Paul Francis
Daneo, St. Paul of the Cross, (1694 – 1775), an Italian gathered
companions who would focus their lives on the Crucified Christ. What he
started became the Passionist Religious Congregation of men, numerous
congregations of women, and confraternities of lay people. Today,
Passionists can be found on all the continents.
From Paul of the Cross they have a diagnosis of the
ills of society. The problem arises when people in their everyday lives
forget about God. In the Bible God is constantly ‘complaining’ that
his people are constantly forgetting that He is their God, with the
result they ignore their responsibilities. This ‘forgetting’ leads
to their downfall as individuals, as communities and as nations.
The remedy according to Paul of the Cross, following
scripture, is to ‘remember’ God. Above all it is to remember the
Crucified Jesus who in His suffering and death showed how much He loved
us. Being aware of the depth of the Love of God for us would bring us to
our senses. We would begin to live lives of love, reconciliation and
truth. We would be built up into mature individuals, loving communities
and just and caring nations.
But it goes deeper. To ‘remember’ in scripture is
not just to ‘call to mind’ but to make present here and now who and
what we are recalling. The ‘memory’ becomes powerful and dynamic.
For Paul of the Cross the ‘Memory of the Passion’ was to make
present Christ Crucified in all His power and glory here and now.
Passionists spend time each day at the Foot of the
Cross and in communion with Jesus allow the fruits of the Passion to
become operative in their lives. They leave the foot of the Cross
carrying the presence of Christ Crucified. Wherever they go they ‘plant’
that presence by raising the awareness in people of the Crucified Jesus
present here and now.
As people reach out to the Crucified One they become
healed, changed, built up into maturity. Consequently the communities to
which they belong and the societies they are building are shaped by the
power of Christ Crucified. Thus is a world of justice, peace, and love
slowly built.