He and his followers had built an "empire" out of paper for the salvation of the men and women of today. Always intent on scrutinizing the signs of the times, he had given to the Church new means by which to express itself. Paul VI had visited his bedside an hour before his death, stopping his work to acknowledge the founder’s passing. The tribute that probably meant the most to him was: "Alberione diffused twenty million copies of the Bible throughout the world!"
But to the thousands of members of the five religious Congregations, four Secular Institutes and the association of Pauline Cooperators he left behind, Father Alberione could be nothing other than father and founder. A charismatic and prophetic leader, Alberione believed, even from the first inspiration as he knelt in Eucharistic adoration, that God willed the work which he began.
To Alberione's mind, one never began the work of God with anything but poverty and faith. He initiated huge undertakings with untrained young people, contracted enormous debts yet never went bankrupt, and refused to budge when he considered something to be the will of God. To the young boys who had joined him in his newly founded Society of St. Paul, Alberione said, "Raise your eyes and look at this mighty tree—a tree so tall that its top cannot be seen. This is our institute, which is truly a giant tree. You stand at the foot of a huge mountain; climb it and study the view. Your horizons are the world." The "giant tree" he referred to has become the Pauline Family.
Today
in over 55 countries the sons and daughters of Blessed James Alberione
bring the Gospel to life with sound and color, image and story.
Worldwide they publish over 20 magazines, operate 40 publishing houses,
produce radio programs in many languages, work in video and recording
studios, and diffuse the Word of God in several hundred Book & Media Centers and Liturgical Centers.
Some of the Congregations that Alberione founded also offer their
services in parishes, catechetical programs and in the service of
priests.