Icons for our SSCC ministry and mission
(General Chapter 2012)
Bob Charlton sscc is a member of the Province of the United
States. He is currently the parish priest of "Queen of Peace Parish"
in Harlingen, Texas, and in charge of the postulancy of the province for the
continental zone. Bob has extensive experience as a pastor and as a formator.
In 2013 Bob wrote these reflections on the sscc icons
offered by the 2012 General Chapter in the document on "Mission".
They are still valuable for today, so we offer them in this SSCC BLOG. Even
more so when we have entered into the preparation period for the next of the
39th General Chapter (2018).
Bob Charlton sscc (US Province)
From “SSCC Heartbeat” 11/21/13
The introduction of General Chapter document on Mission shows
a strength which, had it been used as the orientation for the whole document,
would have made it hang together better for me and offered greater
possibilities. It offers us Damien, Eustachio, and the Martyrs of the 20th
Century as icons for our ministry and mission. To tell you the truth, I would
have felt more salted with fire if these, together with the Good Father, had
been the prisms for the whole document. And I hope you will not object as I now
try to integrate the individual elements and sections of the document under
that rubric. It a sense, I am about to offer a rewrite but it will include all
of the important elements as they appear in the approved document.
The Good Father. Together with
Mother Henriette, he founded a missionary congregation whose purpose was the
re-evangelization of France, the education of seminarians, establishment of
free schools for the poor, the foreign missions and the Adoration. These are
the outstanding ministry categories of the primitive period ending with the
death of the founders. It is clear from his writings that he had three primary
concerns: the good of the work, meaning being useful to the Church; the good of
the communal life; and the good of the brothers. He often made references to
the Cross as a paradigm for the Congregation and its individual members. It is
from his preoccupation with being useful to the Church that our openness to the
discerned needs of the Church flows. It is important to remember that, in the
shadow of the Cross, the Good Father asserts that the moment one of the
brothers becomes concerned about himself he breaks his most essential vow.
It
is helpful to recall that the primitive community was characterized by an
extremely simple and poor fraternity in which the Good Father himself modeled a
care and concern for the well-being of each member. His letters express a zeal
for the work but a kind and tender solicitude for the brothers and the sisters.
It is also important to remember that the communal life was so important to the
Founder that the two missionaries sent to work among the native peoples of
North America were reassigned when it became clear that they would be unable to
live a communal life. As our Icon, the Good Father can serve as the prism for
everything that is said in the document under the section entitled "Sent
in Community by the Community."
The Chapter document affirms that our life and work is grounded in the
communal life. With reference to the Constitutions and previous General
Chapters, the Chapter vision that emerges is the centrality of the local
community to each member’s personal vocation to the Congregation and the
realization of the Congregation’s mission.
The heading gives us an important orientation: The Community sends brothers
in mission in the community. Living in a local community is a fundamental part
and the primary testimony of our mission. It is a school of humanity, thus it
has a reparative dimension enabling us to live the original grace. It shapes
our personal identity and flavors, salts the ministry. It is an apostolic team
that requires practical objectives among which are daily prayer, daily
Eucharist, daily meals, regular meetings, a community PARL and the placing of
all goods in common. It is simple and each member works and contributes to the
household. The superior, we are told, is at the service of this communion and
the guarantor so that each brother participates in the discernment and
evaluation of the apostolic work. Communal life resists the individualism, the
pro-choice kind of life in which members choose themselves and choose for
themselves. Communion in this life is a continual process of learning,
self-denial and conversion.
Damien, Eustachio, and the Spanish Martyrs. How can they serve as prisms
for the principal points of the document? The documents says some things about
them which are true but perhaps not true enough and not well integrated into
all the emphases the document wishes to make. Let us tease out from these
persons what is really rich in what the document is trying to say.
Damien. The document holds
him up as the missionary who left home, family and country and generously gave
himself to the service of those abandoned on Molokai, opening possibilities for
those who had lost hope and coming to identify himself with his beloved leprous
patients even to the point of death. This is good. This is true. But let us not
forget a few things lest Damien appear only as a well-motivated social worker.
Damien went to the missions to witness to Jesus Christ and, by God's grace, to
be an instrument of conversion. He was first and foremost an evangelizer for 9
years before the request to stay in Kalaupapa. We read he was a moralist of a
kind, one who tried to give good example. We know that he suffered at the hands
of the civil authorities but also at the hands of his brother missionaries.
Most of the time, despite repeated requests, he was alone and, when he was not,
he was with people who were hardly less difficult as him. His communal life,
when he had it, was hardly a school of humanity. But, for those who may think
that retirement is something welcome and in view, he is someone who worked to
the bitter end. His last photograph is of him already dead. But four months
before that, he was working on the roof of Saint Philomena's.
As an evangelizer
he was also an ecumenist accepting much help from Protestant England. Until he
was restricted to the colony, he often visited Honolulu and the Sisters were
his depot for supplies. He did bring a certain organization and civility to
Kalaupapa; he also brought faith in the God who made all things bearable. He
did not wish to live alone. He did not do things for his own aggrandizement. He
experienced more of original sin than grace from the community for which he
longed. He is an image of hope, freedom and integrity. He is also an image of
abandonment, suffering and rejection. He had a personal PARL. He lived under a
tree until everyone was housed. Whether a person or an aqueduct, he fixed what
was broken. He prayed four hours every day. He lived and did the Adoration.
Eustachio whose bywords were
Health and Peace. A missionary sent to Brazil. The only saint I know in whose
photograph he smiles. His ministry was that of healing. People experienced
healing both in their souls and in their bodies. Healing can, and should, be
understood, as a repairing, a reparation, a restoration to original grace. We
can view that part of the document addressing the priests of the congregation
through the lens that is Eustachio.
The document goes to great lengths to hold in complementary tension that
fact that most of us are priests and religious. Recalling that the Chapter
theme is salt and flavor, the document attempts to say that being both a priest
and religious of the Sacred Hearts should enrich each other. But the great
temptation that we face, if we consider the Church to be our dominant culture,
is for the religious priest to become more clerical than religious, clerical
understood to mean a certain contaminating element that belongs neither to
secular nor regular clergy. The document names some of those contaminating
elements from which we should seek immunization through the health of our
religious life. They are the temptation to the abuse of power and an imitation
of the violence in cultures that disrespects life and does not appreciate the
fragility of human relationships.
The ordained should see themselves members who can live the missionary
vocation of service in an integrated, peaceful, and fruitful way, in service to
the sacraments whereby each believer may have a personal encounter with the
Risen Lord, and who, as an ordained minister, is at the service of the
community and exercises his authority to promote community and strengthen
fraternity. In a savage world, the ordained, shaped by the sacraments they celebrate
and as members of the simple community through which they are vowed to God,
should exercise authority in a way that signifies something different.
As I understand him, Eustachio was a man of simple needs and a straight
talker. Once, when asked about his healing ministry and how it is that it
happens through him, he is reported to have said that healings would not be so
very rare if priests would simply pray the ritual. Simply pray the
ritual. Shocking isn't it? Simply pray the ritual. He was, of course,
hugely popular and much sought after. There were times when he had to travel at
night from one hiding place to another. There were times when he was forced
from public view by the community (or so I am told). But his message is a
simple and humble one: Health and Peace. Reparation. Restoration. Call it what
you will, but the recovery of original grace, life without disease and sin. He
lived in community and accepted his assignments, and seems not to have been
willful or self-absorbed. He was an agent of reconciliation concerning which so
many Congregational documents speak.
The Martyrs in Spain. They are not
called the Martyrs of the Spanish Civil war. They are called the Martyrs of the
Twentieth Century in Spain. Some people suggest that is so because Spain itself
is still recovering from and interpreting for themselves what happened in their
country in the 1930s. To call them the Martyrs of the 20th Century in Spain is
to say that there is a broader context which has been coming at us for a very long
time which we, perhaps, are late to interpret. Were we to bring the full weight
of the Enlightenment, Colonialism, the Great Wars, the hundreds of smaller wars
and all the collateral damage, and our missionary failure into view, we may be
approaching a truth. There is first the question of the loss of Faith in the
West in virtue of a structure always aligning itself with power, a structure
that baptizes culture and then condemns it, a loss of faith among parishioners,
priests and religious dominated by the collapse and violence of the West. Our
missionary enterprise failed. In the Americas and in Africa we see it. Our own
missionaries formed both Allende and Pinochet. And now we are called to a new
Evangelization, a clarion call taken up around the world but it seems to me to
be principally targeted at Europe.
Place all of that on the Martyrs of the Twentieth Century in Spain. Young
men. Young Priests. Young religious. Hundreds and hundreds of them together
with tens of thousands of lay persons. An appalling, heinous, ferocious attack
that is perfectly understandable. And witness to the Faith. A belief in Jesus
Christ that is good enough and strong enough to witness to death. It makes all
our sacrifices in the present pale by comparison. The surrender we must make to
the goodness and truth of a communal vocation we resist, and accountability we
are tempted to reject, an abuse of power we are tempted to protect and
replicate, a hesitation to go where we are sent and to live as we are called
because of our self-absorbed contamination by a dominant culture of which we
are selectively part and which we may secretly affirm. How in God's name and in
the shadow of this Martyrs' cross, can I ever continue to think about what is
good for me? The minute I begin to think about myself, I have broken my most
essential vow.
-------------
This document entitled "Mission" calls me to a new, converted
life. With these icons I have named as the Good Father, Father Damien, Father
Eustachio, the Martyrs in Spain, I am being called to a new life. One that is
no longer self-absorbed, auto-protecting, preoccupied with my present and my
future. I am being called to live the life discerned by the Congregation:
obedient to the Constitutions, intelligent in the reading of the signs of the
times.
No comments:
Post a Comment