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2019 Fall Mountaineer
The United States Conference of Secular Institutes November 2019 Volume 12, Issue 3 The Mountaineer From the President: consecrated persons, to reflect the life of Christ, to radiate his love, to serve as he served. Our Dear Friends, circumstances are different, but God has As the leaves turn golden and ruby and determined an original way for each of us to the winds become brisk and filled with the aroma climb the mountain of sanctity. of fall (at least here in Nebraska), my thoughts Many of you will remember the days turn to some of my favorite feasts, that of All when we made numerous trips in and out of Saints and All Souls. These are the day when the church, and back in again, to pray for the Church remembers and celebrates the unsung deceased on All Souls Day. Now the Church has heroes of holiness throughout the millennia. given us an octave to gain indulgences for them Above all, I like to celebrate those saints “with a (November 1-8), just by visiting a cemetery and small s” that I knew personally: my Lutheran praying for them. I make it a point to alter my grandfather Ole, Terese from my institute who drive home to pass by a cemetery, pulling over to literally brought people into the Church through pray. In a special way we want to pray for all the her conversations over homemade bread, an deceased members of secular institutes, auxiliary bishop so humble and caring. remembering that we build on their shoulders. And that said, I want to let you know that In Gaudete et Exsultate Pope Francis reminds us in the past two months I have received inquiries that saints are not perfect: from three different people who are interested in “To recognize the word that the Lord founding new institutes. -
SECULAR CONSECRATION: Section Two - Chapter One
SECULAR CONSECRATION: Section Two - Chapter One We now come to the heart of what membership in a secular Institute entails, what distinguishes it from other associations of the faithful. It is the full profession of the evangelical councils of celibate chastity, poverty and obedience. Secular institutes are parallel to Religious institutes such as Jesuits and Franciscans in that both profess the evangelical counsels and are recognized by the Church. Other associations may live in the “spirit” of the counsels such as “Third Orders” (often now called “secular orders”) which often creates confusion between them and secular institutes but there are key differences. Third orders do not profess vows and do not commit themselves to lives of celibate chastity. It is the commitment to perpetual celibate chastity that distinguishes Religious or Secular Institutes from of groupings of Christians. Secular and Religious Institutes make vows or similar promises that are morally binding. They place themselves under the Superiors of these Institutes who have real authority over their members that are morally binding. The Code on Canon Law dealing with secular Institutes state that the profession of the counsels in a secular Institute may be made by vow, oath or another recognized expression of consecration. All members of secular institutes must make a binding profession by vow or oath to celibate chastity and make vows or binding promises of poverty and obedience. While not trying to appear excessively juridical it is important to understand that profession in a secular institute entails a full, total and complete consecration of self no less than in vowed Religious life. -
CUM SANCTISSIMUS Istruzione Della Sacra Congregazione Dei Religiosi
CUM SANCTISSIMUS Istruzione della Sacra Congregazione dei religiosi 1. La Santità di N. Signore avendo promulgato la singoli gli elementi che, a norma della Costituzione Costituzione Apostolica Provida Mater Ecclesia, Apostolica Provida Mater Ecclesia, sono considerati siè poi degnata di lasciare alla Sacra Congregazione e definiti necessari e integranti per gli Istituti dei Religiosi, alla cui competenza sono affidati Secolari (Art. I e III); ma che inoltre sia approvata ed gli Istituti Secolari (Legge Propria, art. IV, § 1 e eretta da un Vescovo dopo di aver consultata questa 2), l’esecuzione, nella maniera efficace, di quanto Sacra Congregazione (Art. V, 2; Art. VI). è sapientemente stabilito nella Costituzione. Pertanto ha concesso a tale scopo tutte le necessarie 5. II. Tutte le Associazioni di fedeli, in qualsiasi e opportune facoltà. parte si trovino, tanto in territorio di diritto comune come in quello di Missione, e che abbiano le 2. Tra gli oneri e i doveri che, per delegazione forme e le caratteristiche descritte nella medesima pontificia, secondo l’espressione della medesima Costituzione Apostolica (Art. IV. § l e 2), dipendono Costituzione, pesano sulla Sacra Congregazione, è da questa Sacra Congregazione dei Religiosi, e sono da notare la facoltà di poter dare norme ritenute soggetti alla Legge Propria della medesima; ad necessarie e utili agli Istituti Secolari in genere, o a esse non è poi lecito per nessuna ragione o titolo, qualcuno in particolare, quando lo esiga la necessità secondo la Lettera Primo feliciter (n. V.) rimanere o lo consiglia l’esperienza, sia interpretando la fra le comuni associazioni di fedeli (C.I.C., L. -
Abbess-Elect Envisions Great U. S. Benedictine Convent Mullen High to Take Day Pupils Denvircatholic Work Halted on Ten Projects
Abbess-Elect Envisions Great U. S. Benedictine Convent Mother Augustina Returns to Germany Next Month But Her Heart Will Remain in Colorado A grgantic Benedioine convent, a St. Walburga’s of ser of Eichstaett. That day is the Feast of the Holy Name In 1949 when Mother Augustina visited the German as Abbess will be as custodian and distributor of the famed the West, is the W jo c h o p e envisioned by Mother M. of Mary, a name that Mother Augustina bears as'' a nun. mother-house and conferred with the late Lady Abbess Ben- St. Walburga oil. This oil exudes from the bones of the Augustina Weihermuellcrp^perior of St. Walbutga’s con The ceremony will be held in St. Walburga’s parish church edicta, whom she has succeeejed, among the subjects con saint, who founded the Benedictine community and lived vent in South Boulder, as she prepares to return to Ger and the cloistered nuns of the community will witness it sidered wJs the possibility of transferring the heart of the 710-780. Many remarkable cures have been attributed many to assume her position as, Lady Abbess at the mother- ffom their private choir. order to America if Russia should:overrun Europe! to its use while seeking the intercession o f St. Walburga. house of her community in Eidistaett, Bavaria. That day, just two months hence, will mark the first At the great St. Walburga’s mother-house in Eich 'Those who have heard Mother Augustina in one of her Mother Augustina’s departure for Europe is scheduled time that an American citizen ,has returned to Europe to staett, she will be superior of 130 sisters. -
Pdfs/Young Adult.Pdf (Accessed March 15, 2007)
Theological Studies 68 (2007) THE NONVOWED FORM OF THE LAY STATE IN THE LIFE OF THE CHURCH PATRICIA A. SULLIVAN The nonvowed “secular single lay state” claims many of today’s Catholics, yet is little noticed, even though it was validated by Vat- ican II and was arguably the first Christian form of life given explicit theological articulation. Insufficient attention and appreciation may prevent the Catholic Church from realizing the full benefits of this form of the lay state. Patricia Sullivan finds in the thought of several renowned theologians guidance for a theological exposition of the nonvowed life whose central feature may be stewardship. WENTIETH-CENTURY CATHOLIC THEOLOGIANS Hans Urs von Balthasar, T Karl Rahner, and Bernard Häring demonstrated a keen sensitivity to the important role that the laity would play in the Catholic Church as it headed toward and into the third millennium of Christianity. Yet their work only nominally recognized the form of the lay state that is the non- vowed life as it is lived today.1 They could not have foreseen the impor- tance for a future generation of more concerted reflection. More curious, then, is the near-invisibility in theological reflection and the near-dismissal from pastoral and popular consciousness today of this form of Christian life, while Catholic demographics show that the “secular single lay state” embraces a significant portion of the Catholic faithful.2 The lack of general PATRICIA A. SULLIVAN earned her Ph.D. from Marquette University, Milwaukee, Wis., and is now assistant professor in the Theology Department at Saint Anselm College, Manchester, N.H. -
1 Company of St. Ursula Secular Institute of Saint
COMPANY OF ST. URSULA SECULAR INSTITUTE OF SAINT ANGELA MERICI FEDERATION www.istitutosecolareangelamerici.org www.angelamerici.it Email: [email protected] 1 2 CONTENTS To the Readers p. 4 A Thought from the President p. 5 A Thought from the Ecclesiastical Vice-assistant p. 8 He has left us… Mons. Gaetano Zito p. 12 Worldwide: Canadian Culture p. 14 Angela Merici‘s Journey of the Heart p. 19 Together: Formation Leaders and Young Members p. 22 484th Birthday of the Company p. 26 Letter to Saint Angela p. 27 FROM THE COMPANIES AND GROUPS Company of Congo D.R.C. p. 30 A Special Experience in Congo p. 32 In Ethiopia p. 33 News from Eritrea p. 34 Minnia Ammar p. 35 Group of Kenya p. 37 Burundi August 2019 p. 38 The Companies of Brazil p. 40 Company of Toronto p. 42 Group of the Philippines p. 42 Group of the United States p. 43 80th Anniversary: Company of Syracuse p. 44 INCOMING MAIL North American Ursuline Convocation p. 45 The Pope in Madagascar p. 46 Company of Indonesia: Meity p. 47 CONVENTION OF THE FEDERATION p. 48 3 TO THE READERS United together to serve his Divine Majesty… Happy New Year 2020, dear readers, still united together in service of the Kingdom of God. One year follows another and it doesn't seem to change much, but we want it to be a new year of grace, of experiences, of relationships... to be lived in synodality, in sisterhood. A year, for us in the Company of St. -
2015 Spring Mountaineer
“JOY OF THE GOSPEL” “WAKE UP THE WORLD!” Inside this issue: Easter blessings 1 Year of Consecrated … 2 Pope Francis 3-4 OSV article 4-5 T.A. Druart honored 5 Year of Mercy 6 Vocation 6-7 Article by Betsy 8-9 International update Catechism on line 10 Mark your calendar 11 April 2015 Volume 8 issue 1 1 ―Year of Consecrated Life‖ A working message from our President to Sr Miriam Fidelis, a Religious Sister of Mercy, Alma, MI, who is working on a paper entitled: “Year of Consecrated Life: Year in Review” for the World Meeting of Families: Sr. Miriam Thank you for the invitation to participate in answering questions on the subject of ―The Year of Consecrated Life.‖ Last weekend, at all the Masses in my parish, a letter from our local Bishop was read highlighting ―The Year of Consecrated Life.‖ His message was very encouraging and affirming. He said: ―To you who live a consecrated life, your joy is infectious and continually renews the Church with hope. Our diocese is blessed with your presence.‖ He invites us to celebrate the richness of our vocation from now until February 2, 2016, and to let the diocesan communication office know how we will celebrate and when. This information will then be communicated to the faithful of the diocese ―to keep before their eyes the focus of this year.‖ During this year, the diocese will also be sponsoring events. Our Bishop closed his letter by echoing the words of Pope Francis: ―The Church Needs You.‖ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ As President of the United States Conference of Secular Institutes, I share with you Pope Francis address to Secular Institutes in Italy. -
The Beginning Everything Started from Father Gemelli’S Inspiring Ideas
The beginning Everything started from father Gemelli’s inspiring ideas. He had the project of founding a Catholic University, the dream of Italian Catholics, to overcome at last the cultural inferiority caused by the Non expedit of the Church. (The Non expedit was a Vatican disposition forbidding the participation of Catholics in politics). The Non expedit (you cannot) had, in fact, a strong influence and caused the detachment of the majority of Catholics from political life. Father Gemelli believed that, to make the University strong and lasting, it was absolutely necessary to have a spiritual institution including people at all levels (professors, assistant professors, technical and financial staff, public relations staff and even door-keepers) supporting its life and activities by all means. He thought of the possibility of a lay consecration to God in the world, with vows taken secretly by lay people. The initial problem was that this type of consecration was considered impossible and unimaginable at that time, as it did not exist in the canon law. He started, however, with the women’s Institute of “the Missionaries of the Kingship of Christ” originated within the Third Order as “a branch of the great and prolific Franciscan tree”. The first twelve “Franciscan Tertiaries of the Social Kingdom of the Sacred Heart” consecrated themselves to the Lord, in the little choir of the church of San Damiano in Assisi, on the nineteenth of November 1919. This was before the foundation of the Catholic University of the Sacred Heart that took place in 1921. These early Missionaries, through their witness of consecrated life in the world, gave a great contribution to the official acknowledgement of this special vocation by the Church. -
COMENTARIO CRÍTICO AL MOTU PROPRIO MITIS IUDEX DOMINUS IESUS Karla Fiestas-Farfán Piura, Noviembre De 2016
COMENTARIO CRÍTICO AL MOTU PROPRIO MITIS IUDEX DOMINUS IESUS Karla Fiestas-Farfán Piura, noviembre de 2016 FACULTAD DE DERECHO Área Departamental de Derecho Fiestas, K. (2016). Comentario crítico al Motu Proprio Mitis Iudex Dominus Iesus (Tesis de pregrado en Derecho). Universidad de Piura. Facultad de Derecho. Programa Académico de Derecho. Piura, Perú. COMENTARIO CRÍTICO AL MOTU PROPRIO MITIS IUDEX DOMINUS IESUS Esta obra está bajo una licencia Creative Commons Atribución- NoComercial-SinDerivadas 2.5 Perú Repositorio institucional PIRHUA – Universidad de Piura KARLA ANDREINA FIESTAS FARFÁN COMENTARIO CRÍTICO AL MOTU PROPRIO MITIS IUDEX DOMINUS IESUS UNIVERSIDAD DE PIURA FACULTAD DE DERECHO Tesis para optar el Título de Abogado 2016 3 4 APROBACIÓN La tesis titulada “Comentario crítico al Motu Proprio Mitis Iudex Dominus Iesus”, presentada por la bachiller Karla Andreina Fiestas Farfán en cumplimiento con los requisitos para optar el Título de Abogada, fue aprobada por la Directora de Tesis Dra. Susana Mosquera Monelos. _______________________ Directora de Tesis 5 6 DEDICATORIA A Dios, por ser el motor de mi vida. A mi familia, por todo el apoyo y el amor que me brinda. Al P. Luis Andrés Carpio Sardón y a la Dra. Susana Mosquera Monelos por ser quienes hicieron nacer en mí el cariño por el Derecho Canónico. Y sin duda por ser personas que merecen todo mi respeto y cariño. A mis amigos, para que Dios ilume su discernimiento al momento de contraer matrimonio. 7 8 INDICE INTRODUCCIÓN ................................................................................... 1 CAPÍTULO I: EVOLUCIÓN DEL PROCESO PARA DECLARAR LA NULIDAD DEL MATRIMONIO ............................ 5 1.1 La Iglesia primitiva y el Antiguo Testamento ................................ -
SALESIAN PONTIFICAL UNIVERSITY Faculty of Theology Department of Youth Pastoral and Catechetics
SALESIAN PONTIFICAL UNIVERSITY Faculty of Theology Department of Youth Pastoral and Catechetics CATECHISTS’ UNION OF JESUS CRUCIFIED AND OF MARY IMMACULATE Towards a Renewal of Identity and Formation Program from the Perspective of Apostolate Doctoral Dissertation of Ruta HABTE ABRHA Moderator: Prof. Francis-Vincent ANTHONY Rome, 2010-2011 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I want to take this opportunity to express my immense gratitude to God who has sustained, inspired and strengthened me in the entire journey of this study. I have strongly felt his presence and providence. I also want to express my gratitude, appreciation and esteem for all those who have worked and collaborated with me in the realization of this study. My deepest gratitude goes to the first moderator of this study, Prof. Francis-Vincent Anthony, SDB, Director of the Institute of Pastoral Theology in UPS, for having orientated the entire work with great patience and seriousness offering competent suggestions and guidelines and broadening my general understanding. I want to thank him for his essential indications in delineating the methodology of the study, for having indicated and offered necessary sources, for his generosity and readiness in dedicating so much time. If this study has obtained any methodological structure or has any useful contribution the merit goes to him. I esteem him greatly and feel so much pride for having him as my principal guide. Again my most sincere gratitude goes to the second moderator of the study, Prof. Ubaldo Montisci, SDB, former Director of the Catechetical Institute in UPS, for his most acute and attentive observations that enlightened my mind and for having encouraged me to enrich the research by offering concrete suggestions. -
From Bonnie Kirk, Sacramental Coordinator
Update August 7th, 2020: from Bonnie Kirk, Sacramental Coordinator AUGUST THURSDAYS You are invited to join us on Thursday evenings during the month of August, on ZOOM, as we explore and prepare the readings for the upcoming Sunday. Contact Bonnie ([email protected]) for more information and to receive the invitation link. We meet from 7:00pm to 8:30pm. RCIA UPDATE In many ways Covid 19 paused the faith journey for our elect, Elizabeth and Mila. We had just celebrated the Rite of Election with them when we were “locked down”. They did continue their preparation within the family and online, and were presented with the creed. We are now able to move forward and so will celebrate a Scrutiny with them on Sunday, August 30th at the 12:30pm Mass. As a result, we will celebrate the liturgy of the fourth Sunday in Lent which proclaims the gospel account of the Man Born Blind. (John 9:1-41). Please continue to pray for them and their families at this time. BIBLE TIMELINE The regular Thursday evening bible study will resume after Labour Day. This year we will be using the Bible Timeline offered by Ascension Press. The Bible Timeline study program takes you on a guided journey through salvation history. Presenter Jeff Cavins will show you how fourteen of the Bible’s narrative books tell the biblical story from beginning to end and give you the keys to understanding the amazing story woven throughout Scripture. Through its 24 sessions, The Bible Timeline will teach you how to read and understand the Bible and introduce you to the wonderful narrative of the Bible in a way that will transform your life. -
Full Secularity Full Consecration in the World
In the world Full secularity Full consecration Source: www.cmis-int.org (World Conference of Secular Institutes) “A secular institute is an institute of consecrated life in which Christ’s faithful, living in the world, strive for the perfection of charity and endeavour to contribute to the sanctification of the world, especially from within” (canon # 710). What is the secular institute? Secular institutes are a still young reality in the history of the Church. They emerged in the first half of the nineteenth century and were approved by Pope Pius XII in 1947 through the Apostolic Constitution Provida Mater Ecclesia and via the Motu Proprio Primo Feliciter in 1948. Until then, all those who wanted to devote themselves to God had to leave the world and enter religion, either in a Religious Order or in a Congregation. Since the appearance of Secular Institutes, lay people who feel the call to live the evangelical counsels of chastity, poverty and obedience, can consecrate themselves to God, without losing their secular state in the Church, by sanctifying themselves in the world and from within the world itself. Secularity and consecration Secular institutes combine secularity and consecration: in fact, the members of a secular institute are fully secular and fully consecrated, joining in themselves two realities that until now were incompatible with each other. They are fully consecrated to God as the religious and they are as secular as the rest of the Christians who are not clerics. The fact that they live in the midst of the world, performing the most varied professions in different social environments, does not diminish their consecration.