Communion between Old and New Charisms
30. The communion which consecrated persons are called
to live goes far beyond their own religious family or Institute. Opening
themselves to communion with other Institutes and other forms of consecration,
they can spread communion, rediscover their common Gospel roots and together
grasp the beauty of their own identity in the variety of charisms with greater
clarity. They should compete in mutual esteem (cf. Rm 12:10), striving for the greater gift, charity (cf. 1Cor 12:31).
Meeting and solidarity among
institutes are thus encouraged, aware that “communion is closely linked to the
Christian community's ability to make room for all the gifts of the Spirit. The
unity of the Church is not uniformity, but an organic blending of legitimate
diversities. It is the reality of many members joined in a single body, the one
Body of Christ (cf. 1Cor. 12:12)”.95
It can be the beginning of a joint
search for common ways of serving the Church. External factors, such as having to
comply with the new demands of States and internal Institute factors such as
the decrease in the number of members, have already led to the coordination of
efforts in the fields of formation, the management of goods, education and
evangelization. Even in these situations we can find the Spirit's invitation to
a more intense communion. The Conferences of Major Superiors and Conferences of
Secular Institutes are to be supported at all levels in this task.
The future can no longer be faced in
isolation. There is a need to be Church, to together live the adventure of the
Spirit and of the following of Christ, communicating the experience of the
Gospel, learning to love the other's community and religious family as one's
own. The joys and sorrows, the concerns and successes belong to everyone and
can be shared.
Dialogue and communion are also
sought from new forms of evangelical life. These new associations of
evangelical life, Vita Consecrata reminds us, “are not alternatives to already existing
Institutions, which continue to hold the pre-eminent place assigned to them by
tradition... The older institutes, many of which have been tested by the
severest of hardships, which they have accepted courageously down
the centuries, can be enriched through dialogue and an exchange of gifts with
the Foundations appearing in our own day”.96
Finally, a new richness can spring
from an encounter and communion with the charisms of ecclesial movements.
Movements can often offer the example of evangelical and charismatic freshness
such as the generous, creative initiatives in evangelization. On the other
hand, movements as well as new forms of evangelical life can learn a great deal
from the faithful, joyful and charismatic witness of consecrated life which
bears a very rich spiritual patrimony, the many treasures of experience and
wisdom and a great variety of apostolates and missionary commitments.
Our Dicastery has already offered
criteria and directives for the insertion of Religious men and women into
ecclesial movements which are still valid.97 What we would
rather stress here is the relationship of knowledge and collaboration, of
esteem and sharing which could be inserted not only among individuals but also
among Institutes, ecclesial movements, and new forms of consecrated life in
view of a growth in life in the Spirit and of the carrying out of the Church's
one mission. It is a question of recognizing which came about through the
promptings of the same Spirit to bring about the fullness of evangelical life
in the world, coming together to realize God's one plan for the salvation of
all. The spirituality of communion is realized precisely in this vast dialogue
of evangelical fraternity among all segments of the people of God.98
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