| Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
| Alphabetical [« »] meetings 1 melting 1 member 2 members 68 men 21 mendicant 1 mendicant-conventual 1 | Frequency [« »] 73 was 71 also 68 cf 68 members 67 missionaries 66 work 64 2 | Various Authors USG 53a Assembly - May 1998 IntraText - Concordances members |
The cons. Life in the mission "ad gentes" Chapter, Paragraph
1 3 | investiture, relationships of members with their families especially 2 3 | Relations Between Bishops and Members of the Consecrated Life. 3 3 | increased the ability of members of the Consecrated Life 4 3 | expatriates and autocthonous members, both in regards to their 5 3 | communion and dialogue with members of the hierarchy, especially 6 3 | the Mixed Committees of members of the Episcopal Conferences 7 3 | Episcopal Conferences and members of the Major Superiors Conferences. 8 3 | the country, either with members of the hierarchy (e.g. contracts, 9 5,1| personnel who are already members of these Institutes are 10 5,1| growing number of their members for various reasons are 11 5,1| coming from lands where these members were once employed (Africa 12 5,1| certain lessening of the members' enthusiasm to their missionary 13 5,1| the ageing of the veteran members, is the tendency of these 14 5,1| Institutes to scatter their members in various undertakings, 15 5,1| strengthen the role of "Associate Members" or "Associates" of the 16 5,1| community life with the members under vow or oath. Their 17 5,1| Their reception as live-in members was often mixed, wanted 18 5,1| distinction between the members in vows or oath and the 19 5,1| or oath and the Associate members became rather blurred even 20 5,2| on-going formation of the members of missionary Institutes~ 21 5,3| territories among their members, is the constitution of 22 5,4| Changed Relationship between Members of Missionary Institutes 23 5,4| diocesan Bishop and the members of missionary Institutes 24 5,4| of his diocese, while the members of the missionary Institutes 25 5,4| the work to be done, the members to be assigned to it and 26 5,4| Plenary Congregation of its members, dedicated precisely to 27 5,5| the assignments of the members, and especially those who 28 5,5| amount of money which the members will receive from the parishes 29 5,5| professional training for the members, which gives them both a 30 5,5| of some of your Institute members to the Diocesan Bishops 31 5,5| offer some of your best members as formators and superiors. 32 5,5| the part of some of the members of your own houses of formation 33 5,5| house like the ordinary members of the Institute, and perhaps 34 5,5| you will not accept these members into your own Institute The cons. life in the miss. ad gentes today Chapter, Paragraph
35 2 | Churches and of all the members of the Church in the universal 36 2 | particular the responsibility of members of institutes of consecrated 37 3 | quite a few people - and members of institutes of consecrated 38 4 | Consecrated Life, whose members "dedicate themselves through 39 4 | become sons in the Son and members of the Church, whose nature 40 5 | active apostolate demand it, members of these institutes (which Missio ad gentes and the excl. missionary inst. Chapter, Paragraph
41 2,3| possibility of recruiting members for themselves. Our first 42 2,3| today the mentality of some members and Bishops. Among the missionaries 43 3,1| on the mission of all the members of God's people to be at 44 4,2| to have two categories of members. Whatever their nationality, 45 4,2| their nationality, all the members belong to the Province in 46 4,2| an increasing number of members of the Third World and our 47 4,3| more complex when young members coming from the local Church Pr. and prosp. common to all inst. of cons. life in the miss. ad gentes Chapter, Paragraph
48 Int | and women religious, the members of these Institutes are 49 1,4| religions to dialogue with their members, which in some cases enables 50 1,5| habits of the religious members. The challenge for the exclusively 51 1,5| communities composed of local members. The refounding or inculturation 52 1,5| account of the new local members. The change of leadership 53 1,5| change of leadership to local members also requires adjustments. 54 1,5| seen as a labor force and members of a subordinate state. 55 2,2| for equality among all the members. ~By way of conclusion to 56 2,2| churches requires that the members of the Institutes of consecrated 57 2,5| clergy and of the local members of diocesan or international Group meeting: institutes excl. missionaries Chapter, Paragraph
58 | redefined in regard to those members entering our Institutes, 59 | constitutes a limit: our members are better prepared for Small group gatherings - Monastic Ord. Chapter, Paragraph
60 | Places for encounters with members of other religions~The monastery’ Miss. ad gentes in our inst. mendic.-convent. orders group" Chapter, Paragraph
61 Pre | constituted of the 15 Orders, members of USG, known as Mendicant 62 Pre | the fact that religious members of those Orders, called " Miss. ad gentes in the life of the soc. of apost. life Chapter, Paragraph
63 | today. ~ Habitually their members make a permanent commitment The ad gentes miss. in an inst. of brothers Chapter, Paragraph
64 | impels us" (2 Cor 5:14). The members of every Institute should 65 | Today, more than half our members are Asian or African. After 66 | and temporarily professed members is clearly on the increase.~ Cons. life as a way to inculturation Chapter, Paragraph
67 5 | of spirit and heart among members of an institute in a disconcerting Lay ass. and miss. ad gentes, of the Maryknoll f. and br. Chapter, Paragraph
68 2 | Presently there are 125 members of the Maryknoll Mission