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Cursillo Movement is a movement of the Catholic Church. The name
Cursillo is Spanish, meaning short course, and is often associated with
a 3-Day weekend - which is only one aspect of the Cursillo Movement.
The proper name is Cursillo de Cristiandad (short course of
Christianity). There is much more to the Cursillo Movement than
just a 3-Day weekend.
This Movement evolved from Spain,
where it got its origin, in the 1940s. The Cursillo Movement did
not develop by accident. It began when a group of men dedicated
themselves to bringing the young men of their city of Mallorca, Spain,
to know Christ better. It developed as they prayed and worked
together; it developed as they talked together, sharing their thoughts
about the state of the world and the effectiveness of their efforts to
bring the light of Christ to it. On the natural level alone, the
story of the Cursillo Movement is exciting. It's a story filled
with the adventure of new discoveries and works of outstanding
dedication, tragic misunderstandings and setbacks, as well as impressive
patience. These young men and the clergy who supported them
endured many unpromising situations in the faith that God would work.
But it is even more an exciting
story on the spiritual level. It is the story of how God taught a
group of men how to work for Him in an effective way, a way that bears
fruit. In the late 1940s, the first Cursillo was given and the
Cursillo Movement began. Those who make Cursillo's today would
find much of the first Cursillo familiar. The Cursillo has been
refined and changed somewhat, but today's Cursillo weekend remains
basically the same as those first Cursillo's.
It was, however, no accident that
the first Cursillo was so fully formed that a movement could begin from
that date. The first Cursillo was neither a lucky accident nor a
blueprint which came directly from heaven, but grew out of a process of
development. Nor were the first leaders just a chance collection
of men. They had been working together for some time trying to
bring men to Christ so they could work together to Christianize the
world.
But the Cursillo, on the other
hand, was not just a well worked out human product. It grew in the
climate of spiritual renewal. It was developed by men of prayer
who were seeking to serve the Lord. It was formed by the
inspiration of the Holy Spirit working in men who had dedicated
themselves to bringing others to a knowledge of Christ.
The Cursillo Movement came to
birth in the movements of renewal that preceded the second Vatican
Council. Vatican II was such a major event in the history of the
modern Catholic Church that there is a certain tendency to date
everything from the Council. But Vatican II was itself born out of
an effort of spiritual and pastoral renewal that had begun years before.
The liturgical movement, the scriptural renewal, Catholic Action and
other movements of the lay apostolate had begun years before the
Council. Everywhere in the Church, people were seeking to find
ways of "bringing the Church to life in the hearts of men"
(Romano Guardini). The Cursillo Movement came from the work of
such individuals.
The first stirrings of what later
was to become the Cursillo Movement began on the Island of Mallorca
during World War II. The Spanish Civil War had ended in 1939, and
the years after the Civil War were a time of ferment in the Spanish
Church. Before the war, a pilgrimage to the shrine of St. James at
Compostela had been planned. This spiritual journey to the great
Spanish pilgrimage center of the Middle Ages would provide a time for
the young men and women of Spain to dedicate themselves in a renewed way
to the work of the apostolate. After being postponed several times
by the disruption of war, it was finally rescheduled for 1948. |
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The
pilgrimage set a tone. The spirit of pilgrimage is a spirit of
restlessness, of dissatisfaction with spiritual lukewarmness, of moving
onward, of "ultreya ." It is also a spirit of
brotherhood among fellow pilgrims who are striving together to reach the
goal of a life fully given to the love of God and man. The pilgrim
style has marked much of the spirituality of the Cursillo Movement.
Preparation for the pilgrimage
gave rise to efforts of renewal in the different Catholic Action groups
in Spain, among them the branch for young men in the diocese of Majorca.
As a result of the preparations for the pilgrimage there was greater
interest in finding an effective way to work apostolically. The
groups responsible for preparations for the pilgrimage to St. James were
the diocesan councils for the young men's branch of Catholic Action.
Catholic Action was the official organization of the lay apostolate in
Spain (and in many other countries). Most organized efforts of
Catholic laity taking part in the work of the Church were part of
Catholic Action (which was supported and directed by the hierarchy).
In Spain, Catholic Action was divided into the men's branch, the women's
branch, the young men's branch and the young women's branch. The
leaders of the young men's branch on the island of Majorca were the
founders of the Cursillo Movement. Those who first developed the
Cursillo Movement worked together as a team from the very beginning.
They worked as a leaders' team
that prayed together, shared their Christian lives together, studied
together, planned together, acted together and evaluated what they had
done together. Together they worked at the task of forming
Christian life among the young people in Majorca. Out of their
common efforts, something new in the life of the Church was born.
Church renewal, spiritual renewal, pastoral renewal, the pilgrim style,
a pastoral plan, teamwork among leaders - the Cursillo Movement grew out
of all these things. It developed not by accident nor through a
clearly specified plan, but was an organic development of the efforts of
a group of men who had dedicated themselves to the work of God.
At first, the Cursillo's were just
"little courses" (little course is the literal meaning of the
Spanish word - Cursillo) which were given by the diocesan council of the
young men's branch of Catholic Action. They were given to members
of Catholic Action groups as a way of forming them so they could become
effective apostles.
The first Cursillo in the United
States was held in Waco, Texas, in 1957. The key figures in the
beginning were Father Gabriel Fernandez and two airmen from Spain,
Bernardo Vadell and Agustin Palomino, who were training with the United
States Air Force. Father Gabriel had arrived in Waco in 1955 from
Spain where he had made his three days under two of the founders of the
movement, Father Juan Capo and Eduardo Bonnin. The priest and the
airmen were responsible for putting on the first two weekends in Waco.
Airmen Vadell and Palomino were
transferred to Mission, Texas, just after they had completed the second
weekend in Waco. By late 1957, the traveling airmen had put on the
first weekend in Mission. In 1958, they started a center in
Laredo, Texas, and soon after, the movement was introduced in Corpus
Christi.
In 1959, the Cursillo spread
throughout Texas and to Phoenix, Arizona. In August of that year
the first national convention of spiritual directors was held, and
Ultreya magazine began publication. In 1960, the growth of the
Cursillo quickened in the Southwest, and weekends were held for the
first time in the East in New York City and Lorain, Ohio.
Until 1961, all weekends were held
in Spanish. That year the first English-speaking weekend was held
in San Angelo, Texas. Also in 1961, first weekends were held in
San Francisco, California; Gary, Indiana; Lansing, Michigan; and Gallup,
New Mexico. By 1962, twenty-five more English-speaking weekends
had been held.
In 1962, the Cursillo Movement
came to the Eastern United States. Weekends were held in
Cincinnati, Brooklyn, Saginaw, Miami, Chicago, Detroit, Newark,
Baltimore, Grand Rapids, Kansas City and Boston. In the West, the
first weekends were held in Monterey, Sacramento, Los Angeles, Pueblo
and Yakima.
The movement spread rapidly with
the early centers carrying the Cursillo to nearby dioceses. As of
1981, almost all of the 160 dioceses in the United States had introduced
the Cursillo Movement.
The Cursillo Movement in the
United States was organized on a national basis in 1965. At this
meeting a National Secretariat was organized, and a National Cursillo
Office (currently in Dallas, Texas) was established.
The Cursillo Movement has the
support of the vast majority of the American hierarchy. It is
joined to the National Conference of Catholic Bishops through an
official liaison in the person of Most Rev. James S. Sullivan, Bishop of
Fargo, and through the Bishops' Secretariat for the Laity in Washington,
D.C.
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Today, it
is a worldwide movement with centers in nearly all South and Central
American countries, the United States, Canada, Mexico, Portugal, Puerto
Rico, Great Britain, Ireland, France, Germany, Austria, Italy,
Yugoslavia, Australia, Japan, Korea, Taiwan, the Philippines, Sri Lanka
and in several African countries. The movement is a member of the
International Catholic Organizations of the Pontifical Council for the
Laity in Rome. In 1980, the Cursillo Movement established an
international office, the OMCC (Organismo Mundial de Cursillo's de
Cristiandad), in Santo Domingo to coordinate the three existing
international working groups of Latin America, Europe and the
International English Language Group. The international leaders of
the movement meet periodically to further its work.
At one of these meetings in Rome
in 1966, Pope Paul VI had the opportunity to address the movement.
Among his words of encouragement were the following:
"Cursillo s de Cristiandad,
that is the word, purified through experience, affirmed by its fruits,
that today travels with citizenship papers throughout the world
..."
"Whether some methods become
obsolete, whether new manifestations of the Spirit arise, the
permanent task of the layman will continue to be the infusion of
Christianity into life through the encounter and personal friendship
with God and in communion with his brothers. The layman, upon
forming himself in Christianity, reforms his mentality and conforms
his life to Christ's image by means of faith, hope and charity; acting
with complete responsibility he transforms the temporal structures in
which he is immersed, guided in his action by the glance of Christ he
continually tries to remake the world according to God's plan and
design ...."
"We know that in your plan of
spirituality and apostolate in the Cursillo Movement the 'Sensus
Ecclesiae' (mind of the Church) is the guiding light that orients you
...."
"Beloved sons and daughters:
Our soul is so oppressed by the vision of the evils which afflict the
Church and mankind. But permit us to express our overwhelming joy
that, at this moment, floods our soul before the immense chorus of
your manly faith in Christ, your fidelity to the Church, your fervent
loyalty to this Chair of Peter and to the ministry of the episcopal
hierarchy."
"Cursillo s de Cristiandad!
Christ, the Church, the Pope, are counting on you!" Pope
Paul VI, First World Ultreya, Rome, May 28,1966
In 1980, Pope John Paul II,
addressing the first National Italian Ultreya in Rome said,
"Your movement, which recently
celebrated its thirtieth anniversary, devotes itself to drawing forth
from Christians a commitment to live lives consistent with their faith
whether individually or as a community - and to bring this ferment to
the environments where you live."
"You have discovered anew
the explosive truth of the evangelical message: God, Father of all,
comes to us as we encounter him in Jesus Christ to reunite us through
the grace of the Spirit in one family which is the Church."
"In her, we are truly able to
experience even now the love which will be the inexhaustible fountain
of eternal joy in heaven. Here then is the synthesis of all of
Christianity. This is the news that all human hearts hope for
without realizing it. Therefore dedicate yourselves more and
more to being tireless apostles in your environments."
"My apostolic blessing goes
with you as a pledge of this divine grace which enables you to live
forever."
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