One
October day in Trent during World War II, Chiara Lubich was with her friends,
and a bombing raid began. They couldn’t
make it to the bomb shelter, so they took cover in the cellar. As the house
shook over their heads and the bombs fell all around them, they were convinced
that they were going to die at that moment. Lubich asked: is there something we
could do right now at the moment of our death that would be especially pleasing
to God? They opened the Gospel at random and read: “This I command you: that you love one another” (John 15:17). These
friends made a pact among themselves of “mutual
love.” They promised to love one another as Jesus had loved them and to make
this particular commandment the basis of all that they did. So, while some
Christians emphasize the apostolic mandate to go out and preach to all nations,
baptizing them, Lubich emphasized John’s mandate for those who came to be part
of the Focolare Movement (the ecclesial movement that grew up around Lubich): “This is how all will know that you are my disciples, if you have
love for one another.” (John 13:35)
The excerpts from Chiara Lubich’s writings that are collected here
reflect the deep union with God that she experienced individually and as part
of the Body of Christ as she put this “pearl” of the Gospel into practice.