J
jwinch2
Guest
Thanks for that! Very helpful!Just a few examples.
OBEDIENCE
Solemn vow: The Church believes that your practice obedience far surpasses that of any other Christian. She calls it solemn. She releases you from the authority of a bishop, except as is expected of any person who lives in his diocese.
Simple vow: The practice of obedience is still beyond that of anything that the Church expects of the faithful, but given the things that your community asks you to obey, the Church does not deem it to be on the same level as religious orders. These are always congregations.
Promise: The practice of obedience is still beyond what is epxpected of the ordinary Catholic, but the commitment is between you and the society. The Church approves of the commitment. However, the society can release you of it.
Solemn vows are always perpetual. Simple vows can be either perpetual or for a fixed amount of years and then you renew them or you make them perpetual.
Promises can be either perpetual or for a specific period of time.
The obligations on the part of the individual are going to be determined by the constitution and the superior, not by the indvidual.
What the Church is looking is at degrees of consecration.
The consecration of Jesuit is a much more solemn consecration than that of Mother Teresa, even though she was a saint. Nonetheless, she was in simple vows. Jesuits are in solemn vows. The Church recognizes their way of life as a higher form of consecrated life than that of Missionaries of Charity. This is no reflection on their apostolic work or their personal holiness. The statement is about the intensity of the consecration, not about a person’s holiness.
There are communities in simple vows or in promises that have more demanding rules than religious orders in solemn vows. But the Church ignores that. The important thing to the Church is how she views the community. She does not view the Missionaries of Charity as she view sthe Jesuits. That’s just one example. Hoewever, she loves them both and both are necessar to the life of the Church.
The Catholic encyclopedia has a very long and boring article that summarizes these regulations. Religious Life. I say boring, because the writer gives too miuch information.
Fraternally,
Br. JR, OSF![]()
Jason