Memorial of Porrajamos, the massacre of the Roma and Sinti people by the Nazis during the Second World War. Memorial of blessed Ceferino Gimenéz Malla, a Gitano martyr killed in Spain in 1936. We remember Yaguine and Fodé, two boys 15 and 14 years old from Guinea Conakry, who died because of cold in 1999 while they were trying to fly to Europe, where they dreamt to study, hidden in the cargo hold of an airplane. Read more
Memorial of Porrajamos, the massacre of the Roma and Sinti people by the Nazis during the Second World War. Memorial of blessed Ceferino Gimenéz Malla, a Gitano martyr killed in Spain in 1936. We remember Yaguine and Fodé, two boys 15 and 14 years old from Guinea Conakry, who died because of cold in 1999 while they were trying to fly to Europe, where they dreamt to study, hidden in the cargo hold of an airplane.
Reading of the Word of God
Alleluia, alleluia, alleluia
Whoever lives and believes in me
will never die.
Alleluia, alleluia, alleluia
Leviticus 25,1.8-17
Yahweh spoke to Moses on Mount Sinai and said: "You will count seven weeks of years -- seven times seven years, that is to say a period of seven weeks of years, forty-nine years. And on the tenth day of the seventh month you will sound the trumpet; on the Day of Expiation you will sound the trumpet throughout the land. You will declare this fiftieth year to be sacred and proclaim the liberation of all the country's inhabitants. You will keep this as a jubilee: each of you will return to his ancestral property, each to his own clan. This fiftieth year will be a jubilee year for you; in it you will not sow, you will not harvest the grain that has come up on its own or in it gather grapes from your untrimmed vine. The jubilee will be a holy thing for you; during it you will eat whatever the fields produce. "In this year of jubilee, each of you will return to his ancestral property. If you buy land from, or sell land to, your fellow-countryman, neither of you may exploit the other. In buying from your fellow-countryman, you will take account of the number of years since the jubilee; the sale-price he fixes for you will depend on the number of productive years still to run. The greater the number of years, the higher the price you will ask for it; the fewer the number of years, the greater the reduction; for what he is selling you is a certain number of harvests. So you will not exploit one another, but fear your God, for I am Yahweh your God.
Alleluia, alleluia, alleluia
If you believe, you will see the glory of God,
thus says the Lord.
Alleluia, alleluia, alleluia
This passage from the book of Leviticus reports the institution of the "jubilee": every fifty years you had to give rest to the land - "ye shall not sow, nor reap nor harvest" - and the portion of the land that belonged to the owners had to be given back to them. The sound of a horn (this is the meaning of the word jubilee) began this extraordinary year in which the order upset by the work of exploitation of people over other people was re-established. This practice showed that people are not the absolute masters of the earth. With the Jubilee all the injustices and abuses against the land and other people that in the meantime the strongest had perpetrated against the weakest, were nullified. Thus, radical equality among all, that universal fraternity which God wanted as we are all his children, were restored. The deep reason for such a long celebration connected to the memory of the liberation from slavery in Egypt and the entrance into the promised land. The land was a gift of God, not an achievement of the people, much less of any single group or individual. Every fiftieth year, through the directions set forth in this page of Leviticus, the believers of Israel were to rediscover the primacy of God and fraternity among all of them. It is in the wake of this ancient tradition that even in the Church a 'holy year', a 'jubilee', is celebrated every 25 years, like the one we are living in this particular year to rediscover the gift of God's grace and mercy manifested with Jesus. Jesus himself, in his first sermon in Nazareth, after reading the page of Isaiah where a year of grace is proclaimed, said, "Today this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing" (Lk 4:21).
Prayer is the heart of the life of the Community of Sant'Egidio and is its absolute priority. At the end of the day, every the Community of Sant'Egidio, large or small, gathers around the Lord to listen to his Word. The Word of God and the prayer are, in fact, the very basis of the whole life of the Community. The disciples cannot do other than remain at the feet of Jesus, as did Mary of Bethany, to receive his love and learn his ways (Phil. 2:5).
So every evening, when the Community returns to the feet of the Lord, it repeats the words of the anonymous disciple: " Lord, teach us how to pray". Jesus, Master of prayer, continues to answer: "When you pray, say: Abba, Father". It is not a simple exhortation, it is much more. With these words Jesus lets the disciples participate in his own relationship with the Father. Therefore in prayer, the fact of being children of the Father who is in heaven, comes before the words we may say. So praying is above all a way of being! That is to say we are children who turn with faith to the Father, certain that they will be heard.
Jesus teaches us to call God "Our Father". And not simply "Father" or "My Father". Disciples, even when they pray on their own, are never isolated nor they are orphans; they are always members of the Lord's family.
In praying together, beside the mystery of being children of God, there is also the mystery of brotherhood, as the Father of the Church said: "You cannot have God as father without having the church as mother". When praying together, the Holy Spirit assembles the disciples in the upper room together with Mary, the Lord's mother, so that they may direct their gaze towards the Lord's face and learn from Him the secret of his Heart.
The Communities of Sant'Egidio all over the world gather in the various places of prayer and lay before the Lord the hopes and the sufferings of the tired, exhausted crowds of which the Gospel speaks ( Mat. 9: 3-7 ), In these ancient crowds we can see the huge masses of the modern cities, the millions of refugees who continue to flee their countries, the poor, relegated to the very fringe of life and all those who are waiting for someone to take care of them. Praying together includes the cry, the invocation, the aspiration, the desire for peace, the healing and salvation of the men and women of this world. Prayer is never in vain; it rises ceaselessly to the Lord so that anguish is turned into hope, tears into joy, despair into happiness, and solitude into communion. May the Kingdom of God come soon among people!