His Holiness John Paul II
You bear a prophetic witness to charity
Holy Father speaks on Guanellian charism to participants in Servants of Charity's General ChapterJanuary 29, 2000
"The return to the congregation's genuine sources
of spirituality and Gospel witness will help you make a more profound
discernment of what the will of God and the call of the Spirit are at this
historical transition to the third Christian millennium", the Holy Father
said on Saturday, 29 January, to the the Servants of Charity taking part in
their General Chapter. The Pope urged them "each day to rediscover the deep
spiritual roots of community life and the service of charity", so that they
can continue to see their brethren as a true gift of Providence, especially if
they are lonely or in trouble. Here is a translation of his address, which was
given in Italian.
Dear Guanellian Religious,
Brothers and Sisters in the Lord,
1. I extend my cordial greeting to all of you who in these days are holding the
General Chapter of the Congregation of the Servants of Charity. My special
congratulations and best wishes go to Fr Nino Minetti, whom you have reconfirmed
in the office of Superior General. I also offer best wishes to Fr Protógenes
José Luft, attending this Chapter, whom I recently appointed Coadjutor Bishop
of Barra do Garças, Brazil. May the Lord help them in their respective tasks,
so that they can respond to his plans for the congregation and for the Church at
the beginning of a new millennium. I would like, through those of you here, to
extend my greetings to all the members of Fr Guanella's Work who are spread
throughout Europe, Africa, Asia and the Americas.
During your Chapter you have paused to reflect and to pray on a stimulating
theme, which you have expressed as: "Charismatic identity and
prophetic witness of the Servants of Charity in the Church and in the world of
the third Christian millennium". In fact, this is a very fitting occasion
for rediscovering the wealth and vitality of the charism entrusted by the Lord
to your founder, Bl. Luigi Guanella, in today's world.
2. The return to the congregations's genuine sources of spirituality and Gospel
witness will help you make a more profound discernment of what the will of God
and the call of the Spirit are at this historical transition to the third
Christian millennium. This commitment will nourish in each of you a renewed
enthusiasm to become a credible manifestation of God's love and tenderness
towards the expectations of the poor and the needs of those who live on the
fringes of society.
The witness of charity is the great prophetic message of our times. In this
Jubilee of the Year 2000, in which the "Holy Door" is symbolically
wider to show the greatness of God's merciful love, the tent of charity must
also be enlarged throughout the Church to accommodate the multitudes of poor
living in contemporary society. This is a major challenge facing the Guanellian
religious family.
I know you nurse the desire to extend your presence and charitable witness to
nations in Africa and the Far East, through concrete forms of support to people
who are in difficulty or are marginalized. I encourage you to continue on this
path, treasuring your teaching experience and making your spiritual resources
and competence available to those in need.
3. This fundamental commitment, whose primary goal is to meet the immediate,
practical needs of the poor, should nevertheless be accompanied by a prophetic
message that will affect the social structures themselves, which are at the root
of so many acts of injustice and oppression towards the weakest groups. This is
a second and more demanding challenge for all who have chosen to follow Christ,
the Good Samaritan, who cares for man's physical and spiritual wounds. It
involves influencing the cultural and social processes with the power of the
Gospel, to enable the human heart to change its criteria of judgement and models
of life that contradict God's plan.
As you face these demanding challenges, the shining example of Bl. Luigi
Guanella will prompt you to choose the commandment of love as the essential
criterion of your being and acting, expressed in decisions to serve and to
promote the advancement of the poorest people. This will spur you to be present
on the frontiers of charity, with full trust in Providence.
As in the past, your religious family can rely on the active contribution of
many lay cooperators, both men and women. Drawn by the Guanellian charism, they
generously share in your mission as "Good Samaritans" to the
marginalized, thus living the basic Gospel vocation to charity.
The presence at your Chapter of representatives of the Guanellian Sisters and of
a lay group is very significant in this regard. It will help you to deepen the
unity and strengthen the cooperation of Fr Guanella's spiritual children, so
that your witness to charity and your efforts for a more just and fraternal
world can be more effective.
4. In the spirit of your blessed founder, in the midst of a world too frequently
fraught by tension and individualism, may you be an ever more visible sign of
dialogue and fraternal communion, and credible witnesses of reconciliation and
peace.
Above all, may you be able each day to rediscover the deep spiritual roots of
community life and the service of charity, so that you can continue to see your
brethren as a true gift of Providence, especially if they are lonely or in
trouble. In your daily work and in your mutual relations, may you always keep
alive the ideal of unity indicated by Jesus in the "testament" he left
his disciples at the Last Supper: Father, that they may all be one, so
that the world may believe that you sent me (cf. Jn 17: 21).
In hoping that the guidelines resulting from the General Chapter you are holding
during the Great Jubilee of the Year 2000 will bring your institute renewed
dynamism and vitality in spiritual commitment, in fraternal life and in service
to the poor and marginalized, I invoke the heavenly protection of Our Lady and
Bl. Luigi Guanella, as I cordially bless you and all the Guanellian communities
throughout the world.
(©L'Osservatore Romano - 9 February 2000)