|
- The economy and the religious life in Third
World countries: dependency, autonomy, lifestyles, aid.
Our group examined this subject from three
points of view:
1. challenges
2. observations
3. the way forward
We will begin our presentation with lifestyles.
1.
LIFESTYLES
1) Challenges
a. The Synod on the VC had already stressed the importance of
inculturation of the religious in all areas of the world. This problem is now becoming
more apparent because of the emerging global culture. However, this must not
lead us to forget the richness to be found in cultural variety.
b.
Western consumerism is a culture that is taking over in developing countries
and this has an effect on our candidates and on our brothers. Therefore it is
important for the inculturation of the Consecrated Life in developing countries
that we demonstrate the simplicity of our lifestyle, especially those of us who
are expatriates.
c.
In the past, many people saw the VC as a promotion; this can still happen in
developing countries.
2) Observations
In order to meet these challenges, we see that all the members of our
Institutes must make an effort to return to the essential values of the Gospels
and of our origins. In this way, with creative fidelity, we will be able to
respond to the problems at present affecting the life of the Church.
3) The way forward
a. Educate the brothers in the Southern Hemisphere for a lifestyle that
is inculturated, simple and close to the conditions of the people in those
countries.
b.
Consider the possibility of formation in the South instead of the North.
c.
Help our brothers to use local resources so as to be less dependent on outside
aid.
II.
COMMUNION AND SOLIDARITY
1) Challenges
a. Our Institutes must face the challenge of
increasing Solidarity in the world and in the Church. This solidarity must take
the form both of reciprocal understanding and aid and the sharing of financial
resources.
b.
The special part to be played by the general administration in promoting
awareness and putting this sharing into practice.
2) Observations
All the Congregations’ assets are at the service of the global mission.
3) The way forward
a. Organise training sessions for the
Treasurers and for the communities with the aim that everyone understand the
importance of finances and so that they can take part in planning.
b. Create an awareness of the Province and of
the Congregation so as to overcome parish jealousies and individualism.
c.
Agree as a community on the aid to be given to the poor, to brothers’ families
and to the local Churches.
III.
FINANCIAL INDEPENDENCE
1) Challenges
a.
The financial independence of our Institutes in developing countries is urgent
and necessary.
b.
One of the causes of this problem are the plans made with a Western mentality,
which do not correspond to the social and cultural situations in the developing
countries.
c.
Funds being created in advanced countries to achieve financial independence in
developing countries have met with difficulties because of the fall in interest
rates.
2) Observations
a.
The starting point will always be the return to the essential Gospel values and
to the person of Christ. He is the way, the truth and the life.
b.
We need a “refoundation” of the religious life which has always begun amongst
the poor and at the service of the poor.
c.
We must always proceed with hope. There is no lack of religious, groups,
experiences that are islands of creativity for the future.
3) The way forward
a.
Financial independence begins with our own paid work, not forgetting the
possibility of aid from international organisations.
b.
Formation has a place in bringing about this change: we need to create a “work
ethic” that includes manual labour, and a certain austerity in our lifestyle as
the expression of the basic evangelical principles.
c.
Through dialogue with our brothers in the various regions, create structures
that are realistic and meet the needs of the culture. Local models of religious
life can help us to find solutions.
d.
We must convince ourselves that in some areas it is almost impossible to
achieve a state of financial independence that will allow us to meet the costs
of university formation for our candidates.
Instead, we can work towards financial independence in regard to ordinary
expenditure.
e. A life that brings us into closer daily contact with the poor might
make it easier to identify vocations. This could avoid what in the past has
been one of the causes of an abundance of vocations – the promotion of the
person – and which has then led to so many leaving our congregations.
-
Asset management
and evangelical criteria: how to calculate what reserves we need and what to do
with the surplus? What role does Providence play in our lives? Is our lifestyle
one of poverty?
How do we calculate what
reserves we need? What should we do with any surplus?
- First and foremost, we should not live off
our reserves, but by our own work, whether in solidarity with the external
environment in which we find ourselves or as a matter of solidarity within our own
communities, taking into account the specific nature of the various institutes.
- Moreover, if we set aside reserves, then we
must set a ceiling on them, for without fixed limits there is a risk of holding
too much capital.
- In general, any surplus should be used to
support formation, new foundations and those people who are no longer active;
the institute’s own external solidarity must also be kept in mind.
- We must determine which kind of reserve and
which type of long- or short-term investment fund to use. We might set our
criteria on the basis of recognised needs and fix the reserve ceiling in
proportion to the return on capital. The needs referred to may include
provision for social welfare and there are various ways in which they can be
identified: actuarial studies (long-term plans for the future), an evaluation
of accounting results and future prospects (carried out by the plenary council
of the community), etc. This kind of audit may result in monies being set aside
in a shared common fund.
- The need has been demonstrated not only to
train people as experts in finance and administration, but also to educate
people not only to receive surpluses, but also to share them with others. If
the criteria for sharing are not clear enough problems and misunderstandings
may arise, so clear criteria must be established for sharing any surplus.
- We suggest a study be undertaken into the
various types of management (more or less centralised) in order to evaluate
their advantages and disadvantages.
- Congregations without sufficient resources
are beginning to request assistance; the USG should examine the possibility of
creating a fund and of extending this examination to the level of the Church.
- We must begin by considering that
Providence comes firstly from our own efforts. Trust in Providence does not
relieve us of the obligation to produce something. We must make a commitment to
do so, but we must not worry about it.
- The trust in Providence that is a feature
of our charism leads some people to ask continual questions, especially about
how that trust is to be transmitted to the younger generations.
- In general, this point obviously needs
on-going examination and comparison with the example set by our founders, who
knew how to marry trust in Providence with practical dedication.
- There is a conflict between man’s inherent
desire to accumulate and the limits that need to be set. This means thinking
about how we understand Providence.
- We believe Providence should be understood
as committing ourselves to co-operate with actions that originate from God;
careful management of the assets entrusted to us is part of that co‑operation.
- Certain kinds of mission should not have
finance as their chief criterion, but rather be motivated by the desire to
support the actions that come from God.
- We must all think about how we can be
Providence for other people.
- For us, the poor are teachers who teach us
how to live with trust in Providence.
A life of poverty
- We must insist on a visible life of poverty
at the level of the community.
- This makes us somewhat ill at ease because
it questions the relevance of some of our choices.
- How does the cultural environment in which
we live react to our life style? How do we react to the drives or temptations
that come to us from that environment?
- There is a certain amount of difficulty
between missionaries working in developing countries and the local brothers; the
missionaries can often count on far greater resources from their countries of
origin to support the mission. All the resources for the mission must become
community property and be managed by the community.
- We must join a life of poverty in the evangelical
sense with the fight against poverty that is oppressing the human race.
- We should put greater emphasis on
understanding and sharing the life of the poor in the environment in which we
find ourselves. This means sharing not only resources but also our time, our
whole lives.
- We sometimes run the risk of becoming
involved in the consumer society.
- We must believe that a life of poverty also
means not having too much security.
At the end of this examination, we cannot fail to
indicate that we find ourselves faced with a complicated subject, which may make many Superiors General feel
incompetent; they may feel poorly motivated or at best not very much involved.
Nevertheless, the financial reports of a Religious Institute or a Province
reveal many factors and data that will help us to analyse the path of spiritual
revitalisation which the group is taking. It is important that good management
and distribution of assets based on the teaching of the Gospels are reflected
in proposals and implementation of new plans for using and sharing what we
have. We must demonstrate fraternal solidarity to a point beyond what might be
judged as financially sensible. And we can only do this if we start with a
simple way of life and with full trust in Providence.
There is no doubt that the way of focusing on and dealing with financial
matters expresses very well what a congregation believes and hopes, and in
which it places its trust on a practical basis. The Gospels remind us that,
“Where your treasure is, there will your heart be also” (Mt 6,21). Throughout
this documents we have tried to offer guidance to make our mission, the
proclamation of the Kingdom, our “treasure”, and to put our assets at the
service of this mission. Making the economy serve the person and the mission is
a practical way of serving the Church.
Rome, May
2002
|