My understanding is that a person may essentially take a “vow” of non-violence but that he can not require others to do so.
If you’re one of the six major Law-Givers all bets are off.
- Benedict
- Basil
- Augustine
- John de Matha
- Albert
- Francis of Assisi
They stated their requirements in their respective rules and the Church sealed them with papal bulls so that no one can touch those rules, except another pope. Not even superior general can tamper with the rule, nor can the general chapter.
Since their rules are untouchable and all who join the community enter freely, then all who enter are bound to pacifism to the degree required by the founder.
As St.Benedict explained in his 12 steps. obedience is the most noble expression of love. No one can force you to enter a religious family. If you enter, you know that you must obey, even what bothers your conscience. In the major religious orders, conscience does not have primacy over the Rule and Constitutions. Any conscience that struggles with the Rule and Constitutions, must be brought into alignment with these until such time as the Church says otherwise. Thus, as St. Benedict says, obedience is the highest expression of love, because it requires that one crucify oneself.
If pacifism is what the Rule commands, then pacifism it is. What I feel about it is irrelevant, because no one forced me to enter and when the superior approved me for vows, it was Christ himself doing the speaking. Therefore, my fate is sealed. This is what I must do no matter how great the sacrifice.
Hence the expression, “Many are called, but few are chosen,” or as Bl. John Paul II wrote in Vita Consecrata, the call to religious orders, secular orders, societies of consecrated life, consecrated virginity, monastic life and religious congregations is only for a select few. God does not give everyone the grace to live this way of life, because it’s a life against human nature.
For many people, this idea of accepting pain or even death rather than fight or even feel anger is impossible. They don’t have the grace that this requires. These are people like St. Edith Stein, OCD; St. Maximilian Kolbe, OFM Conv; St. Miguel Pro, SJ.; and Bl. John Paul II.
Fraternally,
Br. JR, FFV
