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What does refounding mean to
us?
As women who are
situated in the world, allowing ourselves to be confronted by it, we have
undertaken a process which, during the last thirty years, has profoundly
changed our style of life, of government and of formation, and has given us a
different outlook on our spirituality, mission and community life.
Before Vatican II
we had a certainty about our identity and our place in the Church and the world
and we did not speak of refounding. Like every religious congregation, we passed
through a crisis, and this crisis led us to experience not only the struggle
for survival but the beginning a serious and deep journey which would not be
merely a renewal.
We have understood
that religious life is not the only "way of perfection", but rather a
way of living out our Christianity in the following of Jesus, in an apostolic
congregation, by means of the vows and in the context of community.
We have taken
seriously the reflection on our experience and the last General Chapters have
given us direction and helped us to define with greater clarity what we want to
live.
In 1982 we revised
our Constitutions and they were approved in 1987. The Society of the Sacred
Heart, from its origens has been characterized by a contemplation of the
situation of the world - the contemporary reality. That reality in France, at
the beginning of the nineteenth century impelled Saint Madeleine Sophie Barat
to gather together a group of women in order to give a response to the crisis
of faith engendered by the French Revolution. Conscious of the situation of
women, and with a vision of their role in the family and society, she saw the
education of women as an urgent need.
The manner in
which we situate ourselves in the world and contemplate reality, going from the
pierced Heart of Jesus to the pierced heart of humanity, was one of the factors
which moved us and led us to search for a new way to address the challenges
which the world and the Church presented to us as urgent needs to which we had
to respond. Vatican Council II led us to see the world with new eyes and to
situate ourselves in it in a way that is more inserted and in solidarity with
the sufferings and hopes of humanity. This shift in focus meant changing, for
apostolic reasons, from a more conventual to a more open community life. It was
no longer a question of waiting for people to come to us, but rather of going
out in search of them. What we saw then as a necessary renewal we understand
now as needing a further step: the Church as well as religious life is being
called to a refounding.
It was necessary
for us to experience some chaos before arriving at creative responses. We went
through a crisis of institutional mistrust, in which there was much
self-questioning and strong differences among us regarding the meaning of
religious life and the form of living it, and a consequent diversity of
responses.
Today we can speak
of refounding because we we find ourselves in a new situation with more hope
and energy and because we know that it is urgent to continue on the road of
searching to express what religious life is today.
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