Subject: October Issue of The Baltimore Beacon

The Baltimore Beacon


Please read the entirety of the October issue here.


Dear Brothers and Sisters: 


I write this as we have just finished the XXVI Redemptorist General Chapter in Rome.  A whirlwind four weeks that saw us elect a new Superior General, Rogério Gomes, from São Paulo, Brazil, elect a new team of General Consultors, set a direction for the Congregation for the next six years, celebrate Liturgy at the tomb of St. Alphonsus in Pagani, and the highlight, an audience with Pope Francis. I share with you his remarks that he made to the 120 Redemptorists who were gathered with him in the Clementine Hall. May they be an inspiration to all the Redemptorist family!


“Dear brothers and sisters, good morning and welcome!


I greet with joy all the Redemptorist missionaries present in the 85 countries in which the Congregation of the Most Holy Redeemer operates. I also greet all those on the path of formation, the Redemptorist religious, the whole charismatic family, and the laity associated with the mission. I greet you with affection and I thank the new Superior General, Father Rogério Gomes, for the words he addressed to me.


Celebrating a General Chapter is not a canonical formality. It is living a Pentecost, which has the capacity to make all things new (cf. Rev 21,5). In the Upper Room the disciples of Jesus had doubts, insecurities, fears, they wanted to remain firm and protected; but the Spirit who blows where he wants (cf. Jn 3: 8) causes them to move, to go out, to go towards the peripheries to bring the kerygma, the beautiful News.


In these days you are addressing five important themes for your Congregation: identity, mission, consecrated life, formation, and governance. These are fundamental themes, connected to each other, to rethink your charism in the light of the signs of the times. This community discernment is rooted in the capacity of each of you to seek the mystery of Christ the Redeemer, which is the reason for your consecration and your service to the men and women who live on the existential peripheries of our history today. It is rooted in the fruitfulness of the Alphonsian charism, as the lymph that nourishes the spiritual life and mission of each one and makes it flourish again. I encourage you to dare, having the Gospel and the Magisterium of the Church, as the only boundaries. Do not be afraid to take new paths, to dialogue with the world (cf. Const. 19), in the light of your rich tradition of moral theology. Don’t be afraid to get your hands dirty in the service of the most needy and people who don’t count.


In your Constitutions there is a very beautiful expression, where it is said that Redemptorists are willing to face every trial to bring Christ’s redemption to everyone (cf. n. 20). Availability. We do not take this word for granted! It means giving oneself entirely to the mission, with all one’s heart; “dies impendere pro redemptis,” right up to the last consequences, with the gaze fixed on Jesus who, “despite being in the condition of God [...], emptied himself by assuming the condition of a servant, becoming similar to men “(Phil 2: 6-7); and he became a good Samaritan, a servant (cf Lk 10,25-37; Jn 13,1-15).


Brothers and sisters, the Church and consecrated life are experiencing a unique historical moment in which they have the possibility of renewing themselves in order to respond with creative fidelity to the mission of Christ. This renewal goes through a process of conversion of the heart and mind, of intense metanoia, and also through a change of structures. Sometimes we need to break the old amphorae (cf. Jn 4:28), inherited from our traditions, which have brought a lot of water but have now fulfilled their function. And breaking our jars, full of affection, cultural customs, stories, is not an easy task, it is painful, but it is necessary if we want to drink the new water that comes from the source of the Holy Spirit, the source of all renewal. Those who remain attached to their own certainties risk falling into sclerocardia, which prevents the action of the Spirit in the human heart. Instead, we must not put obstacles to the renewing action of the Spirit, first of all in our hearts and in our lifestyles. Only in this way can we become missionaries of hope!


Your Constitutions affirm: “The Congregation, always preserving its own charism, must adapt its structures and institutions to the requirements of the apostolic ministry and to those peculiar to each mission” (n. 96). “New wine in new wineskins” (Mk 2:22). “A renewal unable to touch and change the structures and the heart does not lead to a real and lasting change. [...] It requires an openness to imagine forms of prophetic and charismatic following, lived in adequate and perhaps unprecedented patterns.” [1]


In this process of re-imagining and renewing the Congregation, three fundamental pillars must not be forgotten: the centrality of the mystery of Christ, community life, and prayer. The testimony and teachings of St. Alphonsus continually remind you to “remain in the love” of the Lord. Without him we can do nothing; remaining in him we bear fruit (cf. Jn 15: 1-9). The abandonment of community life and prayer is the door to sterility in consecrated life, the death of the charism and closure towards the brothers. Instead, docility to the Spirit of Christ pushes us to evangelize the poor, according to the announcement of the Redeemer in the synagogue of Nazareth (cf. Lk 4: 14-19), concretized in the congregation by St. Alphonsus Maria de Liguori. This mission, carried out by your saints, martyrs, blessed and venerable, leads Redemptorists from all over the world to give their lives for the Gospel and to write stories of redemption on the pages of our time.


I wish the new General Government, the first body for the animation of the apostolic life of the Congregation, humility, unity, wisdom, and discernment to guide your Institute in this beautiful and challenging moment in our history. The work is of the Lord, we are only servants who have done what we had to do (cf. Lk 17:10). Those who appropriate the leadership function for a personal interest do not serve the Lord who washed the disciples’ feet, but the idols of worldliness and selfishness.



Dear brothers, I entrust your Congregation to the protection of the Mother of Perpetual Help, so that she always accompanies you as she accompanied her Son at the foot of the cross (cf. Jn 19:25). You are not alone, be loved and guarded children. I pray the Lord that you may be faithful and persevering in your mission, never forgetting the poorest and most abandoned you serve, and to whom you announce the Good News of the Redemption. I cordially bless you, the sisters and the lay faithful who share your charism. And I ask you to please pray for me. Thank you!”


In the Spirit of the Redeemer, 

Paul J. Borowski, C.Ss.R.




Mark your calendar!


  • Praying with the Icon: Mary, Mother of Jesus, Saturday, October 22, at 10 a.m. on Facebook and Youtube.

     

  • REDEMPTORIST CONVERSATIONS ON RACIAL JUSTICE on ZOOM (Each session will be 90 minutes) Eastern: 8:00pm - Central: 7:00pm - Mountain: 6:00pm - Pacific: 5:00pm

    November 8: Redemptorists & the South

    Presentations by and Discussions with Dr. Patrick Hayes & Dr. Nicholas Radamacher 

    More information can be found here.


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