| Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
| Alphabetical [« »] communions 1 communism 1 communitarian 1 communities 39 community 45 compact 1 comparison 1 | Frequency [« »] 41 own 40 if 40 service 39 communities 39 through 38 because 37 religions | Various Authors USG 53a Assembly - May 1998 IntraText - Concordances communities |
The cons. Life in the mission "ad gentes" Chapter, Paragraph
1 1,5| non-Christians from young communities to areas where Christianity 2 5,3| the constitution of local communities made up of persons from 3 5,3| as to how to make such communities efficient for the pastoral 4 5,5| traumatic for the local communities that receive them. And The cons. life in the miss. ad gentes today Chapter, Paragraph
5 5 | them to the mission. When communities are under the influence 6 5 | mission ad gentes, as were the communities of Jerusalem or Antioch, 7 5 | religious, as in institutes and communities, the Spirit reveals the Missio ad gentes and the excl. missionary inst. Chapter, Paragraph
8 2,2| of these older Christian communities calls for a renewed missionary 9 2,2| churches, establish religious communities of sisters, open schools 10 4,1| commitments. We help the Christian communities, constituted thanks to our 11 4,1| their turn. As soon as these communities, living in communion with 12 4,2| to God and create dynamic communities that live and proclaim the 13 4,2| populations who are marginalized; communities suffering from wars or atheistic 14 4,3| gentes help the Christian communities established thanks to our Pr. and prosp. common to all inst. of cons. life in the miss. ad gentes Chapter, Paragraph
15 1,3| proselytism by Christian and other communities whether in the American 16 1,4| apostolic personnel. The local communities cannot and have not been 17 1,4| the increase in Christian communities. The challenges become a 18 1,4| of the existing Christian communities which results in a diminishing 19 1,5| change in the composition of communities of consecrated life. Some 20 1,5| there is a change from communities made up mainly of foreigners 21 1,5| mainly of foreigners to communities composed of local members. 22 1,5| number of local diocesan communities, lacking in means and in 23 1,5| service of the Christian communities. Sometimes there is a lack 24 2,2| Christian countries too, communities and cultural groups are 25 2,2| 50), of ecclesial basic communities (cf. RM 51), of inculturation ( Group meeting: institutes excl. missionaries Chapter, Paragraph
26 | willing to accompany Christian communities as long as there is specific Small group gatherings - Monastic Ord. Chapter, Paragraph
27 | those countries in which our communities are not really in a situation 28 | look at the history of our communities’ participation in this " 29 | the founding of monastic communities in these two continents 30 | Benedictine Sisters 15~Monastic communities in Asia (1988)~Monks 40~ 31 | and aid among the various communities, communities which are often 32 | the various communities, communities which are often very small, Miss. ad gentes in the life of the soc. of apost. life Chapter, Paragraph
33 | lay missionaries in their communities and apostolates. For this Formation for mission Chapter, Paragraph
34 | missionary friars in formation communities -- those returning, for 35 | great help to formation communities.~The task indicated in Redemptoris 36 | of formation: ~ formation communities can be established in the 37 | preferably for international communities of formation, where the Miss. ad gentes - Dial. in the non-Christian cont. Chapter, Paragraph
38 | types of prophetic religious communities have to emerge in the context 39 | fruits if our religious communities in the non-Christian context