GIJIDELINES AND DIRECTIVES 71
crated persons are called to be precisely living memorials of
Jesus, eschatological signs, in their poverty, chastity and obedi-
ence. In an age that has discovered the beauty ofbody and sexu-
ality, the created world and freedom, and that yet blights all by
exaggeration and overkill and an absolutizing of what is fragile
and relative, consecrated persons are spiritual therapy, sign,
prophecy. And it is our life that is a sign. The ministry of the
priest remains valid even if the priest is unworthy, but the con-
secrated person is a sign only through the limpidity of his life.
There is no chastity in a religious who is not chastes.
In a church that is not only Petrine but also Marian, and
Marian before being Petrine, consecrated life takes its place at
the Marian heart of the church. For the Petrine ministry is des-
tined to pass, but the Marian is the ultimate vocation of the
whole church'. Consecrated persons are a sign and a reminder to
the whole church of its final vocation and destiny. And also here
the Brother is a sign to his priest confreres in the community. His
vocation is the Salesian life in pure form'0, in statu nascendi", a
permanent reminder to his priest confreres of their consecration.
2. The path ahead
Reflection on the figure of the Salesian Brother thus leads us
to a new appreciation of the Salesian consecrated vocation in its
two forms. In the present guidelines, however, as we have said,
we would like to give renewed attention to the lay form of our
'See Bozzor,o 335.
e Catechisrn of the Catholic Church n. 773.
'o Philip RINaloI in ASC 4, cited by Vigand, "The Lay Element in the Salesian Com-
munity," AGC 298 (1980) section 5.
11 "In statu nascendi" (in the state of being born, or just emerging; nascent state)
refers to the state of certain elements at the moment of liberation in a chemical or elec-
trolytic reaction, characterized by a high reactivity. The term is now used analogously in
other fields to indicate the great potentiality of certain experiences/situations at their
origin, with the capacity to influence future developments. See, for example, Francesco
Ar,spnoNI, who uses it of the period in which a group of persons, united by common
hopes, come together to create a new force (e.9., a movement), seeing in these beginnings
dynamics which are very similar to those that we find when two persons fa-ll in love.