INTRODUCTION
Contemplating the Splendour of the Face of Christ
1. Contemplating Christ's crucified and glorious face1
and witnessing to his love in the world, consecrated persons joyfully accept the
Holy Father John Paul II's pressing invitation at the beginning of the third
millennium to cast out into the deep:
“Duc in altum!” (Lk 5:4). These
words, echoed throughout the whole Church have enlivened a powerful new hope,
reawakened the desire for a more intense evangelical life, and broken open the
horizons of dialogue and mission.
Perhaps today, more than ever, Jesus' invitation to cast out into the deep
appears as a response to the human drama which is the victim of hate and death.
The Holy Spirit is always active in history and can draw from human dramas a
discernment of the events which is open to the mystery of mercy and peace among
peoples. The Spirit, in fact, from the very troubled nature of the nations
calls forth in many the dream of a different world already present among us.
John Paul II assures young people of this when he exhorts them to be “sentinels
of the dawn” who, strong in the faith, keep watch, awaiting the dawn.2
Certainly the dramatic events which have
taken place in the world in these recent years have given rise to new and more
weighty questions added to those already present, which grow out of a
globalized Society. A society with its positive and negative forces in which
“not only are technology and economy globalized but also insecurity and fear,
crime and violence, injustices and war”.3
In this situation, consecrated persons are called by the
Spirit to a continual conversion to give new vigour to the prophetic
dimension of their vocation. They who, in fact, are “called to place their very
existence at the service of the cause of the Kingdom of God, leaving everything
behind and closely imitating the form of life of Jesus Christ, assume a most
important teaching role for the whole People of God”.4
The Holy Father made this
expectation clear in his message to the members of the last Plenary Session
of our Congregation: “The Church”—he writes—“counts on the continual
dedication of this chosen host of her sons and daughters, on their yearning for
holiness and upon the enthusiasm of their service to foster and sustain every
Christian's striving for perfection and to enhance the common welcoming of
neighbor, especially those most in need. In this way, witness is given to the
love of Christ among all people”.5
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