exclamation

Important notice: To continue serving our valued readers during the postal disruption, complete unrestricted access to the digital edition is available at no extra cost. This will ensure uninterrupted digital access to your copies. Click here to view the digital edition, or learn more.

From back to front: Wally Tello, David Leross, Javier Capella
Front: Fr. Thomas Rosica, CSB, Deacon Pedro Guevara-Mann, Sebastian Gomes, Alicia Ambrosio, Richard Valenti, Cheridan Sanders, Charles LeBourgeois and Joshua Lanzarini.

Fanning the Flames of World Youth Day

By 

How fitting: we set off on our journey to Rio on the Feast of St. Bonaventure, literally “bona aventura” or good adventure. That’s what World Youth Day is: an adventure in faith. I wonder if that’s what the disciples were thinking as they made their way down from Galilee to Jerusalem with Jesus for that fateful Passover.

I thought of that last Sunday. For the last couple of weeks we’ve been listening to various readings from the Gospel of Luke. In them, Jesus is teaching the disciples what it means to be a disciple. He tells them it means to pick up your cross; it means to deny yourself. And then he sends them out; first the twelve and then the seventy-two. They go out on a mission to proclaim the Kingdom of God and they do that by healing the sick, caring for the afflicted and expelling evil spirits.

And last Sunday we learned how to really be a missionary: a man set out on the road from Jerusalem to Jericho (Luke 10:25-37). The story of the Good Samaritan is probably the best well-known parable because it summarizes the missionary life. It summarizes our apostolic call, which is the theme for World Youth Day Rio 2013: “Go and make disciples of all nations” (Mt. 28:19). Did the disciples realize that Jesus was transforming them into apostles? Did the disciples realize that it’s not enough to just follow, but at some point we have to be sent?

And that’s what World Youth Day is like, a transforming journey from Galilee down to Jerusalem where pilgrims realize that it’s not enough to follow; something has to change. We have to go out. We have to make disciples of all nations; we have to heal the sick, care for the afflicted, be salt and light, bring good news to the poor, set prisoners free, help the blind see. It’s not enough to be a disciple; we have to be apostles who are sent.

And so we begin our “bona aventura” not knowing what to expect, not quite sure how God will use us, but trusting fully that He will allow us to collaborate with Him in whatever He is doing in this world in which He has put us.

Rio 2013 is the 28th World Youth Day, an event that began as a simple evening Vigil gathering of young people with the Pope, “Il Papa e i giovani, insieme,” and has grown into a massive six-day event. On that first meeting with young people on St. Peter’s square in 1984, Pope John Paul II gave the young people of the world a simple wooden cross. This cross has become the Olympic flame of WYD. It is fitting, because that’s where the bona aventura leads us, because the cross is the only way to be a true disciple. How do we follow Christ? We pick up our cross. The cross is the only way to eternal life. Young people come to WYD seeking Christ. They come as pilgrims to learn about their faith, to celebrate their faith, but do so as they journey together under the cross, with Mary and the Saints.

And because this land Latin America is a land of a missionary Church and a land of a Marian Church, we cannot ignore these two aspects of our Faith. Mary is the mother of missions because she always leads us to her son, Jesus. And here in Brazil we have a great patroness in the image of Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception of Aparecida. She will watch over us and walk with us as we journey.

World Youth Day is the largest Catholic gathering in the world. It is a huge celebration of Faith. It is a time for joy and fun. It is also a time for growth and nourishment, a time for formation. But at its core, it is a transformation. It’s so easy for us to be caught up in what we have to do, especially those of us who are working while we’re here. Our Salt + Light team has the huge task of bringing the good news of WYD to all the nations, and it’s easy to get bogged down with the details. It’s easy to worry about Internet signals and satellite feeds. It’s easy to grumble and argue, to complain and be frustrated. It’s easy to be like the disciples on the road to Jerusalem, not understanding where we’re going or why.

It’s not easy to understand the Cross. After all, it’s easier to follow than to be sent. But at some point, we have to let the Spirit do His work. We have to surrender to the one who’s brought us here. It’s very likely that His plan is very different than ours.

My prayer for the next week is that our hearts are inclined to His will. I pray that the fire of World Youth Day, which sometimes is nothing more than an ember, can be kept alive. I pray that our work helps to fan the flames, to keep those embers alive. It’s not a coincidence that the very word “Brasil” comes from the word “brasa,” which means embers. Portuguese sailors who came to this land called it the land of the “Vera Cruz” or of the True Cross — but it was commonly known by the wood of a red-bark tree called “pau-brasil” or “Brazil-wood.” It’s this land of the red-ember tree where God has chosen to fan the flames of the Spirit.

May the Spirit, through World Youth Day help kindle this land of embers, with the fire of His love. May all the pilgrims let themselves be taken over by the fire of the Spirit, as we walk on this journey, this good adventure towards Christ, along with Mary and the Saints, with the Holy Father and his brother Bishops, learning about and celebrating our faith in this land of the True Cross.

Deacon Pedro is a permanent Deacon for the Archdiocese of Toronto. He is a senior producer for Salt + Light Catholic Media and is currently in Rio de Janeiro covering the events of WYD Rio 2013. You can follow Salt + Light’s coverage of WYD at www.wydcentral.org or www.saltandlighttv.org/live.

Read 39782 times Last modified on July 23, 2013
Rate this item
(0 votes)
Komento Support

Originally from Panama, Deacon Pedro Guevara Mann came to Salt + Light Television after being the artistic director for World Youth Day 2002, meaning that he was responsible for all the artistic programming. He has a background in the performing arts: theatre, music and dance, holds a B.F.A. from York University and has been working with young people since he was a teenager. For eight years he was a youth worker and job coach at Covenant House, where he developed a passion for serving the most vulnerable and the voice-less. He has also been a youth leader with the Children's International Summer Villages and Confirmation retreat facilitator for many groups.

Deacon Pedro has been a music minister for over 25 years. He directed the Children's Choir at Our Lady of Lourdes in Toronto for many years and most recently played with the 7pm Youth Group at St. Elizabeth Seton Parish in Newmarket, Ont. Deacon Pedro is also a dynamic youth speaker and workshop facilitator, having been to many schools for various talks. His most popular topics have to do with love, sex, relationships and marriage (as he loves JPII's Theology of the Body). Other topics include vocations, and the culture and media.

Deacon Pedro is the producer/director for Abraham's Tent (2012), Ends of the Earth (2009), A People of Life (2008), Turning the Tide: Dignity, Compassion and Euthanasia (2007); Lives in the Balance (2006); INRI (2006); Thank You, John Paul II (2005). He is also the producer of In Your Faith (2004, 2010), as well as many Catholic Focus episodes, and the concert series Openings. He is the producer and host of The Salt + Light Hour for the Catholic Channel on Sirius XM Radio, coordinates SLRadio and also produces and hosts Perspectives: The Weekly Edition, every Friday on S+L TV.

On May 26, 2012 Pedro was ordained a Permanent Deacon for the Archdiocese of Toronto. Deacon Pedro is at Holy Martyr's of Japan Parish in Bradford, Ont. and lives north of Toronto, with his wife and their two sons.

Latest from Komento Support