Entries in consecrated life (1)

Thursday
Dec182014

Consecration Series - Part 1

Pope Francis’ apostolic letter to “All Consecrated People” provides us with the way to view how consecrated members of religious institutes are to embrace their relationship with God and live the Gospel more fully.  The letter was written in conjunction with the 50th anniversary of Vatican II.  In Perfectae Caritatis, article five identifies virtue as the key for living the evangelical counsels of poverty, chastity, and obedience.  For the next series of blogs, we will explore how the theological and spiritual foundation of religious life disposes the Salesians to live the counsels.  By probing the internal sorts of Salesian consecrated life, the hoped-for outcome is to gain a better understanding and appreciation of religious life while learning how to embrace this life more fully in a contemporary setting.

Perfectae Caritatis expresses how religious are to respond to God’s call by living for God alone.  Religious dedicate the whole of their lives to a special consecration rooted in their baptismal consecration to live their baptism to the full.  Seeking God in this manner is always rooted in virtue.  For St. John Bosco, the whole of his life journey was a continuum to seek God which was influenced through the accompaniment of his mother Margaret, who taught him common sense and how pray three times a day; his friendship with Louis Comollo, who modeled to John how to keep one’s gaze on paradise; and his mentor Father Cafasso, who taught John how to use charity to win over the hearts of young men in prison.

Through these influences, John Bosco set up the environment of life in the oratory as a system of virtue such that learning was always rooted in reason, fairness, and charity.  Further, to be a disciple in this setting meant that everyone had to be open to share and give life to promote the virtue in others.  St. Dominic Savio was clearly a product of the system of virtue.  The exemplary way he modeled zeal for being available to his peers resulted from growing daily in his personal relationship with God through ardent prayer, peer relations, and loving service.  

With the models of St. John Bosco, St. Dominic Savio and countless others in our Salesian history, we embrace this call to "wake up the world" and pray for the consecrated in our community, for our fellow brothers and sisters around the world, and  those who have heard God's call to "Come, follow me" and are discerning.