“From the very beginning of the movement, [we] did not hesitate to recognize in our neighbours, in every brother or sister, our typical way to go to God.”
The story goes that the disciples of Anba Bishoy, a Coptic-Orthodox monk who died in 417, upon learning that Christ often appeared to him, asked him to have Christ appear to them, too. Anba Bishoy agreed and told them that Christ would meet them on a certain fixed day. All the people of the savannah and desert prepared for that encounter.
Everyone was ready, all dressed up in their finest clothes, and so happy to be able to meet Christ. While they were going toward the place indicated to them, they met an old man who asked each one passing by, “Take me with you!” But each one had the holy excuse of having to go and meet Christ, and no one brought him along with them.
Then Anba Bishoy passed by and saw the old man, who also asked him: “Please, take me with you!” So Anba Bishoy carried him on his own back, as an act of love for his neighbour. Needless to say, on that day only Anba Bishoy met Christ, while everyone else missed this opportunity.
This episode aptly introduces that point of the spirituality of unity on which we wish to focus our attention this year: the presence of Jesus in our neighbours and our love for him.
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