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Vatican Cardinal Franc Rode has said that religious orders today are in a “crisis” caused in part by the adoption of a secularist mentality and the abandonment of traditional practices.
Cardinal Rode, prefect of the Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life, said the problems go deeper than the drastic drop in the numbers of religious men and women, CNS reports.
“The crisis experienced by certain religious communities, especially in Western Europe and North America, reflects the more profound crisis of European and American society. All this has dried up the sources that for centuries have nourished consecrated and missionary life in the church,” Cardinal Rode said in a talk delivered Feb. 3 in Naples, Italy.
“The secularized culture has penetrated into the minds and hearts of some consecrated persons and some communities, where it is seen as an opening to modernity and a way of approaching the contemporary world,” he said.
Cardinal Rode said the decline in the numbers of men and women religious became precipitous after the Second Vatican Council, which he described as a period “rich in experimentation but poor in robust and convincing mission.”
The challenge, however, should not be seen strictly in negative terms, he said. The present moment, he said, can help religious orders better define themselves as “alternatives to the dominant culture, which is a culture of death, of violence and of abuse,” and make it clear that their mission is to joyfully witness life and hope, in the example of Christ.
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Vatican official says religious orders are in modern ‘crisis’ (Catholic News Service)
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Tags: Cardinal Franc Rode, Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Li
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