WAYS OF
REFOUNDING THE CHARISM
BY PROMOTING VOCATIONS
As witness I will
tell of two experiences. One took place in my own religious Province, in
Paraguay. (I am German by birth, but before coming to Rome I worked for 18
years in Paraguay.) The second experience is from Spain.
"Refounding"!
The word reminds me that we used this expression about ten years ago when we
were trying to find a new formula in the promotion of vocations. We had been
ten years without any novices. During that period our policy for formation was:
to prepare our young people for a "real" community life, that is, as
they would experience it on entering the ministry. To tell the truth, the
communities in the Province did not have much life in community; community
meetings and prayer in common were not very frequent. It was taken for granted
that each one would, of his own accord, do something to nourish his piety,
facing at the same time a difficult missionary work. Another reality which should
be mentioned: the lifestyle in a Province whose members were 90% foreigners,
could not be qualified as simple. In formation our stated aim was to prepare
our young people for this reality. We considered that it would be most logical
to have the lifestyle in our prenovitiate and scholasticate correspond to the
lifestyle in the mission communities. Our young people, however, found this
formula less attractive and practically all of them left us. However, there was
a strong desire among the few young Oblates in the Province to overcome the
vocations crisis. We were looking for new ways and we spoke of
"refoundation".
The leader in this
field was a young Paraguayan Oblate named Father Marcos. He and I were given
the task of promoting vocations in the Province. Our request was accepted to
have this as a full-time occupation. The basic change which we planned to
introduce was simply to be inspired by our Founder, Saint Eugene de Mazenod,
instead of modeling ourselves on the missionaries of the present time. What would
Saint Eugene have done in the Paraguay of today? This was our starting point.
The concrete expression of this idea was a little house which the Provincial
gave us permission to acquire and which we baptized Vocations House of St
Joseph the Worker.
In his youth
ministry, Father Marcos had come to know a number of young people who wanted to
test and see if they had a vocation but who were not prepared to enter a
seminary structure. Therefore we suggested to them that they live in community
for one year. The lifestyle would be that of our Founder. Some of them
accepted. Characteristic of our lifestyle was that it was incorporated in a
typical barrio of the capital city. The eight young people and the two Oblates
slept in two rooms and took care of all the chores in the house, being
available to receive at almost any hour the young people of the barrio. There
was no formal study but we had our own program of biblical, doctrinal and human
formation. An intense life of prayer and frequentation of the Sacraments was an
important element in our experience. I shall mention one point in particular:
every week we had a silent Wednesday. The only visits allowed on that day were
by those who accepted to participate in the silence. There was fasting until
supper time. The most important apostolic activity of the vocations house were
the so-called youth missions. At different times of the year, all of us
together with other young helpers, went to places which were pastorally
abandoned, just as our Founder had done in promoting parish missions. We spent
some days or even a couple of weeks with the people, visiting their homes,
organizing meetings for the young people and for adults, giving talks and
preaching.
The vocations
house continued in this form for five years. It was discontinued for a number
of reasons. Missions to young people are still carried on today on an annual
basis. The most recent, in January of this year, involved one hundred
missionaries, including about ten Sisters, religious and priests. As regards vocations,
the fruit of our "refoundation" experience has come with the years.
Since 1986, our Province, which has about 40 Oblates, has had one or two
novices each year. Even a womens’ branch of our Congregation has taken root:
some girls who had taken part in our missions have asked to live the Oblate
charism. There is also a group of lay people who wish to share the charism of
Saint Eugene with us.
The second
experience which I wish to present took place in the First World. It happened
in Spain. If, in Paraguay, the initial motivation came from the lack of
vocations and from there we moved into youth ministry, in Spain the starting
point was the pastoral ministry among young people in itself. In working with
young people it was customary also to speak of the charism of the Congregation.
Father Alfredo, the man who initiated the movement, however, says that he was
always very discreet in suggesting to the young people the possibility of a
vocation to consecrated life. The vocations did come, just the same, and they
were to some extent the fruit of pastoral ministry among young people which was
centered on Christ. This happened in a Province which had not had a priestly
ordination or a perpetual oblation for twenty years.
I shall quote from
a report by Father Fernando, the present coordinator of youth ministry and
whose vocation is the result of the Oblate refoundation in Spain: "What we
offer to young people is the faith which is intended to fill a void which
society cannot satisfy: a response to the dissatisfaction and the emptiness
which they feel. We do so by offering them what we experience in our own lives:
JESUS CHRIST. It is in Him that we understand the real destiny of Man and of
the Church. The general aim of our program is : "To evangelize the young
people of today, by leading them to a personal encounter with Christ, a
community living of faith, in keeping with the Oblate spirit." What is
suggested to the young people is the following: To come together in
Christian life groups, or to follow on, in communities of Christian life. It is
an effort to initiate the young people to community life as expressed in Acts
2, 42-47. In their weekly meetings the young people share their lives around
the Eucharist, prayer, the Gospel, frequentation of the Sacraments and
commitment to evangelization. They also take part in the activities of the
parish or community where they live. (NB. In one of these parishes in Madrid it
is quite common to have 80 young people at weekday Mass).
Personally, I am convinced
that two-thirds of the perseverance of young people is due to accompaniment. In
their relationship with the priest, this accompaniment is realized in the
Sacrament of reconciliation and in spiritual direction. It is necessary,
however, to "lose" (or gain) a lot of time with young people. Another
important element is the fact of their coming together.
This method is at
present being used in six Oblate parishes in Spain with a total of seven
hundred young people. Among them there are life groups and some who live in
community. All youth ministry implies vocations ministry: groups in which the
young people can discern their own vocation: lay, priestly or religious
life." The results of this activity in a Viceprovince which has 50
members: 7 Oblate priests, 1 diocesan priest, 8 scholastics and 3 women
religious. All of this began twenty years ago in a Madrid suburb, in the parish
of Aluche.
These examples
will be sufficient. Others could be mentioned, experiences in France, Italy,
Senegal etc. Refoundation experiences would be needed in other areas of the
Congregation, including countries in Africa and Asia where there are many young
people in formation but where a fresh missionary impulse is needed. The most
important element in what we call refoundation is not so much the explicit
insistence on the Founder and on the charism of the Congregation. In those
places where there has been success the main reason was the promotion of the
values which animated the Founder and which are a part of our charism. Christ
himself is the center of those values.
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