1247 RM's final day in PNG: holy individuals, yes, but holy communities, please!
austraLasia 1247
RM's final day in PNG: holy individuals, yes, but
holy communities, please!
PORT MORESBY: 16th September 2005 -- On his final day in
PNG, the 14th September, Fr Chávez had his fair share of
meetings: 9.00 with the bulk of Salesians in the Delegation, including
all the young confreres; Rectors and Delegation council meeting 11.00;
meeting with young Salesians in formation later int he afternoon.
The first gathering, with some 40 confreres, was
devoted to Religious Life today. The Rector Major drew on Vita
Consecrata, the post-synodal Papal Exhortation on Religious Life, but
also and especially on the World Congress on Consecrated Life in Rome
last year, which celebrated the 10th anniversary of VC (the above
document), focusing on the theme: passion for Christ and for
humanity. The Rector Major invited his listeners to read VC and
also the acts of the recent congress, especially the first talk.
In a question session that followed, Fr
Chávez was asked what Don Bosco thought about consecrated
life. In response the RM said his thinking was summed up in the
da mihi animas - his love for God and for the young. His entire
life is consecrated in those directions. He went on to say that
in an evaluation of the congress (The RM is one of the central
committee members), they agreed that Religious Life always has three
essential elements, whatever form it takes: experience of God,
fraternal community and mission. He expressed himself well satisfied
with the choices of GC25 which re-emphasised such elements for
Salesians. Fraternal community alone is insufficient - we need to share
our experience of God with our brothers. We achieve a high standard of
spiritual life by means of a life project. And we want to renew
our communities not just for themselves but for the mission.
In an open forum that followed, one questioner asked
about the way we live our religious life within the local church which
we attempt to rejuvenate - do we lose our identity as we mix, on the
one hand, or set up a parallel church on the other, separate
from? In response the RM pointed out that the Major Superiors are
now insisting on a new Mutuae Relationes (the document expressing
agreement and cooperation between Bishops and Religious, written 35
years ago). In practice there is a new ecclesiology in action and
Bishops and Religious need to sit down again together and think this
through. We need a different attitude - both groups, that is.
Another question concerned community life in small
communities and the difficulty if not impossibility of common
timetables. The RM agreed these are trying situations and cited
an example of a mission territory (Ecuador) where confreres in mission
parishes stay together two days a week, then go off to their
parishes. Not ideal but a step forward from earlier times when
either they were all together all the time and the mission suffered or
never together and community life suffered. And to a question on
the radical nature of Salesian holiness in individuals today (16,000
but maybe few saints?) the RM responded by saying it is not just
individual holiness he keeps stressing, though that too. But
important also is the quality of community holiness, community
spiritual life. He knows many holy Salesians, he said, giving an
example of a particular individual who clearly draws his energy from
the primacy of God in his life, but the real challenge is holy
communities and we can't delegate that. The community is us!
_________________________
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