93 episodi

Looking for a way to live the Gospel in today's hectic world? Now available in podcast, here is the Focolare's Word of Life: one phrase of Scripture a month to guide and inspire our daily living. This commentary, translated into 96 different languages and reaching several millions worldwide, is also available online (livingcitymagazine.com) and in leaflet form.

Focolare Word of Life Focolare Media

    • Religione e spiritualità

Looking for a way to live the Gospel in today's hectic world? Now available in podcast, here is the Focolare's Word of Life: one phrase of Scripture a month to guide and inspire our daily living. This commentary, translated into 96 different languages and reaching several millions worldwide, is also available online (livingcitymagazine.com) and in leaflet form.

    JUNE 2024 | EXPERIENCES | “The kingdom of God is as if someone would scatter seed on the ground... (Mk 4:26-27)

    JUNE 2024 | EXPERIENCES | “The kingdom of God is as if someone would scatter seed on the ground... (Mk 4:26-27)

    The first experience is by Gary Hauk from Atlanta who shares how during his lifetime, various people have "planted seeds" in his heart, which ultimately helped him to understand his calling. 


    The second experience comes to us from Long Island, New York. Elisa Fontana shares about her work at a soup kitchen.

    The third experience is by Lucy Bujnoch from Houston TX. She shares how together with her daughter they helped her grandson get through a difficult time.

    • 20 min
    JUNE 2024 | REFLECTION BY FR. TYLER MATTSON

    JUNE 2024 | REFLECTION BY FR. TYLER MATTSON

    Cultivating Confidence in God

    • 6 min
    JUNE 2024 | “The kingdom of God is as if someone would scatter seed on the ground, and would sleep and rise night and day... (Mk 4:26-27)

    JUNE 2024 | “The kingdom of God is as if someone would scatter seed on the ground, and would sleep and rise night and day... (Mk 4:26-27)

    Focolare Word of Life — June 2024

    “The kingdom of God is as if someone would scatter seed on the ground, and would sleep and rise night and day, and the seed would sprout and grow, he does not know how.” (Mk 4:26-27)

    The kingdom of God is at the heart of Jesus’ message. In fact, in his Gospel, Mark wants to announce this good news. He describes it in a parable Jesus used, in which he compared the kingdom of God to a seed that, once cast into the ground, releases its life force and bears fruit. But what is the kingdom of God for us today? What does it have to do with our personal and collective history? How can it resolve the constant sense we might have of being suspended between expectations and disappointments? If it has already been sown, why don’t we see its fruits of peace, security and happiness?

    “The kingdom of God is as if someone would scatter seed on the ground, and would sleep and rise night and day, and the seed would sprout and grow, he does not know how.”

    This Word of Life conveys to us that Jesus had total confidence in God’s plan for humanity. Chiara Lubich wrote: “Since Jesus came into the world and was victorious over it, his kingdom is already present here on earth and its fulfilment at the end of history is already assured. The Church is the community of those who believe in his kingdom and is, in fact, its foundation.”[1] And to all who welcome his kingdom, God entrusts the task of preparing the ground to receive this gift and to maintain hope in his love. “(...) The fact is that no amount of human effort, no exercise in self denial, no intellectual study or research will give you the right to enter the kingdom of God. It is God himself who comes to meet you, who reveals himself with his light and who touches you with his grace. There is no merit on your part that you can boast of, or rely on, that will entitle you to such a gift from God. The kingdom is offered to you free of charge.”[2]

    “The kingdom of God is as if someone would scatter seed on the ground, and would sleep and rise night and day, and the seed would sprout and grow, he does not know how.”

    This parable speaks of scattering the seed. In other words, not holding on to it, but confidently sowing it over a large area. “Night and day” means that the kingdom grows silently, even in the darkness of night. And every day we can ask our Father: “Your kingdom come.” The farmer doesn’t have to constantly check on the seed to see if it is growing. He needs to wait patiently for nature to take its course. This Word of Life helps us to understand that the seed we scatter is love and we should trust that it will bear fruit in its own time. It teaches us the art of patiently waiting for what can grow on its own, without being anxious about the result. It sets us free to welcome each neighbor in the present moment, valuing his or her potential, while respecting the time it takes them to grow. “A month before his wedding, our son phoned us in a state of alarm because his girlfriend had started using drugs again. He asked our advice about what he should do. It wasn’t easy to know what to say. We could have taken advantage of the situation and persuaded him to leave her, but that didn't seem right. And so we suggested he listen to what his own heart was telling him (...).   “A long silence followed, then he said, ‘I think I can love her more.’ After the wedding they managed to find an excellent rehabilitation center with outpatient support. Fourteen long months passed during which she managed to keep her commitment to ‘no more drugs.’ “It will be a long road for everyone, but the evangelical love we try to have between the two of us as a couple - even though there are times when we are reduced to tears - gives us the strength to love our son in this delicate situation. Perhaps our love will also help him understand how to...

    • 7 min
    MAY 2024 | EXPERIENCES | “Whoever does not love does not know God, because God is love.” (1 John 4:8)

    MAY 2024 | EXPERIENCES | “Whoever does not love does not know God, because God is love.” (1 John 4:8)

    1.  In the first experience, Robbie Young shares how he made himself available to serve and help a friend who suffered a stroke with many concrete acts of love.

    2. The second experience is by Stephen Thuo who, together with other young people, helped raise funds to gather supplies and deliver them to a correctional center for juveniles.

    3.  In the third experience, Almie Latimore shares with us her great suffering due to the loss of her husband to cancer and how she discovered the love of God.

    • 22 min
    MAY 2024 | REFLECTION BY FR TYLER MATTSON

    MAY 2024 | REFLECTION BY FR TYLER MATTSON

    • 6 min
    MAY 2024 | Whoever does not love does not know God, because God is love (1 John 4:8).

    MAY 2024 | Whoever does not love does not know God, because God is love (1 John 4:8).

    Focolare Word of Life —May 2024

    Whoever does not love does not know God, because God is love (1 John 4:8).

    The first letter of John is addressed to all people and it encourages us to restore fellowship because our society is divided by many different doctrines and ways of life. John exhorts us to keep in mind what has been proclaimed from the beginning of Christain teaching when the first disciples experienced living a life with the Lord. By repeating this in the way we live with Jesus in our lives we will be in communion with the first disciples and therefore with Jesus and the Father.[i]

    Whoever does not love does not know God, because God is love.

    St. John reminds us that it has been revealed that God loved us first by taking upon himself a human existence, in Jesus, with all the limitations and weaknesses. While on the cross, Jesus shared in our separation from the Father through His cry, “My God, why have you forsaken me?” He brought to us healing through the total gift of Himself, by loving us without limits or conditions and His life show us what true love is. Through the example Jesus gives to us, we can understand that loving takes courage, hard work along with the risk of facing adversity and suffering. But, if we can love in this way we will participate in God’s life and experience His freedom and the joy of self-giving. By loving as Jesus loved, we become aware that we are free from ourselves and from the selfishness that closes the door to communion with our brothers and sisters and with God.

    Whoever does not love does not know God, because God is love.

    The human heart longs to know God, who created us and who knows us in the deepest way possible.   Our faith informs us that God is Love and by loving like him we get a glimpse of the truth of this Love. And if we do make it to love like him we will grow in the knowledge of God because we are essentially living his life and we walk in his light. This is accomplished when love becomes mutual, because if we love one another, ‘God abides in us.’ [ii] It’s similar to two electric poles coming together to produce light.   Whoever does not love does not know God, because God is love.   Chiara Lubich said, ‘To witness that God is love is the great revolution we are called to offer to the modern world which is experiencing extreme tension just as the early Christians bore testimony to this in the pagan world of their time’. How can we do this? How can we live this love that comes from God? ‘By learning from his Son to put it into practice... in particular, let us focus on serving our neighbors, especially those closest to us, beginning with little things, with the most humble kinds of service. Let us make the effort, following Jesus’ example, to take the initiative in loving, being detached from ourselves and embracing all the small or big crosses that this might entail. In this way, we too will soon reach that experience of God, that communion with him, that fullness of light, peace and inner joy which Jesus wants us to have.’[iii]

    Whoever does not love does not know God, because God is love.

    Santina often visited a nursing home that was run by a Catholic association. One day, she and Roberta, her colleague, met Aldo, a tall, very cultured and very wealthy man. Aldo looked sternly at the two young women and said, ‘Why do you always come here? What do you want from us? Why don’t you just let us die in peace?’ Santina didn’t lose heart and told him, ‘We are here for you, to spend some time together, to get to know each other and become friends.’ They continued to visit the home regularly. Roberta recounts, ‘That man was particularly closed in on himself and dejected. He did not believe in God. Santina was the only one who was able to get close to him, gently listening to him for hours. She prayed for him and, on one occasion, gave him a rosary...

    • 8 min

Top podcast nella categoria Religione e spiritualità

FRAGRANZE
NR Podcast
Omar Suleiman
Muslim Central
Insight Hour with Joseph Goldstein
Be Here Now Network
Anima Ribelle Podcast con Ellis De Bona
Ellis De Bona
Il Tempo del Risveglio
Jano
The Basement
The Basement

Potrebbero piacerti anche…

Jesuitical
America Media
Bishop Barron’s Sunday Sermons - Catholic Preaching and Homilies
Bishop Robert Barron
The Word on Fire Show - Catholic Faith and Culture
Bishop Robert Barron
Inside The Vatican
America Media
The Bible in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz)
Ascension
He Leadeth Me
Jessica