Letter 2025
Hope beyond all hope
Brother Matthew
Listening to young people in Taizé and elsewhere[1],
many of whom are confronted with harsh realities in their everyday
life, I ask myself how they find the strength to carry on. The question
becomes even more pressing when they are living in war zones.
Where do their resilience and perseverance in seemingly impossible
situations come from? It became clear to me, as I listened, that trust
in God enables people of faith to nurture a hope. And through the
Resurrection of Jesus, a certainty grows that death will not have the
last word.
Trust in the Resurrection gives hope that the weariness of life is
not the final point. We are called to something more. It is this hope
that young people wanted to share with me, a hope that is beyond all
hope because it counts on new life to arise when all seems lost[2].
Mary sang in her cry of praise and hope: “With the strength of his
arm, God scatters the proud. God casts down the mighty from their
thrones and lifts up the lowly. God fills the hungry with good things
and sends the rich away empty-handed.” (Luke 1:51-53) Yes, let us dare
to sing with her and to pray for situations to change. Even when God
seems silent, a path may suddenly open up[3].
At the same time, let us do what we can, even when it may not seem
much, to express signs of solidarity with people in distress around us,
or who are caught up in war or forced to leave their country. Is it not
this that will enable us to hope beyond all hope?
The reflections that follow come in large part from the meetings and
conversations with young people living in countries at war or zones of
conflict over the last year. I am full of gratitude towards those who
shared their experiences and thoughts and also to our youngest brothers
whose careful counsel put everything in order.