Luigi Giussani's Living the Liturgy is a masterpiece of liturgical spirituality, grasping the real insight of the Second Vatican Council. Liturgical renewal was not fundamentally about changing the rites but the way that ordinary Catholics would find their lifeblood in the rites, feasts, and seasons of the Church's liturgy. Msgr. Giussani carefully invites the reader into the kind of spiritual formation that will allow for greater participation in the liturgy not only in churches but in wherever we eat, drink, pray, or work. Living the Liturgy should find itself among the liturgical classics of Romano Guardini, Evelyn Underhill, and Thomas Merton.
-Timothy O'Malley, Professor of the Practice, Theology, University of Notre Dame
These beautiful meditations transcend the two forms of reductionism often applied to the liturgy: the "sociological" and the "archeological." The first reduces the liturgy to an expression of the needs and feelings of the community, hoping to make it relevant to life, whereas the liturgy is primarily the locus of a divine action in which God, not we, speaks. The second seeks to protect the integrity of the liturgy by adhering to the forms of the past, without regard for the life it is meant to nourish. Giussani vigorously affirms both the "otherness" of the liturgy and its organic relationship with the Christian life because "the mystery of the liturgical life is the paradigm of life, an occasion of encounter with the Presence that saves the world."
-Carlo Lancellotti, Professor of Mathematics, City University of New York