Comboni Lay Missionaries

Meeting of the Comboni Family in Spain

Familia Comboniana

Once again this year the Comboni Family of Spain has met in Madrid. It was once again a privileged moment for all of us. With some new participants and many of us who keep repeating.

Familia Comboniana

It seems to me that it is a privileged place for all those who enter the province to begin their missionary service, a way of understanding how we relate as a family. Unfortunately this type of meeting is not common in other countries, but in Spain, what we started to celebrate together the 150th anniversary of the Comboni Plan, has become a tradition. We hope that this initiative, where all the religious and lay people of the country come together every year, will be extended to other countries. It is a nice moment of reunion, to take the pulse of how we are walking together and in a particular way each and every one of us. I have always thought that it is also a seed of relationship for all those who will leave for other mission countries and will meet other members of the Comboni family, the bonds that we create in these meetings help us to grow as a family.

Familia Comboniana

As Fr. Pedro Andrés reminded us at the beginning of his presentation, the central point of our first meeting was to rediscover that Daniel Comboni dreamed of us as a family and not as separate institutes. He conceived us so that from our complementarity we could serve the mission in the best possible way.

This year’s meeting focused on sharing the journey we are making at the world level. We took advantage of the fact that the General Chapters for Comboni religious men and women have just been held, and also this year the continental assemblies of the CLM in America and Africa were celebrated.

Fr. Pedro Andres began by telling us how the chapter of the MCCJ was conceived and developed. A chapter that had to be delayed due to the confinement of the pandemic.

A chapter under the motto “I am the vine, you are the branches. Rooted in Christ together with Comboni“. Fr. Pedro explained the preparations and the development of the event in terms of the Comboni Family. He underlined the aspects he considered central in this sense.

Familia Comboniana España

The methodology used in the search for the “seeds of life” and the dreams that we should pursue is noteworthy. We are used to look for the failures and how to improve them (which were also present), but he insisted on how they wanted to open themselves to the Holy Spirit and understand, all together, what were those seeds of the Spirit and what He was asking them in this historical moment). Dreams that had to do with Spirituality, with the community, highlighting the synodal path of discernment, the importance of the wheels of conversation, giving time to listen to all, in all languages and from all realities…. The importance of identity and community life, or formation. The very significant role of ministry and the new way of understanding it, walking with the people and re-qualifying people to be at the service of the new needs, a ministry from which to start as a Comboni Family. And finally the importance of integral ecology as a transversal axis of the initiatives to be taken.

Finally, he also commented on the changes proposed in the Rule of Life, where they explicitly recognize the collaboration with the Comboni Lay Missionaries or emphasize the importance of the apostolic community as a common reference point when organizing, carrying out and evaluating the missionary activity.

All this gave us the opportunity to discuss for more than an hour, sharing, asking questions and thanking the Spirit for the many dreams and the good things to come.

Saturday afternoon was used to learn first hand about the chapter of the Comboni Missionary Sisters. Her presentation began with the song “Tell me how to be bread” and around the song and the importance of being leaven in the dough, she was telling us about the time of the chapter.

The motto of the Chapter was: “Transformed by our charism, missionary disciples towards the existential peripheries“. As the chapter started from the reality of the world and the communities where they are present, as it could not be otherwise. A world punished by the pandemic, by wars, by climate change… and also a chapter marked by the decrease of members in the institute and the forecasts for the future. All this has made them rethink their presence and their options for a meaningful mission with a new internal organization.

Familia Comboniana España

With three central axes: charism, government in synodality and reconfiguration. These have been the backbone of these reflections.

Starting from the charism that gives light to all the reflection and the work done. Charism is like yeast in the dough, which helps it to ferment and allows it to rise. A small quantity but essential and necessary for the bread to be bread.

The charism that becomes life in the strong sense of God that leads to be mission and not so much to do mission. Finding a balance between contemplation and action so necessary. From the community as a cenacle of apostles that needs to be constantly renewed, as an intercultural and intergenerational community. And of course from the passion for the mission, like the passion of St. Daniel Comboni who continues to animate and give life in the Comboni family.

Secondly, she spoke of government in synodality, with the importance of the mission, of formation and also the care of the elderly and sick sisters (of whom there are many in the Institute). A government that should be able to face the challenges that lie ahead in the next 6 years.

Familia Comboniana España

Finally, she also commented on the reconfiguration. Understanding that the model so far maintained is no longer viable. With courage they propose a new reorganization from 19 circumscriptions to 6. A grouping of countries that allows a greater co-responsibility, solidarity sharing of resources and complementarity in the missionary service.

However, as with any change, they also recognize the resistance and uncertainty that it can provoke. But undoubtedly they trust in the intuition of the Spirit in this change. A change that will also need a formation for all the sisters that will allow them to assume this process and finally to continue going out to the existential peripheries to which they feel called, to the services with the indigenous peoples, migrants, human trafficking, etc.

Familia Comboniana España

A beautiful prayer helped us to close the day in communion.

On Sunday we began the day praying together before the presentation of the CLM.

At first Isabel, as coordinator of the Spanish coordinating team, spoke to us about the last assembly, the change of team and the challenges we face in Spain. To understand how many we are and where we are present. To understand the activities we do as a group, but also the presence that each one of us has in the different places where we are. All this is central to take the pulse of our being CLM in Spain.

Familia Comboniana España

Then I had time to share the meetings held this year at continental level in America (Lima-Peru) and Africa (Cotonou-Benin).

The important thing, I believe, was not only to bring back what was agreed upon in the meetings, but above all to make known the richness and weaknesses of our CLM in these two continents.

First of all, there was time to briefly present the reality of the different countries of America in order to contextualize the meeting held in September.

Undoubtedly the pandemic, for which this meeting had to be postponed, has greatly marked the life of the people, and of course that of our groups. The impossibility of meeting as a group slowed down the activity. Everyone at home. Then we had to attend to family and community needs. Many of our groups have been community organizers and facilitators of help for the communities, such as the creation of community pots that have allowed so many people to get ahead. Then little by little we began to use online media to begin to pray together, to share, to reorganize, to form ourselves and to move forward.

Familia Comboniana España

The theme of the meeting was “United for a synodal church at the service of the mission“. The meeting had privileged moments to share what each group has been working and living in these years, we had moments of joint formation to analyze the reality of America and the need for ministeriality and the importance of JPIC issues in our dynamics.

It was also important to highlight the moments of prayer and celebration of the Eucharist together, without which we could not understand the meeting itself and the importance of the presence of the Lord in it. Each day, and prepared by a country to help us enter into what we were sharing and analyze it in the light of the Word, asking the Lord for his inspiration and accompaniment.

There was also time to share the culture, gastronomy and festivities of our American peoples.

The resulting document of the meeting is short and easy to read. But what is really interesting is the impulse that each CLM of America group has received, the reinforcement that we are not isolated groups, but that we belong to an international CLM family and that together we are called to carry out the mission. Committing ourselves to this common work, seeking new vocations, strengthening our formation and even financially supporting this mission that we carry out together.

It is a privileged moment that we continue to give continuity with common formations for all the CLM of the continent. such as the one recently conducted by Fr. Rafael Gonzalez Ponce with the title ““Towards a synodal Church going out to the peripheries””.

Familia Comboniana España

We were then able to continue talking about the African meeting. In a way similar to that of America, with a context of post pandemic and how much this has affected the different countries and our groups in particular.

It was also a privileged time to reflect on the journey we are making.

The two continental meetings were especially important for the new groups that participated for the first time in this type of meeting, as in the case of Chad and Kenya. They are groups that have been working for a long time at the country level, but the meeting with CLM from other countries helps them to grow in their CLM vocation, helps us all to discover the richness of it, the co-responsibility in the mission and the importance of the contribution of each one from our own reality.

The African meeting also stood out for the particularity of the continent, for the evaluation of our international missionary presences or the reality of an African church that still has a long way to go to be fully inculturated and the need for us as committed lay people identified with our faith to help in this process, in reflection and practice.

I think that bringing the daily life of our people in America and Africa (some of them also Spanish, of course) helped us to know better our vocation and the expression of it in our day to day life.

Familia Comboniana España

At the end of the meeting we had a few words from the leaders of the three participating branches, encouraging us to continue in this family endeavor.

Finally, all together, we went up to celebrate the Eucharist as a family. During the Eucharist we had a special moment for Fr. Pedro Andrés who, after these years as Provincial in Spain, is leaving for Peru. With this moment of thanksgiving and sending out as a family, this beautiful weekend came to an end, returning each one of us to our own corner of Spain with much energy and missionary conviction, confirmed in the charism we have received and the joy of sharing it with the other members of the family.

Familia Comboniana España

Kind regards to all, Alberto de la Portilla (coordinator of the CLM Central Committee and Spanish CLM member).

” Stand up and welcome the Spirit”

Combojoven febrero 2023
Combojoven febrero 2023

Last weekend COMBOJOVEN held its monthly meeting. For this academic year 2022/2023, the group has chosen as a formative axis the preparatory catechesis for their participation in the WYD 2023 to be held in early August in Lisbon, Portugal.

COMBOJOVEN is a group of young people between 20 and 30 years of age who live their faith from the mission and the Comboni charism, and who are accompanied by the Comboni Family.

During this weekend, eight young people gathered together with their companions MCCJ, Comboni Sisters and two CLM. On this occasion Pauline (originally from Kenya) and Leo (Tenerife) were the CLM Spain who shared formation, reflection, prayer and experiences in the house of the Comboni Missionaries in Madrid.

Combojoven febrero 2023

The inspiring theme of the meeting was ” Stand up and welcome the Spirit”. The young people discovered, meditated and prayed, using the Word of God as a vehicle, the importance of the Holy Spirit in Christian and missionary life.

Recovering the words of Pope Francis “God puts us first” (Evangelii Gaudium), the group became aware of the action of the Holy Spirit in the life of every baptized person; how through his action we recognize Jesus as Messiah, accepting the promise of salvation that he brings us; and how through the Son, we come to the knowledge of the Father. In short, it is the Holy Spirit who makes us discover that God the Father is madly in love with each one of us.

Furthermore, we reflect on how this experience of love moves us, impels us, pushes us to give witness to our faith. It makes us witnesses and missionaries. It is the power of the Holy Spirit that takes us out of our comfort zone and gives us the courage to approach our brothers and announce the Good News: “God loves you, madly”.

Combojoven febrero 2023

The meeting also included the missionary testimony of Fr. David (MCCJ) and a visit to the Museum of Africa (“Mundo Negro”). On Saturday evening we had a strong moment of prayer in which we prayed for the gifts of the Holy Spirit to accompany these young people in a special way.

During the next months COMBOJOVEN will continue to prepare their trip to Lisbon, the MCCJ, the Comboni Sisters and the CLM, we will continue to accompany them.

Pauline and Leo (CLM Spain).

Message of his holiness Pope Francis for Lent 2023

Cuaresma 2023

Lenten Penance and the Synodal Journey
 

Cuaresma 2023

Dear brothers and sisters!

The Gospels of Matthew, Mark and Luke all recount the episode of the Transfiguration of Jesus. There we see the Lord’s response to the failure of his disciples to understand him. Shortly before, there had been a real clash between the Master and Simon Peter, who, after professing his faith in Jesus as the Christ, the Son of God, rejected his prediction of the passion and the cross. Jesus had firmly rebuked him: “Get behind me, Satan! You are a scandal to me, because you do not think according to God, but according to men!” (Mt 16:23). Following this, “six days later, Jesus took with him Peter, James and John his brother and led them away to a high mountain” (Mt 17:1).

The Gospel of the Transfiguration is proclaimed every year on the Second Sunday of Lent. During this liturgical season, the Lord takes us with him to a place apart. While our ordinary commitments compel us to remain in our usual places and our often repetitive and sometimes boring routines, during Lent we are invited to ascend “a high mountain” in the company of Jesus and to live a particular experience of spiritual discipline – ascesis – as God’s holy people.

Lenten penance is a commitment, sustained by grace, to overcoming our lack of faith and our resistance to following Jesus on the way of the cross. This is precisely what Peter and the other disciples needed to do. To deepen our knowledge of the Master, to fully understand and embrace the mystery of his salvation, accomplished in total self-giving inspired by love, we must allow ourselves to be taken aside by him and to detach ourselves from mediocrity and vanity. We need to set out on the journey, an uphill path that, like a mountain trek, requires effort, sacrifice and concentration. These requisites are also important for the synodal journey to which, as a Church, we are committed to making. We can benefit greatly from reflecting on the relationship between Lenten penance and the synodal experience.

In his “retreat” on Mount Tabor, Jesus takes with him three disciples, chosen to be witnesses of a unique event. He wants that experience of grace to be shared, not solitary, just as our whole life of faith is an experience that is shared. For it is in togetherness that we follow Jesus. Together too, as a pilgrim Church in time, we experience the liturgical year and Lent within it, walking alongside those whom the Lord has placed among us as fellow travellers. Like the ascent of Jesus and the disciples to Mount Tabor, we can say that our Lenten journey is “synodal”, since we make it together along the same path, as disciples of the one Master. For we know that Jesus is himself the Way, and therefore, both in the liturgical journey and in the journey of the Synod, the Church does nothing other than enter ever more deeply and fully into the mystery of Christ the Saviour.

And so we come to its culmination. The Gospel relates that Jesus “was transfigured before them; his face shone like the sun and his clothes became white as light” (Mt 17:2).This is the “summit”, the goal of the journey. At the end of their ascent, as they stand on the mountain heights with Jesus, the three disciples are given the grace of seeing him in his glory, resplendent in supernatural light. That light did not come from without, but radiated from the Lord himself. The divine beauty of this vision was incomparably greater than all the efforts the disciples had made in the ascent of Tabor. During any strenuous mountain trek, we must keep our eyes firmly fixed on the path; yet the panorama that opens up at the end amazes us and rewards us by its grandeur. So too, the synodal process may often seem arduous, and at times we may become discouraged. Yet what awaits us at the end is undoubtedly something wondrous and amazing, which will help us to understand better God’s will and our mission in the service of his kingdom.

The disciples’ experience on Mount Tabor was further enriched when, alongside the transfigured Jesus, Moses and Elijah appeared, signifying respectively the Law and the Prophets (cf. Mt 17:3). The newness of Christ is at the same time the fulfilment of the ancient covenant and promises; it is inseparable from God’s history with his people and discloses its deeper meaning. In a similar way, the synodal journey is rooted in the Church’s tradition and at the same time open to newness. Tradition is a source of inspiration for seeking new paths and for avoiding the opposed temptations of immobility and improvised experimentation.

The Lenten journey of penance and the journey of the Synod alike have as their goal a transfiguration, both personal and ecclesial. A transformation that, in both cases, has its model in the Transfiguration of Jesus and is achieved by the grace of his paschal mystery. So that this transfiguration may become a reality in us this year, I would like to propose two “paths” to follow in order to ascend the mountain together with Jesus and, with him, to attain the goal.

The first path has to do with the command that God the Father addresses to the disciples on Mount Tabor as they contemplate Jesus transfigured. The voice from the cloud says: “Listen to him” (Mt 17:5). The first proposal, then, is very clear: we need to listen to Jesus. Lent is a time of grace to the extent that we listen to him as he speaks to us. And how does he speak to us? First, in the word of God, which the Church offers us in the liturgy. May that word not fall on deaf ears; if we cannot always attend Mass, let us study its daily biblical readings, even with the help of the internet. In addition to the Scriptures, the Lord speaks to us through our brothers and sisters, especially in the faces and the stories of those who are in need. Let me say something else, which is quite important for the synodal process: listening to Christ often takes place in listening to our brothers and sisters in the Church. Such mutual listening in some phases is the primary goal, but it remains always indispensable in the method and style of a synodal Church.

On hearing the Father’s voice, the disciples “fell prostrate and were very much afraid. But Jesus came and touched them, saying, ‘Rise, and do not be afraid.’ And when the disciples raised their eyes, they saw no one else but Jesus alone” (Mt 17:6-8). Here is the second proposal for this Lent: do not take refuge in a religiosity made up of extraordinary events and dramatic experiences, out of fear of facing reality and its daily struggles, its hardships and contradictions. The light that Jesus shows the disciples is an anticipation of Easter glory, and that must be the goal of our own journey, as we follow “him alone”.  Lent leads to Easter: the “retreat” is not an end in itself, but a means of preparing us to experience the Lord’s passion and cross with faith, hope and love, and thus to arrive at the resurrection. Also on the synodal journey, when God gives us the grace of certain powerful experiences of communion, we should not imagine that we have arrived – for there too, the Lord repeats to us: “Rise, and do not be afraid”. Let us go down, then, to the plain, and may the grace we have experienced strengthen us to be “artisans of synodality” in the ordinary life of our communities.

Dear brothers and sisters, may the Holy Spirit inspire and sustain us this Lent in our ascent with Jesus, so that we may experience his divine splendour and thus, confirmed in faith, persevere in our journey together with him, glory of his people and light of the nations.

Cuaresma 2023

Rome, Saint John Lateran, 25 January, Feast of the Conversion of Saint Paul

FRANCIS

Stopping inequality is in your hands

Manos Unidas
Manos Unidas

With this slogan, Manos Unidas (NGO of the Spanish Church), begins its annual campaign.

Manos Unidas has been known for supporting development projects around the world.

As Comboni Lay Missionaries, we collaborate in the campaign when we are asked to do so and we share our experience of the support received.

This year, Monsignor Jesus Ruiz, Comboni missionary and bishop of our diocese in Central African Republic, participated in a special way.

We leave you the video interview made for the campaign where we can hear the situation in the country.

Dário Bossi, an Italian Comboni missionary who has been working for years in Brazil with our CLM community, told us in the opening press conference of this year’s campaign about the situation in Brazil where our CLM are also present (his intervention from minute 25).

We also leave you the interview that Fr. Dário was given on television on the occasion of the presentation of this campaign.