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Word of Life - January 2023

The Word of Life for January 2023 focuses on a passage from Isaiah, emphasizing the importance of justice and goodness, particularly during the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity. It highlights the need for active support of the marginalized and the call for personal conversion towards a culture of peace. The document illustrates this message through a real-life example of reconciliation and mutual support, demonstrating how acts of love can lead to unexpected blessings.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
8 views2 pages

Word of Life - January 2023

The Word of Life for January 2023 focuses on a passage from Isaiah, emphasizing the importance of justice and goodness, particularly during the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity. It highlights the need for active support of the marginalized and the call for personal conversion towards a culture of peace. The document illustrates this message through a real-life example of reconciliation and mutual support, demonstrating how acts of love can lead to unexpected blessings.

Uploaded by

Lala
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Word of Life – January 2023

By Patrizia Mazzola and the Word of Life team

The Word of Life for the month of January is taken from the first chapter of the prophet Isaiah. This passage was
chosen for the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity, which is celebrated throughout the Northern Hemisphere January
18–25.

The texts were prepared by a group of Christians from Minnesota (where in May 2020 George Floyd, an African
American man, was murdered by a police officer in Minneapolis).

The subject of justice is a hot topic. Inequality, violence and prejudice worsen within a society that struggles to
witness to a culture of peace and unity.

Isaiah’s times were not so different from ours. Wars, rebellions, the pursuit of wealth, power, idolatry and the
marginalization of the poor had led the people of Israel astray. The prophet uses harsh words to call his people back
to a path of conversion, and he points the way to a return to the original spirit of the covenant God made with
Abraham.

“Learn to do good; seek justice.”

What does it mean to learn to do good? It means that we need to be open to the idea of learning, and that requires
effort on our part. Each day, there is always something to understand or something to improve. We can always start
again if we have made a mistake.

What does it mean to seek justice? This is a treasure that we should yearn and search for as the goal of our actions.
Practicing justice helps us learn to do good, because it means we better understand the will of God, which is our
good.

Isaiah offers concrete examples. The people most preferred by God are the helpless, the oppressed, the orphans and
the widows, because they are the most defenseless. God invites his people to take practical care of others, especially
those who are unable to assert their rights. Religious practices, rites, sacrifices and prayers are not pleasing to him if
they are not matched by the pursuit and practice of goodness and justice.

“Learn to do good; seek justice.”

This Word of Life urges us to support others, to have a watchful eye and practically help those in need. Our journey of
conversion requires us to open our hearts, minds and arms to others, especially toward those who suffer.

“The desire and the search for justice have always been inscribed in the human conscience,” wrote Focolare founder
Chiara Lubich in a Gospel commentary in November 2006. “God himself put them in our hearts.

“But despite the conquests and progress made throughout history, how distant we are from fulfilling God’s plan! The
wars that are still being fought today, as well as terrorism and ethnic conflicts, are the sign of social and economic
inequalities, injustice, hatred...

“Without love and respect for the individual and attention to his or her situation, personal relationships may be
correct, but they can also become bureaucratic and incapable of providing decisive answers to human requirements.

“Without love there will never be true justice, goods will never be shared between rich and poor, and there will
never be attention to the life and specific needs of each man and woman.”

“Learn to do good; seek justice.”

To live for a united world means taking the wounds of humanity upon ourselves and carrying out small gestures that
can help build up the human family.

One day, J. from Argentina bumped into the headmaster of the institute where he had taught. The headmaster had
used an excuse to force him to leave his job.
When the headmaster recognized him, he tried to move away, but J. went towards him. He asked him for his news,
and the headmaster told him about his difficulties, that he lived in another city and was looking for work.

J. offered to help him, and the next day he spread the news among his acquaintances that he was looking for a job for
someone. The response was not long in coming.

When the headmaster received the news of an offer for a new job, he could hardly believe his ears! He accepted the
job, deeply grateful and moved that the very person he had once fired had taken a real interest in him.

J. then received the “hundredfold” because, at the same time, he was offered two jobs that he had always wanted
since he started university. He too was amazed and touched by this practical love of God.

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