Chapter,Paragraph,Number
1 Intro, 1,2| vocation. In practice, the members of a religious community
2 Intro, 1,2| God distributes among her members for the good of the entire
3 Intro, 2,3| fraternity which must unite all members in charity. The new Code
4 Intro, 2,3| union and of unity among the members can be distinguished:~ -
5 Intro, 4,5| co-responsibility and subsidiarity. All members became involved in the problems
6 I, 1,9 | among themselves all the members of the same Body of Christ,
7 I, 2,10 | their attention to other members of the community more delicate
8 II, 1,14 | the community,(31) where members can nourish their own Eucharistic
9 II, 3,27 | dying out; before long, members will be tempted to seek
10 II, 4,29 | number of regular meetings of members at different levels, central,
11 II, 4,30 | proved very useful; they let members share problems concerning
12 II, 4,30 | the community and to the members' commitments. In contemplative
13 II, 4,31 | sharing which will enable members, in their own apostolates,
14 II, 4,31 | ages and different races, members with different cultural
15 II, 4,31 | attentive listening, community members run the risk of living juxtaposed
16 II, 5,35 | mediates the Gospel to the members of a given religious institute".(48)
17 II, 5,36 | common requires from all members good psychological balance
18 II, 5,36 | to attain maturity. Where members of a community become aware
19 II, 5,37 | authority needs to remind members that life in common sometimes
20 II, 5,39 | the slow journey of weaker members without stifling the growth
21 II, 5,39 | they may appear to some members, they are not for this particular
22 II, 5,40 | point of choosing its own members, and brothers or sisters
23 II, 5,41 | International institutes in which members from different cultures
24 II, 5,41 | gifts through which the members mutually enrich and correct
25 II, 5,42 | difficulties in sensitising all the members of a community, the absorbing
26 II, 5,42 | place where, day by day, members help one another to respond
27 II, 5,42 | felt today is to integrate members who were given a different
28 II, 5,43 | The poverty of individual members, which brings with it a
29 II, 5,43 | either for oneself or for members of one's family, a life-style
30 II, 5,43 | that of fellow community members and from the poverty level
31 II, 5,44 | and, in him, between the members of the same institute....
32 II, 6,47 | deeper communion among the members and an understandable reaction
33 II, 6,47 | co-ordinating the initiatives of the members. As a result, a certain
34 II, 6,49 | affairs of all; to encourage members to assume and to respect
35 II, 6,49 | listen willingly to the members, promoting their harmonious
36 II, 7,54 | fraternal life among its members, makes present in a continuous
37 II, 7,54 | humankind with God, and of its members among themselves.(70) Fraternal
38 II, 7,56 | the perseverance of their members, also acquire the value
39 III, 0,58 | communion with God and among its members. It has a most efficacious
40 III, 1,59 | particular Church, to which the members bring the richness of their
41 III, 1,59 | community or of any of its members.~It is important to recall
42 III, 1,61 | still others are permanent members while remaining in full
43 III, 1,61 | unity of life of each of its members are maintained. This is
44 III, 1,62 | fraternal prayer of the other members of their institute and on
45 III, 1,62 | careful to select suitable members and to prepare such communities
46 III, 1,63 | more demanding for their members.~c) Small communities, often
47 III, 1,63 | for retreat and rest for members working on the more difficult
48 III, 1,63 | fraternal love which unites the members, for the simplicity of their
49 III, 1,63 | confused and fragmented members of modern society.~
50 III, 1,64 | cultivate frequent contacts with members living outside community,
51 III, 1,64 | sense of communion with its members, seeking every means suitable
52 III, 1,64 | atmosphere. Wherever they may be, members of an institute shall be
53 III, 1,64 | institutes to send one of their members to collaborate in an inter-congregational
54 III, 1,64 | be prudent in assigning members to these works.~b) Also,
55 III, 1,64 | unfortunately, the majority of members no longer live in community,
56 III, 1,65 | important thing is that the members of the institute be aware
57 III, 1,67 | the increasing age of its members. Ageing has taken on particular
58 III, 1,67 | When in time these elderly members lose their autonomy or require
59 III, 1,68 | contemplative life requires the members of a monastery to unite
60 III, 1,68 | reason of the number of its members, age, or lack of vocations,
61 III, 1,68 | proper vocation because the members are worn down by practical
62 III, 1,68 | for the elderly or sick members, it will be necessary to
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