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The Ideal of Christian
Perfection
The ideal of Christian
perfection is derived from the teachings of Christ and in particular from the
evangelical counsels. It is derived from the life of Christ, from His passion
and death-the inexhaustible fonts in which the heroism of all Christian
generations find their nourishment. It also includes the work of Christ, that
is to say, the service of the Church performed out of love for Christ, in the
position and according to the function that devolve upon each one in the entire
Mystical Body.
Every Christian is called
upon to strive to attain this ideal of perfection with all his strength, but it
is fulfilled in a more complete and certain way in the three states of
perfection according to the manner described in Canon Law and in the
aforementioned Apostolic Constitutions. In particular the Constitution Provida
Mater of February 2, 1947, on "Secular Institutes" gives access
to states of perfection to the greatest possible number of souls who eagerly
aspire today to a more perfect life. Although this Constitution states that
associations which do not meet the prescribed requirements do not constitute
"states of perfection," it does not claim in any way that there do
not exist real tendencies to perfection outside the latter.
We are thinking at this
moment of all those men and women from all walks of life who, assuming the most
varied professions and functions in the modern world, out of love for God and
in order to serve Him in their fellowmen, dedicate their person and all their
activities to Him. They pledge themselves to the practice of the evangelical
counsels by private and secret vows known only to God and let themselves be
guided in matters of obedience and poverty by persons whom the Church has
judged fit for this purpose and to whom she has entrusted the task of directing
others in the exercise of perfection.
None of the constituting
elements of Christian perfection and of a real tendency to achieve it are
lacking in these men and women. They therefore really take part in it although
they are not committed to any juridic or canonical state of perfection.
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