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II. MEANS
1.Reflecting
at a community, provincial and general level.
The demand of the
Church to renew the Constitutions of Religious Institutes initiated a process
of reflection beginning at grass roots and which involved, first of all the
communities, then the Provinces and, much later, the General Chapters both
ordinary and extraordinary at the end of the 1960's. The fruit of these
reflections on a general level returned to the ground level and with their
support served as a departure point for drawing up the new Constitutions. In
Chapter 1 of these, the charism of our institute as well as its accompanying
spirituality was clearly defined.
2.
Ongoing formation courses on our charism and spirituality
In my Congregation,
as well as in many others, the statement of Vatican II on the role of formation
for the future of religious life was taken seriously. For this reason, many
documents of the General Curia in postconciliar years emphasised the need of
organizing systematic courses on the charism and spirituality for all our
religious. The attempt was made above all at a Provincial level to organize
spiritual exercises and other courses on the history of the Order and its
spirituality to help reinforce their own identity. Sabbatical periods began to
be organized in places that are special to the Order: Mount Carmel the
birth-place of the Order and Avila the cradle of the Teresian refoundation. In
these Sabbatical periods courses for deepening knowledge of Carmel’s spirituality
and its biblical roots were offered to groups of our religious from all over
the world.
3.
Creation of Spirituality Institutes
Another
significant step along the was of refounding the charism through living its
spirituality was the creation of Institutes of Spirituality in various
countries, as a means of living out the demands of our charism and placing it
at the service of the Church. Before the Council we had but one Spirituality
Institute: the Teresianum at Rome. Now we have 3 in India, 5 in Latin America,
3 in Europe and one in Africa. To this we should add that around ninety of the
little more than 500 communities we have in the world (in 72 nations) are
devoted to the apostolate of spirituality: houses of prayer and retreat houses.
4.
Periodial meetings with the Provincials (every two years)
Another important
means for refounding the charism has been periodical meetings with the
Provincials, which we call extraordinary Definitories. In each one of them
there has been an insistence upon the need for formation in the spirituality of
the Order and to give a particular stamp to our apostolates with an accent on
the life of prayer and by revealing and transmitting the wealth of Christian
spirituality.
5.
International Congresses on various aspects of our charism and spirituality
Finally, we
arrange every year an international congress on various aspects of our charism:
formation, Secular Carmel, the apostolate of spirituality, missions, the media
and in all these the import aspect is our spirituality, living it out and
spreading it.
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