis in order to discern and listen together, so that our hope in the Risen One may even better stretch out to the ends of the earth. Are we ready to take this risk? Are we open to one another? Do we really want to live the Gospel than just keep on talking about it?

As Union of the Catholic Apostolate, we too are invited to follow the path of the disciples of Emmaus. Their feelings and doubts are also ours. In many moments of our community life, as priests, brothers, sisters, lay people, we can certainly say: “... but we were hoping” (Lk 24:21), and continue with a whole litany of how we would envisage the Union to be like. Many of us still live decanting the past and are immersed in memories that, instead of moving us forward, hinder our further development. We can indeed see our weaknesses, frustrations, and lack of working together, which should be our greatest task and pride. However, let us make ourselves willing to hand everything over to Jesus. Let us allow ourselves time to express all of this. Let us allow Him to embrace everything that humanly defies us and show us a new perspective. Let us give Him the chance to renew our weary hearts and transform our Pallottine horizons, a mixture of clarity and darkness. And even though we can easily forget it, we’ll see there is always light in everything.

In this spirit we want to live the forthcoming IV General Congress of the UAC, which will be held in Rome from 25 to 31 July, and whose motto is: With Christ our hope, let us set out together with renewed joy and confidence. Throughout the five days we will spend together, we wish to reflect once again on this Gospel pericope - the theme of this text - and experience the transformation of the heart that, after the encounter with the Risen One, switches from resignation to hope. May the words of our Founder guide us as we prepare to live this time together:

I implore you, therefore, to consider, in the light of the love of our Lord Jesus Christ Crucified, the works of the Pious Union and to have this conviction that they can be realised because they are useful and necessary for the extension of the glory of God and the sanctification of souls, as well as for coming to the aid of our brothers and sisters in need, even though some, taking the works of the Pious Union as its goal, think that they are very difficult to realise. Remember, however, that according to the nature of Pious Union, these works are only means to an end (St. Vincent Pallotti).


See you in Rome!

MichaƂ Grzeca