Starting Afresh in Hope
4. The Great Jubilee of 2000, which profoundly involved
all forms of consecrated life throughout the world, has had a great impact on
the life of the Church. On 2 February 2000, preceded by a prayerful
preparation, the Jubilee of Consecrated life was celebrated in all the local
Churches.
At the end of the Jubilee Year, in
the hope that we might cross the threshold of the new millennium together, the
Holy Father sought to summarize the heritage of the Jubilee Celebrations in the
Apostolic Letter Novo Millennio Ineunte. This text
presents, with extraordinary yet predictable continuity, some
fundamental themes already mentioned in the Exhortation Vita Consecrata: Christ, the
centre of life for every Christian,11 the pastoral practice
and teaching on holiness, its demanding character, its high standard of ordinary Christian living,12 the
widespread need for spirituality and prayer realized principally in
contemplation and in listening to the Word of God,13 the
irreplaceable effects of the sacramental life,14 the
spirituality of communion,15 and the
witness of Love which is expressed in a new
creativity of charity towards those who suffer, towards a wounded world
enslaved in hatred, in a spirit of ecumenical and inter-religious dialogue.16
The Members of the Plenary, taking
as points of departure the elements received from the Apostolic Exhortation and
presented by the experience of the Jubilee as well as the call for a new
commitment to holiness, highlighted the questions and hopes pointed out by
consecrated persons throughout the world, concentrating on the most important
aspects. Their intention was not to produce another doctrinal document but
rather to help consecrated life enter into the great pastoral guidelines of the
Holy Father with the contribution of his authority and of charismatic service
to unity and to the universal mission of the Church. A gift which is shared and
put into practice with fidelity to the following of Christ through the
evangelical counsels and with the strength of charity daily lived in fraternal
communion and in a generous apostolic spirituality.
The special Continental Assemblies
of the Synod of Bishops which served as preparations for the Jubilee Year have
already addressed the hopes and challenges of consecrated life in the context
of the local Churches and cultures. The members of the Plenary did not intend
to offer another analysis of the situation. More simply, taking into account
the present state of religious life and seeking to remain attentive to the
guidelines of the Holy Father, they invite consecrated men and women in their
particular situation and culture to focus
primarily on spirituality. Their reflections contained in these pages are
articulated in four parts. Having recognized the rich experiences which
consecrated life is experiencing in the Church at the present time, they wished
to express their gratitude and their wholehearted esteem for what consecrated life is and for what it does (Part 1). They
did not close their eyes to the difficulties, trials and challenges which
consecrated persons are experiencing today but looked upon them as a new opportunity to rediscover, more
profoundly, the meaning and quality of consecrated life (Part II). The most important challenge is that of a renewed commitment to the spiritual life,
starting afresh from Christ in adhering to the Gospel and living the spirituality of communionin a unique
way (Part III). Finally, they wanted
to accompany consecrated persons on the
streets of the world where Christ walked and today is present, where the
Church proclaims him as Savior of the world, where the Trinitarian life spreads
communion in a renewed mission (Part IV).
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