Home2021“Remain in my love: you will bear much fruit” (Jn 15:5)

“Remain in my love: you will bear much fruit” (Jn 15:5)

“Remain in my love: you will bear much fruit” (Jn 15:5).

Every year, Christians belonging to different Churches all over the world observe a week of prayer[1] during which they ask the Father for the gift of unity, according to the desire of Jesus.

Jesus wants this “so that the world may believe” (Jn 17:21): unity changes the world – it creates communion, fraternity, and solidarity. It is fundamentally a gift of God, and for this reason, it is essential to ask the Father for it with persistence and trust.

A group that lives the Word of Life in Spain experienced that this is true. For some years now, during the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity, they felt impelled to pray for the grace of unity and to build bridges with Christians of other denominations. Margarita wrote, “We contacted the ecumenical officers in the diocese and the local Church leaders and shared our ideas. Then we simply gathered together as Christians to pray and used our different church buildings. For example, one day, we used the Catholic church, and another day the Orthodox one. Each time our churches were filled with the joy that comes from God’s presence. It is he who opens the way to unity.”

For 2021, the religious community of Grandchamp in Switzerland, dedicated to the work of reconciliation among Christians, has proposed a very suitable passage taken from the gospel of John, as the light for this journey:

“Remain in my love: you will bear much fruit.”

This is a demanding invitation that asks us to live and work for the unity of Christians during this special time and to continue throughout the year and, indeed, throughout our lives. Our divisions are like a serious wound that needs to be healed, first of all, by God’s mercy and then by our commitment to know and respect one another and together be witnesses to the gospel.

Jesus’ words show us what we should do: first of all, we should “remain” in his love.

Therefore, we should strengthen our personal relationship with him by entrusting our lives to him and believing in his mercy. Jesus, in fact, faithfully “remains” with us always.

At the same time, he invites us to be decisive in standing with him as we offer our lives as a gift to the Father. He suggests that we imitate him in gently meeting the needs of each person with whom we share a small or large part of our day. He asks us to do so with generosity and disinterest, in order to bear “much fruit.”

“Remain in my love: you will bear much fruit.”

The words offered by Focolare founder Chiara Lubich in Geneva in October 2002 during the events marking the 485th Anniversary of the Reformation[2] resonate very strongly: “How much love is needed in the world! Jesus said that the world would recognize us as his own and that through us, it would recognize him, by mutual love and by unity: ‘By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another’ (Jn 13:35). We have understood this: the present time calls for love from each of us. It calls for unity, fellowship, and solidarity. It also calls upon the Churches to recompose the unity that has been torn apart for centuries. This is the reform that heaven is asking of us; it is the first and essential step that will lead towards universal fraternity with everyone. In fact, the world will believe if we are united. Jesus said this: ‘May they all be one… so that the world may believe’ (cf. Jn 17:21). God wants this! May he give us the grace at least to prepare for it even if we do not see its fulfillment.”[3]

Letizia Magri


[1] In the Northern Hemisphere, this is held between January 18-25 while in the Southern Hemisphere, another date is chosen near the feast of Pentecost.

[2] Reformation Day (Reformationstag) is celebrated annually on October 31, commemorating Martin Luther’s proclamation of the 95 theses.[3] C. Lubich in L’Unità, Città Nuova, 2015, p. 87

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