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Religious community and personal growth
35. Because religious community is a Schola Amoris which helps one
grow in love for God and for one's brothers and sisters, it is also a place for
human growth. The path is a demanding one, since it requires the renunciation
of goods that are certainly highly valued,(45) but it is not
impossible. A multitude of men and women saints and the wonderful figures of
religious men and women are there to prove that consecration to Christ
"does not constitute an obstacle to the true development of the human
person but by its nature is supremely beneficial to that development".(46)
The path towards human maturity, which is a prerequisite of a radiant
evangelical life, is a process which knows no limits, since it involves
continuous enrichment not only of spiritual values but also of values in the
psychological, cultural and social order.(47)
In recent years, major changes in culture and custom have been oriented,
in practice, more towards material realities than towards spiritual values.
This makes it necessary to pay attention to some areas where, today, persons
appear to be particularly vulnerable.
36. Identity
The process of maturing takes place through one's own identifying with
the call of God. A weak sense of identity can lead to a misconceived idea of
self-actualisation, especially in times of difficulty, with an excessive need
for positive results and approval from others, an exaggerated fear of
inadequacy, and depression brought on by failure.
The identity of a consecrated person depends on spiritual maturity; this
is brought about by the Spirit who prompts us to be conformed to Christ,
according to the particular characteristic provided by "the founding gift
which mediates the Gospel to the members of a given religious institute".(48)
For this reason, the help of a spiritual guide, who knows well and respects the
spirituality and mission of the institute, is most important. Such a one will
"discern the action of God, accompany the religious in the ways of God,
nourish life with solid doctrine and the practice of prayer".(49)
This accompaniment is particularly necessary in the initial stage of formation,
but it is useful throughout life, in order to foster "growth towards the
fullness of Christ".
Cultural maturity also helps one face the challenges of mission by
acquiring the tools necessary for discerning future trends and working out
appropriate responses, in which the Gospel is continuously proposed as the
alternative to worldly proposals, integrating its positive forces and purifying
them of the leaven of evil.
In this dynamic, the consecrated person and the religious community are
a proposal of the Gospel, a proposal which manifests the presence of Christ in
the world.(50)
37. Affectivity
Fraternal life in common requires from all members good psychological
balance within which each individual can achieve emotional maturity. As
mentioned above, one essential element of such growth is emotional freedom,
which enables consecrated persons to love their vocation and to love in
accordance with this vocation. It is precisely this freedom and this maturity
which allow us to live out our affectivity correctly, both inside and outside
the community.
To love one's vocation, to hear the call as something that gives true
meaning to life, and to cherish consecration as a true, beautiful and good
reality which gives truth, beauty and goodness to one's own existence -- all of
this makes a person strong and autonomous, secure in one's own identity, free
of the need for various forms of support and compensation, especially in the
area of affectivity. All this reinforces the bond that links the consecrated
person to those who share his or her calling. It is with them, first and
foremost, that he or she feels called to live relationships of fraternity and
friendship.
To love one's vocation is to love the Church, it is to love one's
institute, and to experience the community as one's own family.
To love in accordance with one's vocation is to love in the manner of
one who, in every human relationship, wishes to be a clear sign of the love of
God, not invading and not possessing, but loving and desiring the good of the
other with God's own benevolence.
Therefore, special formation is required in the area of affectivity to
promote an integration of the human aspect with the more specifically spiritual
aspect. In this respect, the guidelines contained in Potissimum
Institutioni(51) concerning discernment of "a balanced
affectivity, especially sexual balance" and "the ability to live in
community" are particularly relevant.
However, difficulties in this area are frequently echoes of problems
originating in other areas: affectivity and sexuality marked by a narcissistic
and adolescent attitude, or by rigid repression, can sometimes be a result of
negative experiences prior to entering the community, but they can also be a
result of difficulties in community or apostolate. A rich and warm fraternal
life, one that "carries the burden" of the wounded brother or sister
in need of help, is thus particularly important.
While a certain maturity is necessary for life in community, a cordial
fraternal life is equally necessary in order to allow each religious to attain
maturity. Where members of a community become aware of diminished affective
autonomy in one of their brothers or sisters, the response on the part of the
community ought to be one of rich and human love, similar to that of our Lord
Jesus and of many holy religious -- a love that shares in fears and joys,
difficulties and hopes, with that warmth that is particular to a new heart that
knows how to accept the whole person. Such love -- caring and respectful,
gratuitous rather than possessive -- should make the love of Our Lord seem very
near: that love which caused the Son of God to proclaim through the Cross that
we cannot doubt that we are loved by Love.
38. Difficulties
A special occasion for human growth and Christian maturity lies in
living with persons who suffer, who are not at ease in community, and who thus
are an occasion of suffering for others and of disturbance in community life.
We must first of all ask about the source of such suffering. It may be
caused by a character defect, commitments that seem too burdensome, serious
gaps in formation, excessively rapid changes over recent years, excessively
authoritarian forms of government, or by spiritual difficulties.
There may be some situations when the one in authority needs to remind
members that life in common sometimes requires sacrifice and can become a form
of maxima poenitentia, grave penance.
In some cases recourse to the social sciences is necessary, in
particular where individuals are clearly incapable of living community life due
to problems of insufficient maturity and psychological weakness, or due to
factors which are more pathological.
Recourse to such intervention has proved useful not only at the
therapeutic stage -- in cases of more or less evident psycho-pathology -- but
also as a preventive measure, to assist in the proper selection of candidates,
and to assist formation teams in some cases to address specific pedagogical and
formative problems.(52)
In all cases, in choosing specialists, preference is to be given to
those who are believers and are well experienced with religious life and its
dynamics. So much the better if these specialists are themselves consecrated
men or women.
Finally, the use of such methods will be truly effective only if it is
applied exceptionally and not generalised; this is so partly because
psycho-pedagogical measures do not solve all problems and thus "cannot
substitute for an authentic spiritual direction".(53)
From me to us
39. Respect for the human person, recommended by the Council and by various
succeeding documents,(54) has had a positive influence on the praxis of
communities. Simultaneously, however, individualism has spread, with greater or
lesser intensity depending on the regions of the world, and in various forms:
the need to take centre stage; an exaggerated insistence on personal
well-being, whether physical, psychological or professional; a preference for
individual work or for prestigious and "signed" work; the absolute
priority of one's personal aspirations and one's own individual path,
regardless of others and with no reference to the community.
On the other hand, we must continue to seek a just balance, not always
easy to achieve, between the common good and respect for the human person,
between the demands and needs of individuals and those of the community,
between personal charisms and the community's apostolate. And this should be
far from both the disintegrating forces of individualism and the levelling
aspects of communitarianism. Religious community is the place where the daily
and patient passage from "me" to "us" takes place, from my
commitment to a commitment entrusted to the community, from seeking "my
things" to seeking "the things of Christ".
In this way, religious community becomes the place where we learn daily
to take on that new mind which allows us to live in fraternal communion through
the richness of diverse gifts and which, at the same time, fosters a
convergence of these gifts towards fraternity and towards co-responsibility in
the apostolic plan.
40. In order to realise such a community and apostolic
"symphony", it is necessary:
a) to celebrate and give thanks together for the common gift of vocation
and mission, a gift far surpassing every individual and cultural difference; to
promote a contemplative attitude with regard to the wisdom of God, who has sent
specific brothers and sisters to the community that each may be a gift to the
other; to praise him for what each brother or sister communicates from the
presence and word of Christ;
b) to cultivate mutual respect by which we accept the slow journey of
weaker members without stifling the growth of richer personalities; a respect
which fosters creativity but also calls for responsibility to others and to
solidarity;
c) to focus on a common mission: each institute has its own mission, to
which all must contribute according to their particular gifts. The road of
consecrated men and women consists precisely in progressively consecrating to
the Lord all that they have, and all that they are, for the mission of their
religious family;
d) to recall that the apostolic mission is entrusted in the first place
to the community and that this often entails conducting works proper to the
institute. Dedication to this kind of community apostolate helps a consecrated
person mature and grow in his or her particular way of holiness;
e) to consider that religious, on receiving in obedience personal
missions, ought to consider themselves sent by the community. For its part, the
community shall see to their regular updating and include them in the reviews
of apostolic and community commitments.
During the time of formation, all good will not withstanding, it may
prove impossible to integrate the personal gifts of a consecrated individual
within fraternity and a common mission. It may be necessary in such cases to
ask, "Do God's gifts in this person... make for unity and deepen
communion? If they do, they can be welcomed. If they do not, then no matter how
good the gifts may seem to be in themselves, or how desirable they may appear
to some members, they are not for this particular institute.... It is not wise
to tolerate widely divergent lines of development which do not have a strong
foundation of unity in the institute itself".(55)
41. In recent years, there has been an increase in the number of small
communities, especially for reasons of apostolate. These communities can also
foster closer relations among religious, prayer which is more deeply shared,
and a reciprocal and more fraternal taking up of responsibility.(56)
But there are some motives which are questionable, such as sameness of
tastes or of mentality. In this situation, it is easy for a community to close
in on itself and come to the point of choosing its own members, and brothers or
sisters sent by the superiors may or may not be accepted. This is contrary to
the very nature of religious community and to its function as sign. Optional
homogeneity, besides weakening apostolic mobility, weakens the Pneumatic
strength of a community and robs the spiritual reality which rules the
community of its power as witness.
The effort involved in mutual acceptance and commitment to overcoming
difficulties, characteristics of heterogeneous communities, show forth the
transcendence of the reason which brought the community into existence, that
is, the power of God which "is made perfect in weakness" (2 Cor.
12:9-10).
We stay together in community not because we have chosen one another,
but because we have been chosen by the Lord.
42. Whereas culture of a western stamp can lead to individualism which
makes fraternal life in common difficult, other cultures can lead to
communitarianism which makes giving proper recognition to the human person
difficult. All cultural forms need evangelization.
The presence of religious communities -- which, through a process of
conversion, enter into a fraternal life where individuals make themselves
available to their brothers or sisters, and where the "group"
enhances the individual -- is a sign of the transforming power of the Gospel
and of the coming of the Kingdom of God.
International institutes in which members from different cultures live
together can contribute to an exchange of gifts through which the members
mutually enrich and correct one other in the common desire to live more and
more intensely the Gospel of personal freedom and fraternal communion.
Being a community in permanent
formation
43. Community renewal has greatly benefited from permanent formation.
Recommended and presented in its basic outline by the document Potissimum
Institutioni,(57) permanent formation is considered by all who are
responsible for religious institutes as of vital importance for the future.
In spite of some uncertainties (difficulties in integrating its
different aspects, difficulties in sensitising all the members of a community,
the absorbing demands of apostolic work, and a correct balance between activity
and formation), most institutes, at either the central or local level, have
undertaken initiatives.
One of the goals of such initiatives is to form communities that are
mature, evangelical, fraternal and capable of continuing permanent formation in
daily life. Religious community is the place where broad guidelines are
implemented concretely, through patient and persevering daily efforts.
Religious community is, for everyone, the place and the natural setting of the
process of growth, where all become co-responsible for the growth of others.
Religious community is also the place where, day by day, members help one
another to respond as consecrated persons, bearing a common charism, to the needs
of the least and to the challenges of the new society.
Quite frequently, responses to existing problems can differ and this
entails obvious consequences for community life. From this arises the
realisation that one of the challenges intensely felt today is to integrate
members who were given a different formation and have different apostolic
visions into one single community life, in such a way that these differences
become not so much occasions of conflict as moments of mutual enrichment. In
such a diversified and changeable context, the unifying role of those
responsible for community becomes ever more important; it is appropriate to
provide them with specific support in the area of permanent formation, in light
of their task of motivating the fraternal and apostolic life of their
communities.
Based on the experience of recent years, two aspects deserve particular
attention: the community dimension of the evangelical counsels and the charism.
44. The community dimension of the
evangelical counsels
Religious profession expresses the gift of self to God and to the Church
-- a gift, however, which is lived in the community of a religious family.
Religious are not only "called" to an individual personal vocation.
Their call is also a "con-vocation" -- they are called with
others, with whom they share their daily life.
There is here a convergence of "yeses" to God which unites a
number of religious into one single community of life. Consecrated together --
united in the same "yes", united in the Holy Spirit -- religious
discover every day that their following of Christ "obedient, poor and
chaste", is lived in fraternity, as was the case with the disciples who
followed Jesus in his ministry. They are united with Christ, and therefore called
to be united among themselves. They are united in the mission to oppose
prophetically the idolatry of power, of possession and of pleasure.(58)
Thus, obedience binds together the various wills and unites them
in one single fraternal community, endowed with a specific mission to be
accomplished within the Church.
Obedience is a "yes" to God's design, by which He has
entrusted a particular task to a group of people. It brings with it a bond to
the mission, but also to the community which must carry out its service here
and now and together. It also requires a clear-sighted vision of faith
regarding the superiors who "fulfil their duty of service and
leadership"(59) and who are to see that there is conformity
between apostolic work and the mission. It is in communion with them that the
divine will -- the only will which can save -- must be fulfilled.
Poverty, the sharing of goods, even spiritual goods, has been
from the beginning the basis of fraternal communion. The poverty of individual
members, which brings with it a simple and austere life-style, not only frees
them from the concerns inherent in private ownership but it also enriches the
community, enabling it to serve God and the poor more effectively.
Poverty includes an economic dimension: the possibility of disposing of
money as if it were one's own, either for oneself or for members of one's
family, a life-style too different from that of fellow community members and
from the poverty level of the society within which one is living -- these
things injure and weaken fraternal life.
"Poverty of spirit", humility, simplicity, recognising the
gifts of others, appreciating evangelical realities such as "the hidden
life with Christ in God," respect for the hidden sacrifice, giving value
to the least ones, dedication to efforts that are neither recognised nor paid
-- these are all unitive aspects of fraternal life and spring from the poverty
professed.
A community of "poor" people is better able to show solidarity
with the poor and to point to the very heart of evangelization because it
concretely presents the transforming power of the beatitudes.
In the community dimension, consecrated chastity, which also
implies great purity of mind, heart and body, expresses a great freedom for
loving God and all that is his, with an undivided love and thus with a total
availability for loving and serving all others, making present the love of
Christ. This love, neither selfish nor exclusive, neither possessive nor
enslaved to passion, but universal and disinterested, free and freeing, so
necessary for mission, is cultivated and grows through fraternal life. Thus,
those who live consecrated celibacy "recall that wonderful marriage made
by God, which will be fully manifested in the future age, and in which the
Church has Christ for her only spouse".(60)
This communal dimension of the vows must be continuously fostered and
deepened -- a process which is characteristic of permanent formation.
45. The charism
This is the second aspect of permanent formation to which we must give
special attention in order to promote the growth of fraternal life.
"Religious consecration establishes a particular communion between
religious and God and, in him, between the members of the same institute....
The foundation of unity, however, is the communion in Christ established by the
one founding gift."(61) Reference to the institute's founder and
to the charism lived by him or her and then communicated, kept and developed
throughout the life of the institute,(62) thus appears as an essential
element for the unity of the community.
To live in community is to live the will of God together, in accordance
with the orientation of the charismatic gift received by the founder from God
and transmitted to his or her disciples and followers.
The renewal of recent years, re-emphasising the importance of the
originating charism by rich theological reflection,(63) has promoted
the unity of the community, which is seen as bearer of this same gift from the
Spirit, a gift to be shared with the brothers or sisters, and by which it is
possible to enrich the Church "for the life of the world." For this
reason, formation programmes which include regular courses of study and
prayerful reflection on the founder, the charism and the constitutions of the
institute are particularly beneficial.
A deepened understanding of the charism leads to a clearer vision of
one's own identity, around which it is easier to build unity and communion.
Clarity concerning one's own charismatic identity allows creative adjustment to
new situations and this leads to positive prospects for the future of the
institute.
A lack of clarity in this area can easily cause insecurity concerning
goals and vulnerability with respect to conditions surrounding religious life,
cultural currents and various apostolic needs, in addition to the obstacles it
raises regarding adaptation and renewal.
46. It is therefore necessary to promote an institute's charismatic
identity, especially to avoid a kind of genericism, which is a true
threat to the vitality of a religious community.
Several factors have been identified as having caused suffering for
religious communities in recent years and, in some cases, continue to cause it:
- a "generic" approach -- in other
words, one that lacks the specific mediation of one's own charism -- in
considering certain guidelines of the particular Church or certain
suggestions deriving from different spiritualities;
- a certain kind of involvement in ecclesial
movements which exposes individual religious to the ambiguous phenomenon
of "dual membership;"
- in the essential and often fruitful
relationships with laity, especially with lay collaborators, a certain
adjustment to a lay mentality. Instead of offering their own religious
witness as a fraternal gift which would encourage Christian authenticity,
they simply imitate the laity, taking on their way of seeing and acting,
thus weakening the contribution of their own consecration;
- an excessive accommodation to the demands of
family, to the ideals of nation, race or tribe, or of some social group,
which risks distorting the charism to suit particular positions or
interests.
The genericism which reduces religious life to a colourless lowest
common denominator leads to wiping out the beauty and fruitfulness of the many
and various charisms inspired by the Holy Spirit.
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