J
JReducation
Guest
I see where you’re going here. You’re going with the rite for the consecration of virgins. There is such a rite as you described it.Br. JR, I would disagree that virgins = religious men and women. Virgins are known by tradition and by history as female virgins. Religious are by definition celibate but not necessarily virgins. In other words, they make vows to henceforth observe continence… whereas virgins have maintained their virginity. Consecrated virgins have been consecrated in their virginal bodies and souls to be brides of Christ through a rite reserved to bishops. The conferral of the sacramental of the consecration of virgins is considered the crowning glory of consecrated life for religious women if they are eligible. Celibacy for the sake of the Kingdom is the basic requirement for the consecrated state. For religious men and women and diocesan hermits, this celibacy is vowed to be observed from that time on. For consecrated virgins, true virginity (not merely celibacy) is required, and this it is the bishop’s conferral of the consecration of virgins (analogous to ordination) which constitutes the female virgin a “sacred person” and a bride of Christ in the most direct sense and places her into the consecrated state (if she is living in the world and is not already in the consecrated state by means of religious vows). A virgin living in the world makes no vows in the ceremony, public or private, but that commitment to maintain perpetual virginity is made.
The documents that have come out of the councils and from different popes were not written to address that population. They were written to address two questions:
1 To define the state of celibacy.
- To make a clear distinction between the consecrated life and the priesthood and married life.
The term virgin slips in there, because at the time women religious were divided into two groups: choir nuns and lay sisters. The choir nuns had to be virgins. Those are the virgins to which they are referring. The issue becomes more complex, because choir nuns make the same vows and have the same canonical and theological place as monks and friars. Therefore, the law was applied equally to the three: choir nuns, monks and friars.
Later, this becomes a problem, because the Churhc forbids the founding of new religious orders… The Jesuits were the last religious order founded and they were not allowed to have a rule of their own. But that’s an explanation for another day.
After the porhibition, which is still in force today, the only kind of religious institute that you could found were congregations with simple vows. Religious in simple vows do not have to be virgins. That’s when the separation came in that there were virgins who are not members of the religious life and others who are. It was also decided that nuns would no longer go through the rite of consecration of virgins. Today, no nuns is a consecrated virgin, though many are virgins an of course they are consecrated religiuos in solemn vows, whereas sisters are consecrated religious in simple vows. All men reliigous founded after the Jesuits are also consecrated religious in simple vows. Only nuns, friars and monks are consecrated religious in solemn vows.
All make a vow of chastity that includes celibacy, just like the clergy in the Roman Church. However, the Church continues to teach that the Consecrated Religious life has the primacy among vocations, because of the form in which celibacy is lived, which is different from how a diocesan priest or bishop lives celibacy and because the call to religious life is not a call to ministry (though many of us are in ministry), but it religious life is a call to live for Christ and in Christ alone.
Holy Orders is a call to act in Persona Christi. But it is not a call to the same degree of intimacy with Christ as that of a religious. Of course there are many priests who are both. They are priests and religious. Usually people call them religious priests. The proper translation is Regular Priests or Brother Priests.
Pope John Paul II captured it best in our contemporary language, because he avoids the all the different canonical distinctions, some of which ceased to exist after the Council of Trent. Though Trent’s positon on the anathema has never been revoked. From what I gather, this makes many lay Catholics very angry. But we can’t revoke what the Church proclaims to be a doctrine revealed by Christ himself. The best that we can all to is to be faithful to the call that God has given us. In the end, it is fidelity on which we’re going to be judged.
Fraternally,
Br. JR, OSF