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Material goods in service to the lives of the Brothers
8. Our lifestyle: The
location of our communities and resources. In general our communities have
been closely tied to the work that they were doing, with a preference for the
field of education at the primary, secondary, and university levels. No
distinction was made between sites and facilities intended for the Community
and those of the school involved. Often enough they depended on the same
services. It never dawned on anyone to make a distinction between expenses
originating in the religious community and those resulting from the community
as a teaching staff.
This being the case, as
our schools and installations changed, facing growing demands to upgrade in
size and quality, so did the style of housing for our Brothers. In many cases, especially
in the early stages of a school's development, these changes did not rupture
the simple lifestyle in our homes. In fact, on some occasions in very poor
areas, such changes left the Brothers with living conditions similar to that of
our early Brothers. However, one cannot say the same today, and it seems to me
that we need to examine and take action on this point, because I think it is
having a profound effect on the way we are living out our religious
consecration today.
Our possessions are meant
to express who we are and claim to be. And so the relationship between our
preferred means and ends is not an inconsequential one, and it merits serious
thought and discernment. Other factors that we ought to take a good hard look
at include the location of our education centers, the proximity of many of our
residences to such centers, the social and economic standing of the
neighborhoods in which we live, and the way in which we are obliged to meet
legal requirements for maintaining the quality of our educational
establishments.
In certain countries, the
high income that Brothers earn as teachers is problematical for the practice of
our simple and moderate lifestyle. Communities having Brothers who bring home
big paychecks can run into trouble when it comes to realistically maintaining
their choice to lead a simple lifestyle.
Separating elements of
financial management.
Today the tendency is to clearly separate the financing and budgeting of
costs for the Brothers on the one hand, and for our educational and apostolic
works on the other. In many cases this is already being fully implemented,
albeit for a variety of reasons. Likewise, there is a clearer separation of
sites and services.
This separation of
locations and administrative systems can and should favor courageous decisions
about the way we use money as individuals and communities, notwithstanding
possible pressures to enhance the quality of our educational services. This
approach would allow us to lead lives more in keeping with our customary statements
about simplicity, witness, and solidarity.
Our calling to lead an
unpretentious and prophetic way of life. We still have not positioned ourselves to interact in a
prophetic way with the freewheeling economy and consumerism holding sway in
today's world. This kind of economy can seep into the fabric of our personal
and communal lives, as when we opt for top-of-the-line goods and services,
upscale cars, expensive hobbies, and living standards associated with
prosperous schools adjacent to our communities. It can also lead us to value
people more for what they possess than for who they are. By taking a prophetic
stance, the religious life will experience the loss of power, influence, and
prestige, but it will find these losses more than offset when it proclaims its
uplifting call to life and hope.
In your Province, in what
aspects of the Brothers' personal and community lives do you see this prophetic
option most clearly revealed? What aspects tend to conceal its appearance?
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