Vatican City, 14 December 2015 (VIS) –
This morning in the Holy See Press Office the Congregation for the
Institutes of Consecrated Life and the Societies of Apostolic Life
presented the document “Identity and mission of the religious
brother in the Church” and the concluding activities of the Year of
Consecrated Life. The speakers were Cardinal Joao Braz de Aviz,
prefect of the dicastery, and Archbishop Jose Rodriguez Carballo,
O.F.M., secretary of the same congregation.
“The document emphasises the great
wealth and relevance of the vocation of brothers and its content is
very valid and innovative in the light of Vatican Council II”,
explained Cardinal Braz de Aviz. “The vocation of the religious
brother is, first of all, a Christian vocation … and the feature of
the person of Christ that the religious brother specially underlines
in his way of life is that of fraternity. The religious brother
reflects the face of Christ the Brother: simple, good, near to the
people, welcoming, generous, and serving”.
The identity and mission of the
religious brother, as the text indicates, is summarised in the
concept of fraternity understood as the gift that the religious
brother receives from the Triune God, a communion of persons; a gift
that he shares with his brethren in fraternal life in the community
and a gift he offers the world for the construction of a world of
children of God and brothers.
The cardinal went on to illustrate the
theme of fraternity as a gift that the religious brother receives
from the Triune God. “The religious brother becomes thus because
the Spirit lets him know God, Who in Jesus shows Himself to be a
Father full of love, tenderness and mercy. Together with Jesus, he
feels like a beloved son and with Him he offers himself so as to be
in his life entirely for the Father and entirely for all His sons and
daughters in this world. A characteristic of the identity of the
religious brother is the need for fraternity as a confession of the
Trinity: a fraternity open to all, especially the least, the humble,
the oppressed, the unloved” - those who “are less likely to
experience the good news of God's love in their lives”.
This fraternity is the gift that the
religious brother shares with his brethren in community life.
“Fraternal life in the community means harmonious relations between
brethren, mutual knowledge, acceptance and love, dialogue, mutual
respect, mutual support, the sharing of talents, the abnegation of
the self, ecclesial mission, and openness to the needs of the Church
and the world, especially those most in need. All this is beautiful,
but it is not obtained spontaneously.. … The community is sustained
by the gift of fraternity that religious brothers receive. The
brother needs to support for these fraternal relations by developing
the spiritual, mystical and theological dimension”.
Fraternity is, finally, a gift that the
religious brother offers to the world and which is transformed into
mission. Therefore, “brothers carry out their mission of
contributing to the construction of the Kingdom of fraternity through
ceaseless prayer, the witness of fraternal life and community
dedication to the service of the Church and the world. … The
fraternity of religious brothers is not self-referential or closed up
in itself; it is … a fraternity in perfect harmony … with an
outbound Church, that reaches out to the peripheries of this world;
with a Church called upon to build bridges, open to contemporary man
of every race, culture or creed”.
Fraternal love is made manifest in the
Church and in the life of religious brothers in numerous services:
“educating, healing the sick, helping the imprisoned, welcoming
refugees, catechesis, manual work, and so on. Many of these services
represent true ministries. In this way”, the prefect concluded,
“the religious brother seeks and points to God in the secular
realities of culture, science, human health, the workplace, and the
care of the weak and disadvantaged. Similarly, he seeks and points to
the human being, man and woman, whole and entire, body, mind and
spirit, inasmuch as whatever affects the human person is part of
God's saving plan”.
Archbishop Rodriguez Carballo expressed
his gratitude to Pope emeritus Benedict XVI, who in 2008 was the
first to encourage the preparation of the document presented today,
and to Pope Francis who read the draft while he was the cardinal
archbishop of Buenos Aires and who as Pope has supported its
revision, completion and publication.
The conference concluded with an
announcement of the activities marking the closure of the Year of
Consecrated Life. From 28 January to 2 February 2016 an international
meeting of all types of consecrated life will take place in Rome,
entitled “Consecrated life and communion”, which is expected to
be attended by 6,000 consecrated men and women from all over the
world, and will conclude with Holy Mass celebrated by the Holy Father
in St. Peter's Basilica.
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