Showing posts with label Traces. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Traces. Show all posts

Friday, November 28, 2008

Building on Hope

Earlier this week in preparation for the holidays, Slate.Com offered an amusing little piece on what to say during those inevitable political arguments which come up during family gatherings. I'm always reminded of James Joyce's story "The Dead" and how little the disputes connect with what is really important, something that becomes clear by the climax of the story. Anyway, the article, "Ammunition for Settling--or Starting--Holiday Political Spats" offered a tongue-in-cheek debunking of cherished ideologies by showing how both sides are simultaneously right and wrong. Whether intentional or not, it was quite the post-election, mid-economic crisis piece to display the absurdity of the usual polarities.

The issue of Traces (Vol. 10 No. 9 2008) which just arrived is the perfect antidote to our necessary disillusionment with ideologies and offers a direction for our irrepressible desire for justice and the common good.

Economist Giorgio Vittadini in "Crisis Underscores the Reduction of the Human" writes about the need to build an economy which is for the whole person and not just profits.
The point is to admit that this is not just an economic crisis. It is an anthropological crisis that calls into question a human idea of reduced rationality, tending as it does to the maximization of short-term profits, but inattentive to the principles essential to create a real and lasting affluence. Hence, it is doomed to be cut off from reality and has built a virtual world that will fatally collapse. To look ahead, we need a rationality that reveals how even now Homo oeconomicus has other much greater motives than just quarterly profits unrelated to society. We need a healthy realism that will anchor finance firmly to the real economy, of which it is and must be only an instrument. From this point of view, after having demonized many aspects of the economic system, it is perhaps necessary to reappraise some, such as its close ties to the territory and its concern for the real economy, which is one of its riches that is not yet extinct.
Monsignor Lorenzo Albacete reflects on how the problem of hope makes more clear our need for God and introduces the next book by Fr. Luigi Giussani which we will be working on for School of Community titled Is It Possible to Live This Way?: Hope.
The “knowledge” sustaining modern hope has come from one or another ideology of progress: a political ideology, a scientific one (including so-called scientifically conceived politics that recognize the true structure of history and society), a philosophical system, etc. Yet, again and again, these ideologies show their inability to fulfill our hopes, and hope is increasingly being replaced by a stoic resignation approaching total hopelessness. This was precisely the situation in the culture encountered by the first Christians when they left Palestine and arrived in the great cities of the Roman Empire. Today, we must respond to it as they did. For this to happen, Pope Benedict says, it is necessary to undertake a “self-critique of modern Christianity” by returning to its “roots.”
Then the editorial of the issue asks the direct question: "Got Hope?"
At such an important time in our history, we cannot shy away from proclaiming the only true hope: the encounter with Jesus Christ. And this proclamation does not entail a flight from the world of politics, economics, culture, or justice–in other words, this proclamation does not entail a flight from the world. On the contrary, the hope afforded by the encounter with Christ is that which has most radically transformed life on this earth. As Pope Benedict recently reminded great figures from the world of culture in France, Christian monasticism gave rise to our civilization, without any pretense of a cultural project. We know that hospitals, orphanages, the concept of human rights, science, and polyphonic music all have their roots in that life built on the hope given by the encounter with Jesus Christ.
It would be easy at the point of disillusionment to retreat from active engagement into pietism. Instead, we are called to a great fraternal work born from a reasonable hope based on the person of Christ Incarnate living among us.

Saturday, August 9, 2008

Either Protagonists or Nobodies: Traces July/August 2008

In the issue of Traces > July/August 2008
july 08

This issue of Traces includes a DVD entitled Greater: Defeating AIDS. The subject of this "non-documentary" is the Kampala Meeting Point in Uganda, Africa.

PAGE ONE

One Who Can Truly Fill Your Heart
by Julián Carrón


LETTERS

Georgia, Montréal, Boston…


CLOSE-UP
Anticipating the Rimini Meeting
Marco Bersanelli
Who Wants to Be a Protagonist?
> The witnesses/Fr. Aldo Trento

My Work? It’s the Lord’s


> Economy and work/A. Krueger speaks

The Power of the Markets

> Books/O’Brien at the Meeting

Messenger of Hope

SOCIETY
Food emergency
What the World Is Hungering for

Faith and Culture
Taiwan
Mr. Xiao and the Shén Fù Friends


The movie about the Kampala Meeting Point
Hope Takes the Place of a Happy Ending
> The president speaks

The Ugandan Women are Noticed at the White House

The movie about the Kampala Meeting Point
Hope Takes the Place of a Happy Ending


> The president speaks

The Ugandan Women are Noticed at the White House


Tokyo
This Is How You Say Religious Sense in Japanese

Vacations
Discovering the Noblest Time of the Year

NEW WORLD

Encounters in the Land of “Romaria”


Reading, Writing, and the Freedom to Say “I”: Don DeLillo’s Invitation to Discover Reality

CULTURE
> A Vincente Minnelli’s Film

Strength in Numbers

> Book

Providential Encounters

CHURCH

Faith and history
Cardinal Bagnasco speaks
“The Church Is Not an élite, but a People”


INSIDE AMERICA

Toward an Authentic Dialogue


EDITORIAL
Our Assignment for the Vacation

Every month in Traces,
words from Benedict XVI.

General Audience, Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Traces 1, 2008

It is Possible to Live this Way by Luigi Giussani

A Jolt with Reality
by Lorenzo Albacete

But I always read the letters first: our letters of communion.

Sunday, February 3, 2008

"Moving beyond the parochial vision"

My pastor told us about a meeting in my diocese looking forward to changes over the next few years. One thing on the horizon is a certain consolidation of services between parishes. This consolidation is a point of anxiety for many folks who fear the loss of parish identity. On the other hand, the bishop reminded us recently that 'we are not congregationalists.' Rather, we are Catholics, and our catholicity requires awareness of how everything is directed 'according to the whole' (kata- holos). And so my pastor appealed to the parish to move beyond the parochial.

I was interested to learn from Fr. Giussani about the development of parishes in the Church:
«The most recent studies show that first the apostles and then their successors, the bishops, long resisted the tendency to multiply local communities out of their desire to preserve true unity in the Church. Thus at first many cities, or dioceses if we can call them such, remained linked to an apostle; then for a long time the dioceses remained centered around the bishop, and the "parishes" - in the modern sense - were few at first. It was only in feudal times that the number of parishes increased; and the clergy remained bound to their own Church, and to their own piece of land ("benefice") rather than to the bishop. One of the spiritual consequences of this was a weakened sense of ecclesial communion and contact with the life of the universal Church. This in turn led to a decadence of the clergy, who tended to isolate themselves and settle for the very limited religious needs of the people.»

(The Journey to Truth Is an Experience, p 110-111)

When I read this passage, it's clear to me why the bishops now reassign priests periodically. It's so that the pastors will continue to be a sign of catholicity to the parishes. And the people, even if they don't move around, need to adhere to the bishop so that they too, will announce the presence of Christ who draws us ever deeper into communion with the totality of the Church.

During Advent I had the opportunity to experience this catholicity during a reconciliation service at a parish other than my own. There were 15 priests there including an auxiliary or emeritus bishop. During this service this parish went beyond the parochial vision - it became the locus for the universal Church. One could see then that it was no longer the church of Corinth but the Church herself in Corinth.

As I lean into Lent, I want to remember those instruments that cultivate in me an ever greater awareness of the totality of the Church. Fr. Giussani reminds us that the early Church used letters of communion (Litterae Communionis) to bind each place in the Church with the whole. And so, I want to be more faithful to Traces - the magazine whose particular mission it is to build up this communion among all. And also, I want the Good Friday Way of the Cross to be a more public sign of communion in Christ.

Sunday, December 16, 2007

Traces: our 'letters of communion'

Traces NOVEMBER 2007
NOVEMBER 2007
Table of contents

Every month in Traces,
words from Benedict XVI.

Letter of His Holiness Benedict xvi to the President of the Italian Bishops’ Conference on the occasion of the centenary of the first social week of Italian catholics

ENCLOSED:
Educating: a Communication of Yourself, that is, of Your Own Way of Relating with Reality - A meeting between Julián Carrón and the Communion and Liberation members in the teaching profession. Milan, October 14, 2007

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