Comboni Lay Missionaries

Entrepreneurship: Purpose + People

Entrepreneurship

Good morning everyone.

This past Saturday we had a new training at CLM level. In this case, the topic was about Entrepreneurship.

This is a presentation that we already did in Spanish and that we have repeated for English speakers.

speakers. Understanding and communicating the “why” of our mission, sharing the “how” we want to make it possible and explaining the “what” we do to make it possible, were three fundamental keys of this presentation. We encourage you to listen to it carefully.

It will undoubtedly help us to focus our missionary action and will give clues to extend a network of collaborators to join and support the mission.

Best regards

Alberto de la Portilla. Coordinator of the CLM Central Committee.

You can see the presentation in Spanish: https://lmcomboni.org/blog/en/entrepreneurship-and-sharing-clm-projects/

Pope Francis at today’s General Audience: ‘We dwell today on the witness of St. Daniel Comboni’

Papa Francisco

Here is the translation of Pope Francis’ speech today, with the video in Italian.

Papa Francisco

Dear brothers and sisters, good morning! In our catechetical journey on the evangelizing passion, we dwell today on the witness of St. Daniele Comboni. He was an apostle full of zeal for Africa. Of those peoples he wrote: “they have taken possession of my heart that lives only for them” (Writings, 941), “I will die with Africa on my lips” (Writings, 1441).

And to them he addressed himself thus, “the happiest day of my life will be when I can give my life for you” (Writings, 3159). This is the expression of a person in love with God and the brothers he served in mission, about whom he did not tire of reminding them that “Jesus Christ suffered and died for them also” (Writings, 2499; 4801).

He affirmed this in a context marked by the horror of slavery, which he witnessed. Slavery “cosifies” man, whose value is reduced to being useful to someone or something. But Jesus, God made man, elevated the dignity of every human being and exposed the falsehood of slavery. Comboni, in the light of Christ, became aware of the evil of slavery; he understood, moreover, that social slavery is rooted in a deeper slavery, that of the heart, that of sin, from which the Lord delivers us. As Christians, therefore, we are called to fight against all forms of slavery. Unfortunately, however, slavery, as well as colonialism, is not a thing of the past. In the Africa so beloved by Comboni, today torn by many conflicts, “after the political one, an “economic colonialism” has been unleashed (…), equally enslaving (…). It is a drama before which the most economically advanced world often closes its eyes, ears and mouth.” I therefore renew my appeal, “Stop suffocating Africa: it is not a mine to be exploited or a soil to be plundered” (Meeting with Authorities, Kinshasa, January 31, 2023).

Let us return to the story of St. Daniel. After spending an initial period in Africa, he had to leave the mission for health reasons. Too many missionaries had died after contracting diseases, complicated by the lack of knowledge of the local reality. However, if others were leaving Africa, not so Comboni. After a time of discernment, he sensed that the Lord was inspiring him with a new way of evangelization, which he summed up in these words, “Save Africa with Africa” (Writings, 2741f). It is a powerful insight that helped renew missionary efforts: the people evangelized were not just “objects” but “subjects” of the mission. St. Daniel wished to make all Christians protagonists of the evangelizing action. With this spirit he thought and acted in an integral way, involving the local clergy and promoting the lay service of catechists. He also conceived in this way human development, caring for the arts and professions, fostering the role of the family and women in the transformation of culture and society. How important it is, even today, to advance faith and human development from within mission contexts, rather than transplanting external models or limiting ourselves to sterile welfarism!

Comboni’s great missionary passion, however, was not primarily the result of human endeavor: he was not driven by his courage or motivated only by important values, such as freedom, justice and peace; his zeal was born out of the joy of the Gospel, drew on the love of Christ and led to love for Christ! St. Daniel wrote, “A mission as arduous and laborious as ours cannot live by patina, by crooked-necked subjects full of selfishness and self, who do not care as they should for the health and conversion of souls.” He added, “one must kindle them with charity, which has its source from God, and from the love of Christ; and when one really loves Christ, then deprivations, sufferings and martyrdom are sweetnesses” (Writings, 6656). His desire was to see ardent, joyful, committed missionaries: missionaries, he wrote, “holy and capable. […] First: holy, that is, alien to sin and humble. But this is not enough: it takes charity that makes the subjects capable” (Writings, 6655). The source of missionary capacity, therefore, for Comboni, is charity, particularly the zeal to make others’ sufferings his own, to feel them on his own skin and to know how to alleviate them, as good sires of humanity.

His evangelizing passion, moreover, never led him to act as a soloist, but always in communion, in the Church. “I have but one life to consecrate to the health of those souls,” he wrote, “I wish I had a thousand to consume for that purpose” (Writings, 2271). One life or a thousand lives: who are we alone with our short lives, if it is not the whole Church doing mission? What is the zeal of our work, Comboni seems to ask, if it is not ecclesial?

Brothers and sisters, St. Daniel testifies the love of the Good Shepherd, who goes out to seek the lost and gives his life for the flock. His zeal was energetic and prophetic in opposing indifference and exclusion. In his letters he heartily recalled his beloved Church, which for too long had forgotten Africa. Comboni’s dream is a Church that makes common cause with the crucified of history, to experience the resurrection with them. His witness seems to repeat to all of us, men and women of the Church, “Do not forget the poor, love them, for in them is present Jesus crucified, waiting to rise again.”

Original on comboni.org website

WYD Portugal 2023 and CONAJUM Morelia Mexico 2023

LMC Beatriz

Two congresses with the same objective.

I am referring to the World Youth Day (WYD) Portugal 2023, an experience lived with members of my family and friends that I met along the way; as well as the National Missionary Congress in Morelia Mexico CONAJUM. There I had the opportunity to meet again with friends, bishops from different parts of the world and the country, lay missionaries from other institutes and young people eager to discover their vocation. Not to mention the sharing and teamwork with my Comboni Family where priests, sisters, seculars and lay people were able to listen to each other and support each other. That is why I thank Pope Francis and the Pontifical Mission Societies for inviting us to continue to be part of this project that Jesus Christ inherited from us, the building of his Kingdom.

These events are spaces where our Catholic Church allows young people to meet Jesus Christ through a number of activities where prayer helps them to have a personal encounter with Him; common themes for their growth, pilgrimages that create bonds of friendship, sharing to reach agreements, knowledge of other cultures, forums, concerts, marches, as well as being able to tour the City of Joy in the vocational fair where the encounter with the variety of missionary charisms of the church allow them to know different realities that sensitize them to the needs of others.

It is inexplicable the common experience of praying, listening to stories, laughing, suffering, singing, dancing, crying, struggling, communicating, sleeping, dreaming, admiring, breathing, in the same place embracing the LOVE OF GOD.

All this diminishes any problem or worry because we know that God loves us and protects us by giving us that time to heal any wound and choose what is good for our life, just as we are and where we are. These words fill us with hope to continue walking our path with the confidence that in the falls GOD will help us to get up and in the achievements he will teach us to share them, the communion that these encounters generate gives us the strength to return to our reality and look for the way to give life where there is death.

The central message of Pope Francis to the youth gives us as missionaries the courage to take the Gospel to all the realities that this world presents to us in communion with the bishops. These words that help us to know how to continue in our reality, are the key to make the Gospel come alive. To open our arms and welcome with Love our brothers and sisters who need us is the legacy that Jesus Christ has bequeathed to us. Let us leave indifference behind and act with coherence; because we can all do something to change our reality of death that haunts us today.

I invite you dear brothers and sisters to discover God’s plan in our lives so that leaving behind our fears we can embark on the journey of the mission betting on Justice Peace Integrity of Creation JPIC and the Values of the Kingdom of God.

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Beatriz Maldonado Sanchez, CLM

Be Afrique = Heart of Africa

Élia Gomes

“Where I once left my heart”

Élia Gomes

After seven years in Portugal, five of which were spent supporting the family and working in elderly people’s homes (at the Missionary Sisters of Charity in Faro and at the Parish Center in Paderne) and another two years on mission in the parish of Camarate, I’m leaving to return to the CAR, where I’ve already been for five years.

It won’t be easy, but I know that this is the path God has for me.

The Central African Republic (CAR) is the place where I feel I have been called to serve God and people with joy, in the hope of bringing the message of the Gospel and helping to build a better and fairer world, together with the poorest and most abandoned according to Comboni’s missionary style.

I will face new challenges and difficulties, but I am confident that, with God’s help and the protection of Our Lady of Hope, I will be able to overcome them.

I thank my family and friends for supporting me in this decision.

I thank my parish of Paderne and the Parish Center for always welcoming me with affection despite my long absences.

I thank my community in Fetais and all those who helped me during my time in Camarate.

Finally, I thank the CLM Movement and the Comboni Family for transmitting to me the essence that inspires me to go.

“If I had a thousand lives, I would give a thousand lives for Africa”

Elia LMC

Élia Gomes CLM – Portugal