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4. The
indications of the document "Consecrated Persons and their Mission in Schools, Reflections and Guidelines (October
28, 2002)
On the occasion of the XXXVII anniversary of the
promulgation of the declaration Gravissima educationis of Vatican Council II, the Congregation for
Catholic Education, considered opportune to publish the document Consecrated
Persons and their Mission in Schools.
The
document has an introduction (nn. 1-6), a conclusion (nn. 81-84) and two parts,
of different length. The first one is entitled: "Profile of Consecrated
Persons" (nn. 7-28) and the second one: "The Educational Mission of
Consecrated Persons Today" (nn. 29-80). The first part is articulated in
the following four sections: "At the School of Christ the Teacher"
(nn. 7-11); "Radical Response"
(nn. 12-14); "In the Church Communion" (nn. 15-21); "Before the
World" (nn. 22-28).
The
document, which had a long gestation period, was finished after the apostolic
Letter Novo millennium ineunte and after the Instruction Starting afresh from
Christ. In fact, these two documents are quoted and have been used. This
document was finished and published before the publication of the apostolic
letter Rosarium Virginis Mariae. This is
not the moment to examine all the points of the document or to make an
evaluation of all its content. In no way do I intend to deny its merit. My task
today is to examine and evaluate the presence of the elements of the programme
"Starting afresh from Christ with Mary" in these documents.
The concrete formula "Starting afresh from
Christ" was never used in the first part. In the center of the content of
this part, nevertheless, is found Christ, the Teacher, from whom consecrated
persons have to start afresh in order to exercise, in an adequate way, their
educational mission in the school during the new millennium. In the first part,
in fact, is presented the profile of consecrated persons especially from the
Christological point of view. It begins treating this by a long quotation from
the beginning of the exhortation Vita consecrata. Then the work is continued proposing again
and using determinate Christological expressions of numbers 5, 18, and 22 of
the Exhortation. The document then presents
an identity card of consecrated persons which is highly Christological:
"By the force of their identity, consecrated persons constitute 'a living
memorial of Jesus' way of living and acting as Incarnate Word in relation to
the Father and in relation to the brethern' (VC 22)" (n. 25). The document deserves to be praised
for the way in which it has presented this point, which is the central point.
The
formula "Starting afresh from Christ" appears only in the conclusion
of the document. It is concrete and it
is commented as follows: "It is a matter of discovering and renewing an
awareness of one's own identity, finding again the inspiring nucleuses of a
skilled educational professionalism to be rediscovered as a way of being that represents an
authentic vocation. The root of this
renewed awareness is Christ. Consecrated persons working in schools must start
from him to find again the motivating source of their mission. Starting afresh from Christ means
contemplating his face, pausing at length with him in prayer to then be able to
show him to others. It is what the Church is called to accomplish at the
beginning of the new millennium, conscious that only faith can enter the
mystery of that face (cfr, NMI 19). Starting again from Christ is, therefore,
also for consecrated men and women, starting afresh from faith nourished by the
sacraments and supported by a hope that does not fail : 'I am with you always'
(Mt 28, 20)" (n.82).
The
Marian aspect of consecrated life is not proposed in the document in an
adequate manner. To it are dedicated only the eleven lines - which are the best
- of the last number of the first part. The first two lines read: "Consecrated persons find in Mary the
model to inspire them in their relations with God and in living human
history" (n. 28). The Marian
description of consecrated life given in number 28 is certainly incomplete. In
it, for example, is completely absent the aspect of "Mother". Mary is
never presented as Mother of God, Mother of Christ, Mother of Christians or
Mother, in a particular way of consecrated persons. In a document of this type,
it would have been very appropriate, for example, some brush-strokes on Mary,
"educator of Jesus", and "teacher" of the form of life of consecrated
persons.
The
reader experiences a certain sense of disillusionment when being aware that
also in the whole of the second part there is no mention at all concerning the
convenience of educating, at least in the Catholic school, also to a Christian
life which is solidly Marian. The name of Mary appears only once in the 84
numbers of the document, that is in number 28 already mentioned.
In
conclusion this document offers to consecrated persons good guidelines to
"start afresh from Christ" at the beginning of the new millennium in
the exercise of their educational mission in the school. On the other hand, the
orientations to do "with Mary" are not sufficient. Therefore, even
after the publication of this document, the most solid and complete description
of the programme "Starting afresh from Christ with Mary" as
consecrated persons is found in the exhortation Vita consecrata.
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