Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
instances 4
instead 4
instinctive 1
institute 59
institutes 148
institution-dominated 1
institutional 1
Frequency    [«  »]
62 dialogue
62 god
60 people
59 institute
58 other
57 different
57 what
Various Authors
USG 53a Assembly - May 1998

IntraText - Concordances

institute

The cons. Life in the mission "ad gentes"
   Chapter, Paragraph
1 4 | certain reduction of their Institute's availability, desire and 2 4 | entrusted to a missionary Institute (or also to a particular 3 4 | religious order, the missionary Institute accepts the obligation of 4 4 | delegate of a missionary Institute. He possessed no direct 5 4 | passed from the Missionary Institute to the diocesan Bishop and 6 4 | and thus the missionary Institute has been relieved of its 7 4 | Bishop and the missionary Institute" (op. cit. pp.166-7). ~This 8 4 | Curial Office on which the Institute depends, rather than to 9 5,1| special charisma of the Institute, thereby diminishing certain 10 5,1| re-inforce the ranks of the Institute, often times for maintaining 11 5,1| seeking recruits for the Institute in mission territories for 12 5,1| missionary charisma of the Institute, whether in the nations 13 5,1| or "Associates" of the Institute. In the past, where they 14 5,1| Auxiliaries who assisted the Institute, mostly on the home front, 15 5,1| the problems faced by the Institute or engaging in various aspects 16 5,1| community houses of the Institute became a source of not a 17 5,1| internal matters of the Institute.~ 18 5,4| competent Superior of the Institute. This agreement must expressly 19 5,4| Ordinary and a Missionary Institute. At that time these contracts 20 5,4| simple contract between an Institute and the local Ordinary, 21 5,4| charge that was given to an Institute by the supreme authority 22 5,4| acceptance of this form by the Institute concerned, to collaborate 23 5,4| competent authority of an Institute in the diocese and the local 24 5,5| very houses proper to the Institute are owned by the diocese 25 5,5| owned by the diocese and the Institute has no separate juridical 26 5,5| which helps to form the Institute into a real community with 27 5,5| assistance of some of your Institute members to the Diocesan 28 5,5| the initial stages of the Institute offer some of your best 29 5,5| ordinary members of the Institute, and perhaps clear norms 30 5,5| harmony with the religious Institute receiving these persons. 31 5,5| these members into your own Institute without very special reasons The cons. life in the miss. ad gentes today Chapter, Paragraph
32 4 | emphasised as a "charism"; each institute is born as a "gift" of the 33 4 | solely hierarchical.~Every institute exists for the Church and 34 4 | with the character of the institute (MF 69, citing C.I.C., can. 35 5 | the style of life of each institute (LG 44; PC 2: "own physiognomy, 36 5 | spiritual heritage of each institute (VC 36 - and this fidelity 37 6 | to the charism of their institute and the character of the Pr. and prosp. common to all inst. of cons. life in the miss. ad gentes Chapter, Paragraph
38 1,5| between the Bishop and the Institute. The changeover is sometimes 39 1,5| from the autonomy of each Institute to intercongregational cooperation. 40 2,2| People of God. Also, each Institute of consecrated life has 41 2,2| contribution. "The identity of each Institute is bound up with a particular Group meeting: institutes excl. missionaries Chapter, Paragraph
42 | clear round concerning his Institute’s position vis a vis Ad 43 | it in our own respective Institute situation.~I briefly summarize 44 | orientations which express our Institute’s charisma today. This is The ad gentes miss. in an inst. of brothers Chapter, Paragraph
45 | ad gentes Mission~in an Institute of Brothers~ ~By way of 46 | been taking place in my Institute of the Brothers of St. Gabriel, 47 | missionary character of our Institute.~"The love of Christ impels 48 | 14). The members of every Institute should be able to repeat 49 | and in 1890 to Egypt.~The Institute took a big leap forward 50 | international face of the Institute today is largely thanks 51 | beginning of this century. The Institute of tomorrow will depend 52 | become projects of the whole Institute, and that the enthusiasm 53 | local vocations and the Institute will get established through Cons. life as a way to inculturation Chapter, Paragraph
54 1 | heritage of a religious institute outside the cultural milieu 55 5 | heart among members of an institute in a disconcerting and threatening Lay ass. and miss. ad gentes, of the Maryknoll f. and br. Chapter, Paragraph
56 1 | vocations to the missionary institute. The challenge is to understand 57 1 | promoting the vocations to the institute, without simply reducing 58 4 | dependent on a sponsoring institute. The continuity and structure 59 4 | provided for by the sponsoring institute and the associates usually


Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (V89) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2007. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License