From Sunset to Dawn Reflections on refounding
Chapter, § 1 1 | closeness to the poor in the form of the "inserted" religious
2 1 | charism in its pristine form is to reinterpret it and
3 1 | then refashion our present form of life, language and programmes
4 1 | articulate their thinking on the form to be taken by the charism
5 2 | their life. It has taken the form of a great desire, which
6 2 | seeing the advent of a new form of mass transit, the aeroplane.
7 2 | the founding charism. The form under which these changes
8 2 | it and give it meaning, form, message, presence and action.
9 3 | must do battle to live this form of life. In other places
10 3 | made meaningful. We must form people for it and work in
11 4 | merging or integrating to form a new one. In the whole
12 4 | for some, chaotic. The form to assume, live and achieve
13 5 | bottom" of things. When one’s form of life is not a symbol,
14 6 | structure that corresponds to a form of life centred in the Lord
15 8 | and that God desires this form of life.~In community~The
16 8 | to assume and sustain a form of life that wins back the
Well plac. charisms Resit. charism:|crit., persp., restruct.
Chapter, § 17 0,1| encounters with this concrete form of religious life (as lived
18 0,1| Their wonder takes the form of questions such as the
19 0,1| its unchanged/traditional form, or in a new form, or a
20 0,1| traditional form, or in a new form, or a different public altogether)?
21 0,1| formation cannot effectively form young members contrary to
22 0,2| 500/1500 years ago, is a form of folklore or nostalgia.
Process of ref. the charism of the soc. of the S. Heart…
Chapter, § 23 0,1| of religious life and the form of living it, and a consequent
24 0,4| and Australia the schools form a Network having common
25 0,4| discover this prophetic form of religious life in a feminine
26 0,4| very numerous. Ours is a form of religious life for the
Ways of refound. the charism by prom. vocations
Chapter, § 27 | house continued in this form for five years. It was discontinued
Towards the ref. of the charism in new formative itin.
Chapter, § 28 0,1| the permanent one. ~1.2 Form and Norm~If thus understood,
29 0,1| consecrated person (it is its form and norm), then it will
30 0,1| becomes indispensable to form in this regard, a responsible
31 0,3| the charism~In order to form a mentality and a culture
32 0,3| of the times, in order to form our young people to look
Redesigning presence: crit., persp., restructuring
Chapter, § 33 0,1| identity and vitality of a form of consecrated life. It
34 0,1| become the expression of a form of consecrated life. We
35 0,1| Psalms express it in the form of a painful invocation
36 0,4| lay people, changes in the form of management, the elimination
Redesigning our presence as fraternity
Chapter, § 37 0,1| It is not some specific form of service that defines
Redesigning pres. in new missionary realities…
Chapter, § 38 2,1| and women do we want to form, and what kind of society,
39 2,2| apostolic concern, mainly in the form of "religious acts" which
40 2,2| Christian awareness: to form the pupil as a person and
41 2,c| experiences. The meetings take the form of sharing in small groups
Reint. of the presences in the form. and educ. of today
Chapter, § 42 0,1| and women do we want to form, and what kind of society,
43 0,2| apostolic concern, mainly in the form of "religious acts" which
44 0,2| Christian awareness: to form the pupil as a person and
USG 54a Assembly - November 1998
Chapter, § 45 2,c| experiences. The meetings take the form of sharing in small groups
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