Index
- Decree of approval
- Letter of the Conference of General
Ministers of the First Order and the TOR
- Promulgation of the General
Constitution
- Chapter 1:the Secular Franciscan
Order(arts. 1 - 7)
-
- Chapter 2: Form of Life and Apostolic
Activities (arts. 8 - 27)
-
- Title I: Form of Life (arts. 8 - 16)
- Title II: Active presence in the Church and
in the World (arts. 17 - 27)
- Chapter 3: Life in the Fraternity (arts.
28 - 103)
-
- Title I: General Orientations (arts.
28 - 36)
- Title II: Entrance into the Order and formation
(arts. 37 - 45)
- Title III: The Fraternity at the Various
Levels (arts. 46 - 75)
- Title IV: Election to and Termination of
Offices (arts. 76 - 84)
- Title V: Spiritual and Pastoral Assistance
of the SFO (arts. 85 - 91)
- Title VI: The Fraternal Visit and the
Pastoral Visit (arts. 92 - 95)
- Title VII: The Franciscan Youth (arts. 96
- 97)
- Title VIII: In Communion with the
Franciscan Family and the Church (arts. 98 - 103)
Decree of Approval of the General Constitution
Congregation for the institutes of consecrated life
and Societies of Apostolic Life
Prot. n. T. 144-1/2000
Decree
The Conference of General Ministers of the Franciscan
First Order and Third Order Regular has presented to the Apostolic See
for approval, the text of the Constitutions of the Secular Franciscan
Order, previously approved by the General Chapter of the same Secular
Franciscan Order, celebrated in the month of October 1999.
After careful examination of the above mentioned text of
the Constitutions, the Congregation for the Institutes of Consecrated
Life and the Societies of Apostolic Life, by this present Decree
approves and confirms the text, according to the copy written in
Italian, conserved in its Archives, all requirements of law being
observed.
Anything to the contrary not withstanding.
From the Vatican, December 8, 2000,
Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception
of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
Eduardo Card. Martínez Somalo
Prefect
+ Piergiorgio Silvano Nesti, C.P.
Secretary
Letter of the Conference of General Ministers of the
First Order and the TOR
Rome, January 1, 2001
Feast of Mary, mother of God
Dear Sister Emanuela,
the Lord give you peace!
The Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and
Societies of Apostolic Life has on December 8, 2000, issued the Decree
(Prot. n. T. 144-1/2000) of approval of the general constitution of the
Secular Franciscan Order, as revised by the General Chapter of the SFO
at Madrid in October 1999 and subsequently submitted by the President
of the Conference of General Ministers of the First Order and the
TOR.
Now, also in name of the other general Ministers, I am
entrusting the approved text of the Constitutions to you, and through
you, to all brothers and sisters of the SFO. The common vocation of the
whole Franciscan family, from its very beginning in the overpowering
spiritual experience of Francis and Clare, is "to live according to the
form of the Holy Gospel". The Constitutions reveal themselves to be an
ever more important help to incarnate this one vocation in the rich
variety of its manifold expressions, wherever and whenever the Lord
sends us. They are not just "one more document" or the final stage of a
journey, but an essential and dynamic instrument helping us to
delineate our identity and to structure progressively our life and our
vocation as Franciscans. The work of reflection and revision by so many
brothers and sisters all over the world and the approval by Holy mother
Church, commit us to make these Constitutions the central axis of our
life's project according to the gospel.
In name of the Church and of the general Ministers, I
express this wish to all Secular Franciscans: that you may be
convincing witnesses of the evangelic fire which inflamed the whole
existence of Francis and Clare of Assisi, and made them models of a
fully given and thus completely realized life.
Your brother,
Giacomo Bini, OFM
President of the
Conference of General Ministers
of the First Order and the TOR
Promulgation of the General Constitution
Rome, 6th February 2001
Circ. 21/96-02
To the national Councils of the SFO
To the international Councillors of the SFO
Object: Promulgation of the amended general constitution
approved by the Decree of the Congregation for ICLSAL
of the 8th of December 2000.
Dear brothers and sisters,
the general constitution of the Secular Franciscan
Order, intended to apply the renewed Rule of 1978, were approved by the
Congregation for the Institutes of Consecrated Life and the Societies
of Apostolic Life through the Decree of the 8th of September 1990, for
six years in order to be tried out. Before the end of this period, the
Presidency of the International Council of the SFO, through the
Conference of General Ministers of the First Order and TOR, asked for
an extension of the time of trial, taking into account the time
necessary to translate the Constitutions into the other official
languages of the International Fraternity and, then, into the languages
of each country. The Congregation acceded to the request and conceded
an extension of three years.
During this period of time, the Constitutions have been
studied and put into practice by the Fraternities of the SFO on all
levels and, little by little, have marked them with the characteristics
of the secularity, unity and autonomy of our Order. Not all has
been easy and some aspects have still to be assimilated fully in order
that, at the dawn of the Third Millennium, the SFO should really become
"an army that can be in the vanguard in the Church and in the world to
build a more human and Christian society" as Cardinal Hamer, Prefect of
the Congregation for ICLSAL wished in 1990.
The experience gained has shown the substantial validity
of the general constitution of 1990 and only some aspects required
revision. The work which had to be done was started in time by the
Presidency of the International Council of the SFO and was carried out
through ample consultation involving all the national Fraternities and
international Counsellors as well as the Presidency itself and some
experts belonging to the SFO or assigned by the Franciscan General
Ministers.
In the General Chapter of Madrid (23-31st October 1999)
a text was proposed that gathered and co-ordinated the suggestions and
petitions received, and also presented alternative proposals when there
was no possibility of finding an univocal formulation from among those
that the national Fraternities had expressed. The text presented to the
Chapter was inspired by the following criteria:
-- adhesion to the common law and the law proper to the SFO,
-- respect for the text approved in 1990 by the Holy See,
-- organizational flexibility,
-- cultural and linguistic adaptability.
The General Chapter has attentively and profoundly
examined the text presented, together with the oral and written
interventions made during the work of the Chapter.
The result of the discussions and votes cast, article by
article and on each of the amendments, was presented on the 21st of
December 1999 to the Conference of the Franciscan General Ministers
who, after a final revision by experts in canon law of the four
Curia's, forwarded the text on the 1st of August 2000 to the
Congregation for ICLSAL for approval. The Congregation has approved the
text by the decree bearing the date of the 8th of December 2000, the
Feast of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
And now, brothers and sisters of the SFO, on the 6th of
February 2001, the approved general constitution are promulgated and
consequently should be observed from the 6th of March 2001. It rests on
each one of us to ensure that they are "spirit and life", an instrument
of consolidation and growth of our Order so that with full sail ("Duc
in altum"), we can go on with hope, according to the exhortation given
by the Holy Father to all Christians with the Apostolic Letter "Novo
Millenio ineunte" at the end of the Great Jubilee of 2000. We also,
secular Franciscans, are called to be witnesses, that is to say,
martyrs for Christ, in the original meaning of the word, during the new
millennium.
It wasn't by chance that we chose the date of the 6th of
February for the promulgation of the amended general constitution. On
this date we commemorate the Proto-martyrs of Japan, witnesses per
excellence, with 17 Franciscan Tertiaries crucified in Nagasaki, along
with Peter Baptist, Paul Miki and their other companions. We know very
little about these distant brothers of ours, apart from their
unwavering will to remain firm in faith, to continue witnessing to the
Gospel by their very lives, whatever the cost.
During the past century there have also been secular
Franciscans who have manifested, with the sacrifice of their lives,
their fidelity to baptism and resistance to evil, anchored in the
faith. We remember our brother Ceferino Giménez Malla, victim of
the persecution of religion during the Spanish civil war (1936-1939),
who was beatified on the 4th of May 1997. We remember the Servant of
God Frantisek Nosek, a politician from Bohemia and a secular
Franciscan, another victim of communist violence. We also remember
Juvénal Kabera, Minister of the SFO Fraternity of Kigali,
assassinated during the massacres of the tribal wars in Rwanda. These
are only some examples, but for them also the recent words of the Holy
father remain true: "It has been thanks especially to the brave witness
of lay faithful, not seldom to the point of martyrdom, that the faith
has not disappeared from the lives of entire peoples".
Perhaps we will not be asked to give witness by shedding
our blood, but we will certainly be asked to give witness by being
coherent and firm in the fulfillment of our baptismal promises, renewed
and re-affirmed through profession in the SFO. In virtue of our
Profession, the Rule and the application that the general constitution
make of it represent for each one of us the point of reference for
daily experience, beginning with a specific vocation and precise
identity. On this basis we need to re-shape our existence and find a
project of life (Franciscan evangelical radicalism) and a place of
Church communion (the Fraternity), in which it should be possible for
us to "learn the purpose and the way of living, loving, and suffering"
(Const, art 10).
With this desire, the Presidency of the International
Council of the SFO, having received the approved general constitution,
transmits them to the whole Order so that, as with the Rule, they be
studied, loved and lived.
Emanuela De Nunzio
Minister General of the SFO
General Constitution of the Secular Franciscan
Order
Chapter I
The Secular Franciscan Order
Article 1
1. All the faithful are called to holiness and
have a right to follow their own spiritual way in communion with the
Church. [1]
2. Rule 1 There are many spiritual
families in the Church with different charisms. Among these families,
the Franciscan Family, which in its various branches recognizes St.
Francis of Assisi as its father, inspiration, and model, must be
included.
3. Rule 2 From the beginning, the Secular
Franciscan Order [2] has had its own
proper place in the Franciscan Family. It is formed by the organic
union of all the Catholic fraternities whose members, moved by the Holy
Spirit, commit themselves through profession to live the Gospel in the
manner of St. Francis, in their secular state, following the Rule
approved by the Church [3] .
4. The Holy See has entrusted the pastoral care
and spiritual assistance of the Secular Franciscan Order (SFO), because
it belongs to the same spiritual family, to the Franciscan First Order
and Third Order Regular (TOR). These are the "Institutes" who are
responsible for the altius moderamen, referred to by canon 303
of the Code of Canon Law [4] .
5. The Secular Franciscan Order is a public
association in the Church [5] . It is
divided into fraternities at various levels: local, regional, national,
and international. Each one has its own juridical personality within
the Church.
Article 2
1. The vocation to the SFO is a specific vocation
that gives form to the life and apostolic activity of its members.
Therefore, those who are bound by a perpetual commitment to another
religious family or institute of consecrated life cannot belong to the
SFO.
2. The SFO is open to the faithful of every state
of life. The following may belong to it:
- the laity (men and women);
- the secular clergy (deacons, priests, bishops).
Article 3
1. The secular state characterizes the
spirituality and the apostolic life of those belonging to the SFO.
2. Their secularity, with respect to vocation and
to apostolic life, expresses itself according to the respective state,
that is:
- for the laity, contributing to building up the Kingdom of God by
their presence in their life-situations and in their temporal
activities [6];
- for the secular clergy, by offering to the people of God the service
which is properly theirs, in communion with the bishop and the
presbytery [7] .
Both are inspired by the gospel options of Saint Francis
of Assisi, committing themselves to continue his mission with the other
components of the Franciscan Family.
3. The vocation to the SFO is a vocation to live
the Gospel in fraternal communion. For this purpose, the members of the
SFO gather in ecclesial communities which are called fraternities.
Article 4
1. The SFO is governed by the universal law of
the Church, and by its own: the Rule, the Constitutions, the Ritual,
and the particular statutes.
2. The Rule establishes the nature, purpose, and
spirit of the SFO.
3. Rule 3 The Constitutions have as their
purpose:
- to apply the Rule;
- to indicate concretely the conditions for belonging to the SFO, its
government, the organization of life in fraternity, and its seat [8] .
Article 5
1. Rule 3 The authentic interpretation of
the Rule and of the Constitutions belongs to the Holy See.
2. The practical interpretation of the
Constitutions, with the purpose of harmonizing its application in
different areas and at the various levels of the Order, belongs to the
General Chapter of the SFO.
3. The clarification of specific points which
require a timely decision is the competence of the Presidency of the
International Council of the SFO (CIOFS). Such a clarification is valid
until the next General Chapter.
Article 6
1. The international fraternity of the SFO has
its own statutes approved by the General Chapter.
2. National fraternities have their own statutes
approved by the Presidency of the International Council of the
SFO.
3. The regional and the local fraternities may
have their own statutes approved by the council of the higher
level.
Article 7
All regulations not in accordance with the present
Constitutions are abrogated.
Chapter II
Form of Life and Apostolic Activity
Title I
The Form of Life
Article 8
1. The secular Franciscans commit themselves by
their profession to live the Gospel according to Franciscan
spirituality in their secular condition.
2. They seek to deepen, in the light of faith,
the values and choices of the evangelical life according to the Rule of
the SFO:
-- Rule 7 in a continually renewed journey of conversion and of
formation;
-- Rule 4,3 open to the challenges that come from society and
from the Church's life situation, "going from Gospel to life and from
life to Gospel";
-- in the personal and communal dimensions of this journey.
Article 9
1. Rule 5 The spirituality of the secular
Franciscan is a plan of life centered on the person and on the
following of Christ, [9] rather than
a detailed program to be put into practice.
2. Rule 4,3 The secular Franciscan,
committed to following the example and the teachings of Christ, must
personally and assiduously study the Gospel and Sacred Scripture. The
fraternity and its leaders should foster love for the word of the
Gospel and help the brothers and sisters to know and understand it as
it is proclaimed by the Church with the assistance of the Spirit [10] .
Article 10
Rule 10 "Christ, poor and crucified", victor over
death and risen, the greatest manifestation of the love of God for
humanity, is the "book" in which the brothers and sisters, in imitation
of Francis, learn the purpose and the way of living, loving, and
suffering. They discover in Him the value of contradictions for the
sake of justice and the meaning of the difficulties and the crosses of
daily life. With Him they can accept the will of the Father even under
the most difficult circumstances and live the Franciscan spirit of
peace, rejecting every doctrine contrary to human dignity.
Article 11
Mindful that the Holy Spirit is the source of their
vocation and the animator of fraternal life and mission, secular
Franciscans should seek to imitate the faithfulness of Francis to His
inspiration. They should listen to the exhortation of the Saint to
desire above all things "the Spirit of God at work within them" [11].
Article 12
1. Gaining inspiration from the example and the
writings of Francis and, above all, filled with the grace of the Holy
Spirit, each day the brothers and sisters faithfully live the great
gift which Christ has given: the revelation of the Father. They should
bear witness to this faith before all:
-- in their family life;
-- in their work;
-- in their joys and sufferings;
-- in their associations with all men and women, brothers and sisters
of the same Father;
-- in their presence and participation in the life of society;
-- in their fraternal relationships with all creatures.
2. Rule 10 With Jesus, obedient even to
death, they should seek to know and do the will of the Father. They
should give thanks to God for the gift of freedom and for the
revelation of the law of love. In order to carry out the will of the
Father, they should accept the help which is offered to them through
the mediation of the Church by those who are constituted as authority
in her and by their confreres. They should take on the risk of
courageous choices in their life in society with decisiveness and
serenity.
3. Rule 8 The brothers and sisters should
love meeting God as His children and they should let prayer and
contemplation be the soul of all they are and do. They should seek to
discover the presence of the Father in their own heart, in nature, and
in the history of humanity in which His plan of salvation is fulfilled.
The contemplation of this mystery will dispose them to collaborate in
this loving plan.
Article 13
1. Rule 7 Secular Franciscans, called in
earlier times "the brothers and sisters of penance", propose to live in
the spirit of continual conversion. Some means to cultivate this
characteristic of the Franciscan vocation, individually and in
fraternity, are: listening to and celebrating the Word of God; review
of life; spiritual retreats; the help of a spiritual adviser, and
penitential celebrations. They should approach the Sacrament of
Reconciliation frequently and participate in the communal celebration
of it, whether in the fraternity, or with the whole people of God [12] .
2. In this spirit of conversion, they should live
out their love for the renewal of the Church, which should be
accompanied by personal and communal renewal. The fruits of conversion,
which is a response to the love of God, are the works of charity in the
interactions with the brothers and sisters [13] .
3. Traditional among Franciscan penitents,
penitential practices such as fasting and abstinence should be known,
appreciated, and lived out according to the general guidelines of the
Church.
Article 14
1. Aware that God wanted to make of us all a
single people and that he made his Church the universal sacrament of
salvation, the brothers and sisters should commit themselves to a
faith-inspired reflection on the Church, its mission in today's world
and the role of the Franciscan laity within it. They should take up the
challenges and accept the responsibilities that this reflection will
lead them to discover.
2. Rule 8
The Eucharist is the center of
the life of the Church. Christ unites us to himself and to one another
as a single body in it. Therefore, the Eucharist should be the center
of the life of the fraternity. The brothers and sisters should
participate in the Eucharist as frequently as possible, being mindful
of the respect and love shown by Francis, who, in the Eucharist, lived
all the mysteries of the life of Christ.
3. They should
participate in the sacraments of
the Church, attentive not only to personal sanctification, but also to
fostering the growth of the Church and the spreading of the Kingdom.
They should collaborate in achieving living and conscious celebrations
in their own parishes, particularly in the celebrations of baptism,
confirmation, marriage, and the anointing of the sick.
4. The brothers and sisters as well as the
fraternities should adhere to the indications of the Ritual with
respect to the different forms of participating in the liturgical
prayer of the Church, giving priority to the celebration of the Liturgy
of the Hours [14] .
5. In all places and at all times, it is possible
for true worshipers of the Father to give him adoration and to pray to
him. Nevertheless, the brothers and sisters should try to find times of
silence and recollection dedicated exclusively to prayer.
Article 15
1. Rule 11 Secular Franciscans should
pledge themselves to live the spirit of the Beatitudes and, in a
special way, the spirit of poverty. Evangelical poverty demonstrates
confidence in the Father, creates interior freedom, and disposes them
to promote a more just distribution of wealth.
2. Secular Franciscans, who must provide for
their own families and serve society by means of their work and
material goods, have a particular manner of living evangelical poverty.
To understand and achieve it requires a strong personal commitment and
the stimulation of the fraternity in prayer and dialogue, communal
review of life, and attentiveness to the instructions of the Church,
and the demands of society.
3. Secular Franciscans should pledge themselves
to reduce their own personal needs so as to be better able to share
spiritual and material goods with their brothers and sisters,
especially those most in need. They should give thanks to God for the
goods they have received, using them as good stewards and not as
owners.
They should take a firm position against consumerism and
against ideologies and practices which prefer riches over human and
religious values and which permit the exploitation of the human
person.
4. They should love and practice purity of heart,
the source of true fraternity.
Article 16
1. Rule 9 Mary, Mother of Jesus, is the
model of listening to the Word and of faithfulness to vocation; we,
like Francis, see all the gospel virtues realized in her [15] .
The brothers and sisters should cultivate intense love
for the most holy virgin, imitation, prayer, and filial abandonment.
They should manifest their own devotion with expressions of genuine
faith, in forms accepted by the Church.
2. Mary is the model of fruitful and faithful
love for the entire ecclesial community.
Secular Franciscans and their fraternities should seek
to live the experience of Francis, who made the Virgin the guide of his
activity. With her, like the disciples at Pentecost, they should
welcome the Spirit to create a community of love [16] .
Title II
Active Presence in the Church
and in the World
Article 17
1. Rule 6 Called to work together in
building up the Church as the sacrament of salvation for all and,
through their baptism and profession, made "witnesses and instruments
of her mission", secular Franciscans proclaim Christ by their life and
words. Their preferred apostolate is personal witness [17] in the environment in which they live
and service for building up the Kingdom of God within the situations of
this world.
2. The preparation of the brothers and sisters
for spreading the Gospel message "in the ordinary circumstances of the
world" [18] and for collaborating in
the catechesis within the ecclesial communities should be promoted in
the fraternities.
3. Those who are called to carry out the mission
of catechists, presiders of ecclesial communities, or other ministries,
as well as the sacred ministers, should make the love of Francis for
the word of God their own, as well as his faith in those who announce
it, and the great fervor with which he received the mission of
preaching penance from the Pope.
4. Participation in the service of
sanctification, which the Church exercises through the liturgy, prayer,
and works of penance and charity, is put into practice by the brothers
and sisters above all in their own family, then in the fraternity and
finally through their active presence in the local Church and in
society.
For a Just and Fraternal Society
Article 18
1. Secular Franciscans are called to make their
own contribution, inspired by the person and message of Saint Francis
of Assisi, towards a civilization in which the dignity of the human
person, shared responsibility, and love may be living realities [19] .
2. Rule 13 They should deepen the true
foundations of universal kinship and create a spirit of welcome and an
atmosphere of fraternity everywhere. They should firmly commit
themselves to oppose every form of exploitation, discrimination, and
exclusion and against every attitude of indifference in relation to
others.
3. Rule 13 They should work together with
movements which promote the building of fraternity among peoples: they
should be committed to "create worthy conditions of life" for all and
to work for the freedom of all people.
4. Following the example of Francis, patron of
ecologists, they should actively put forward initiatives that care for
creation and should work with others in efforts that both put a stop to
polluting and degrading nature and also establish circumstances of
living and environment which would not be a threat to the human
person.
Article 19
1. Rule 14 Secular Franciscans should
always act as a leaven in the environment in which they live through
the witness of their fraternal love and clear Christian
motivations.
2. In the spirit of minority, they should opt for
relationships which give preference to the poor and to those on the
fringe of society, whether these be individuals or categories of
persons or an entire people; they should collaborate in overcoming the
exclusions of others and those forms of poverty that are the fruit of
inefficiency and injustice.
Article 20
1. Rule 14 Secular Franciscans, committed
by their vocation to build the Kingdom of God in temporal situations
and activities, live their membership both in the Church and in society
as an inseparable reality.
2. As the primary and fundamental contribution to
building a more just and fraternal world, they should commit themselves
both to the generous fulfillment of the duties proper to their
occupation and to the professional training that pertains to it. With
the same spirit of service, they should assume their social and civil
responsibilities.
Article 21
1. Rule 16 For Francis, work is a gift and
to work is a grace. Daily work is not only the means of livelihood, but
the opportunity to serve God and neighbor as well as a way to develop
one's own personality. In the conviction that work is a right and a
duty and that every form of occupation deserves respect, the brothers
and sisters should commit themselves to collaborate so that all persons
may have the possibility to work and so that working conditions may
always be more humane.
2. Leisure and recreation have their own value
and are necessary for personal development. Secular Franciscans should
maintain a balance between work and rest and should strive to create
meaningful forms of using leisure time [20] .
Article 22
1. Rule 15 Secular Franciscans should "be
in the forefront ... in the field of public life." They should
collaborate as much as possible for the passage of just laws and
ordinances.
2. The fraternities should engage themselves
through courageous initiatives, consistent with their Franciscan
vocation and with the directives of the Church, in the field of human
development and justice. They should take clear positions whenever
human dignity is attacked by any form of oppression or indifference.
They should offer their fraternal service to the victims of
injustice.
3. The renunciation of the use of violence,
characteristic of the followers of Francis, does not mean the
renunciation of action. However, the brothers and sisters should take
care that their interventions are always inspired by Christian
love.
Article 23
1. Rule 19 Peace is the work of justice
and the fruit of reconciliation and of fraternal love [21] . Secular Franciscans are called to be
bearers of peace in their families and in society:
-- they should see to the proposal and spreading of peaceful ideas and
attitudes;
-- they should develop their own initiatives and should collaborate,
individually and as a fraternity, with initiatives of the Pope, the
local Churches, and the Franciscan Family;
-- they should collaborate with those movements and institutions which
promote peace while respecting its authentic foundations.
2. While acknowledging both the personal and
national right to legitimate defense, they should respect the choice of
those who, because of conscientious objection, refuse to bear
arms.
3. To preserve peace in the family, the brothers
and sisters should, in due time, make a last will and testament for the
disposition of their goods.
In the Family
Article 24
1. Rule 17 Secular Franciscans should
consider their own family to be the first place in which to live their
Christian commitment and Franciscan vocation. They should make space
within it for prayer, for the Word of God, and for Christian
catechesis. They should concern themselves with respect for all life in
every situation from conception until death.
Married couples find in the Rule of the SFO an effective
aid in their own journey of Christian life, aware that, in the
sacrament of matrimony, their love shares in the love that Christ has
for his Church. The way spouses love each other and affirm the value of
fidelity is a profound witness for their own family, the Church, and
the world.
2. In the fraternity:
-- the spirituality of the family and of marriage and the Christian
attitude towards family problems should be a theme for dialogue and for
the sharing of experiences;
-- they should share the important moments of the family life of their
Franciscan brothers and sisters and they should give fraternal
attention to those - single, widows, single parents, separated,
divorced - who are living difficult situations;
-- Rule 19 they should create conditions suitable for dialogue
between generations;
-- the formation of groups of married couples and of family groups
should be fostered.
3. The brothers and sisters should collaborate
with the efforts undertaken in the Church and in society to affirm both
the value of fidelity and respect for life and to provide answers to
the social problems of the family.
Article 25
Out of the conviction of the need to educate children to
take an interest in community, "bringing them the awareness of being
living, active members of the People of God" [22] and because of the fascination which
Francis can exercise on them, the formation of groups of children
should be encouraged. With the help of a pedagogy and an organization
suitable to their age, these children should be initiated into a
knowledge and love of the Franciscan life. National statutes will give
appropriate orientation for the organization of these groups and their
relationship to the fraternity and to Franciscan youth groups.
Messengers
of Joy and Hope
Article 26
1. Even in suffering, Francis experienced
confidence and joy from:
-- the experience of the fatherhood of God;
-- the invincible faith of rising with Christ to eternal life;
-- the experience of being able to meet and praise the Creator in the
universal fraternity of all creatures [23] .
Rule 19 Following the Gospel, secular Franciscans therefore
affirm their hope and their joy in living. They make a contribution to
counter widespread distress and pessimism, preparing a better
future.
2. In the fraternity, the brothers and sisters
should promote mutual understanding and they should see to it that the
atmosphere of their meetings is welcoming and that it reflects joy.
They should encourage one another for the good.
Article 27
1. Rule 19 The brothers and sisters,
progressing in age, should learn to accept illness and increasing
difficulties and to give a deeper sense to their life. This should be
undertaken with increasing detachment as they set out for the promised
Land. They should be firmly convinced that the community of those who
believe in Christ and who love one another in him will go forward into
eternal life as the "communion of saints".
2. Secular Franciscans should commit themselves
to create in their environment and, above all, in their fraternities, a
climate of faith and hope so that "Sister Death" may be regarded as a
passage to the Father, and all may prepare themselves with
serenity.
Chapter III
Life in Fraternity
Title I
General Orientations
Article 28
1. The fraternity of the SFO finds its origin in
the inspiration of Saint Francis of Assisi to whom the Most High
revealed the essential gospel quality of life in fraternal communion [24] .
2. Rule 20 "The SFO is divided into
fraternities of various levels", the purpose being to promote, in an
orderly form, the union and mutual collaboration among the brothers and
sisters and their active and communal presence in both the local and
the universal Church. The SFO shall also support the commitment of the
fraternities in their service to the world, and specifically to the
life of society.
3. The brothers and sisters gather in local
fraternities established in connection with a church or a religious
house, or in personal fraternities, constituted for specific and valid
reasons recognized in the decree of establishment [25] .
Article 29
1. Local fraternities are grouped into
fraternities at various levels: regional, national and international
according to criteria that are ecclesial, territorial, or of another
nature. They are co-ordinated and connected according to the norm of
the Rule and the Constitutions. This is a requirement of the communion
among the fraternities, of the orderly collaboration among them, and of
the unity of the SFO.
2. Rule 20 These fraternities, that each
have their own juridical personality in the Church, should acquire, if
possible, a civil juridical personality for the better fulfillment of
their mission. It pertains to the national councils to give guidelines
concerning the motivations and the procedures to be followed.
3. National statutes should indicate the criteria
for the organization of the SFO in the nation. The application of these
criteria is left to the prudent judgement of the leaders of the
fraternities concerned and of the national council.
Article 30
1. The brothers and sisters are co-responsible
for the life of the fraternity to which they belong and for the SFO as
the organic union of all fraternities throughout the world.
2. The sense of co-responsibility of the members
requires personal presence, witness, prayer, and active collaboration,
in accordance with each one's situation and possible obligations for
the animation of the fraternity.
3. Rule 25 In a family spirit, each
brother and sister should make a contribution to the fraternity fund,
according to each one's means, to provide the financial means needed
for the life of the fraternity and for its religious, apostolic, and
charitable works. The brothers and sisters ought to provide the means
necessary for supporting the activities and the operations of the
fraternities at higher levels, both by their financial assistance and
by their contributions in other areas as well.
Article 31
1. Rule 21 "On various levels, each
fraternity is animated and guided by a council and minister (or
president)". These offices are conferred through elections, in
accordance with the Rule, the Constitutions, and their own Statutes.
Only by way of exception or in the first phase of their establishment
may fraternities exist without a regular council. The council of the
higher level will make the arrangements necessary for this inadequate
situation only for the specific amount it time it takes to get a
fraternity back on sure footing or to establish a new fraternity; to
give its leaders the proper formation and to carry out the
elections.
2. The office of minister or councilor is a
fraternal service, a commitment to hold oneself available and
responsible in relation to each brother and sister and to the
fraternity so that each one will realize his or her own vocation and
each fraternity will be a true community, ecclesial and Franciscan,
actively present in the Church and in society.
3. The leaders of the SFO at every level should
be perpetually professed, convinced of the validity of the Franciscan
evangelical way of life, attentive to the life of the Church and of
society with a broad and encompassing vision, open to dialogue, and
ready to give and receive help and collaboration.
4. The leaders should see to the spiritual and
technical preparation and animation of the meetings both of the
fraternities and of the councils. They should seek to inspire life and
soul into the fraternities by their own witness, suggesting appropriate
means for the development of the life of the fraternity and of
apostolic activities in the light of the fundamental Franciscan
options. They should see to it that the decisions made are carried out
and they should promote collaboration among the brothers and
sisters.
Article 32
1. The ministers and councilors should live and
foster the spirit and reality of communion among the brothers and
sisters, among the various fraternities, and between them and the
Franciscan family. They should, above all, cherish peace and
reconciliation in and around the fraternity.
2. Rule 21 The ministers' and councilors'
task to lead is temporary. The brothers and sisters, rejecting all
ambition, should show love for the fraternity with a spirit of service,
prepared both to accept and to relinquish the office.
Article 33
1. In the guidance and co-ordination of the
fraternities and of the Order, the personality and capacity of the
individual brothers and sisters and of the individual fraternities
should be promoted. The plurality of expressions of the Franciscan
ideal and cultural variety must be respected.
2. The councils of higher levels should not do
what can be adequately carried out either by the local fraternities or
by a council of a lower level. They should respect and promote their
vitality so that they fulfil their duties properly. The local
fraternities and councils concerned should commit themselves to carry
out the decisions of the international council and of the other
councils of higher levels, and to implement their programs, adapting
them when necessary to their own situation.
Article 34
Where the situation and the needs of the members require
it, sections or groups which gather members sharing particular needs,
common interests, or the same choices, may be established within the
fraternity under the guidance of the one council.
Such groups can give themselves specific norms relative
to their meetings and activities, firmly remaining faithful, however,
to the requirements which arise from membership in the one fraternity.
National statutes may establish criteria suitable for the formation and
functioning of these sections or groups.
Article 35
1. Secular priests who recognize that they are
called by the Spirit to participate in the charism of Saint Francis of
Assisi within the secular fraternity should find in it specific
attention in conformity with their mission among the People of
God.
2. Secular Franciscan priests may also gather in
personal fraternities in order to pursue the ascetical and pastoral
incentives which the life and doctrine of Francis and the Rule of the
SFO offer them to live their vocation in the Church better. It is
proper that these fraternities have their own statutes which envision
concrete forms for their composition, their fraternal meetings and for
spiritual formation as well as for making their communion with the
whole Order living and functional.
Article 36
1. The brothers and sisters who commit themselves
with private vows to live in the spirit of the beatitudes and to make
themselves more disposed to contemplation and to the service of the
fraternities, can be a great help in the spiritual and apostolic
development of the SFO.
2. These brothers and sisters may gather in
groups according to statutes approved by the national council, or when
these groups spread beyond the borders of a nation, by the Presidency
of the International Council of the SFO.
3. Such statutes should be in harmony with the
present Constitutions.
Title II
Entrance into the Order and Formation
Article 37
1. Rule 23 Membership in the Order is
attained through a time of initiation, a time of formation, and the
profession of the Rule.
2. The journey of formation, which should develop
throughout life, begins with entrance into the fraternity. Mindful that
the Holy Spirit is the principal agent of formation and always
attentive to collaboration with Him, those responsible for formation
are: the candidate, the entire fraternity, the council with the
minister, the master of formation, and the assistant.
3. The brothers and sisters are responsible for
their own formation, developing in an ever more perfect way the
vocation received from the Lord. The fraternity is called to help the
brothers and sisters in this journey by means of a warm welcome,
prayer, and example.
4. The elaboration and adoption of means of
formation, adapted to the local situations and offered as a help to
those responsible for formation in the individual fraternities, belong
to the national and regional councils in common agreement.
The Time of Initiation
Article 38
1. Rule 23 The time of initiation is a
phase preparatory to the true and proper time of formation and is
intended for the discernment of the vocation and for the reciprocal
acquaintance between the fraternity and the aspiring member. It should
guarantee the freedom and the seriousness of entrance into the
SFO.
2. The duration of the time of initiation and the
forms employed in its development are established by the national
statutes.
3. It belongs to the fraternity council to decide
possible exemptions to this time of initiation, keeping in mind the
guidelines of the national council.
Admission to the Order
Article 39
1. Rule 23 The request for admission to
the Order is presented by the aspirant to the minister of a local or
personal fraternity by a formal act, in writing if possible.
2. Conditions for admission are: to profess the
Catholic faith, to live in communion with the Church, to be of good
moral standing, and to show clear signs of a vocation [26] .
3. The council of the fraternity decides
collegially on the request, gives a formal answer to the aspirant, and
communicates this to the fraternity.
4. The rite of admission is performed according
to the Ritual [27] . The act is to
be registered and preserved in the records of the fraternity.
The Time of Formation
Article 40
1. Rule 23 The time of formation lasts at
least one year. The national statutes can establish a longer period.
The purpose of this period is the maturation of the vocation, the
experience of the evangelical life in fraternity, and a better
knowledge of the Order. This formation should be carried out with
frequent meetings for study and prayer and with concrete experiences of
service and of apostolate. These meetings should be held, as far as
possible and opportune, in common with the candidates of other
fraternities.
2. The candidates are guided to read and meditate
on Sacred Scripture, to come to know the person and writings of Francis
and of Franciscan spirituality, and to study the Rule and
Constitutions. They are trained in a love for the Church and acceptance
of her teaching. The laity practice living their secular commitment in
the world in an evangelical way.
3. Participation in the meetings of the local
fraternity is indispensable presupposition for initiation into
community prayer and into fraternity life.
4. A style of teaching which is Franciscan in
character and which fits the mentality of the persons concerned should
be adopted.
The Profession or Promise of
Evangelical Life
Article 41
1. Rule 23 Having completed the time of
initial formation, the candidate submits to the minister of the local
fraternity a request to make his or her profession. Having heard the
master of formation and the assistant, the fraternity council decides
by secret ballot on the admission to profession, gives its reply to the
candidate, and informs the fraternity.
2. The conditions for the profession or promise
of evangelical life are:
-- attainment of the age established by the national statutes;
-- active participation in the time of formation for at least one
year;
-- the consent of the council of the local fraternity.
3. Where it is held to be opportune to lengthen
the time of formation, it must not be extended to more than a year
beyond the time established by the national statutes.
Article 42
1. Profession is the solemn ecclesial act by
which the candidate, remembering the call received from Christ, renews
the baptismal promises and publicly affirms his or her personal
commitment to live the Gospel in the world according to the example of
Francis and following the Rule of the SFO.
2. Rule 23 Profession incorporates the
candidate into the Order and is by its nature a perpetual commitment.
Perpetual profession, because of objective and specific pedagogical
reasons, may be preceded by a temporary profession, renewable annually.
The total time of temporary profession may not be longer than three
years [28] .
3. Profession is accepted by the minister of the
local fraternity or by his or her delegate in the name of the Church
and of the SFO. The rite is carried out according to the norms of the
Ritual [29] .
4. Profession does not only commit those
professed to the fraternity, but also in the same way it commits the
fraternity to be concerned with their human and religious
well-being.
5. The act of profession is registered and
preserved in the records of the fraternity.
Article 43
The national statutes establish:
-- Rule 23 the minimum age for profession which, however, may
not be less than eighteen years completed;
-- the distinctive sign of membership in the Order (the "Tau" or other
Franciscan symbol).
Continuing Formation
Article 44
1. Begun by the preceding stages, the formation
of the brothers and sisters takes place in a permanent and continuous
way. It should be understood as an aid in the conversion of each [30] and everyone and in the
fulfillment of their proper mission in the Church and in society.
2. The Fraternity has the duty to give special
attention to the formation of the newly professed and of the
temporarily professed, to help them become fully mature in their
vocation and develop a true sense of belonging.
3. Ongoing formation - accomplished by means of
courses, gatherings, and the sharing of experience - aims to assist the
brothers and sisters:
-- Rule 4 in listening to and meditating on the Word of God,
"going from Gospel to life and from life to Gospel";
-- in reflecting on events in the Church and in society in the light of
faith and with the help of the documents of the teaching Church,
consequently taking consistent positions;
-- in discerning and deepening the Franciscan vocation by studying the
writings of Saint Francis, Saint Clare and Franciscan authors.
Promotion of Vocations
Article 45
1. The promotion of vocations to the Order is a
duty of all the brothers and sisters and is a sign of the vitality of
the fraternities themselves.
The brothers and sisters, convinced of the validity of
the Franciscan way of life, should pray that God may give the grace of
the Franciscan vocation to new members.
2. Although nothing can substitute for the
witness of each member and of the fraternity, the councils must adopt
appropriate means to promote the secular Franciscan vocation.
Title III
The Fraternity at the Various Levels
The Local Fraternity
Article 46
1. Rule 22 The canonical establishment of
the local fraternity belongs to the competent religious major superior
at the request of the brothers and sisters concerned and with the prior
consultation and collaboration of the council of the higher level to
which the new fraternity will be related according to the national
statutes.
The written consent of the local Ordinary is necessary
for the canonical establishment of a fraternity outside the houses or
churches of the Franciscan religious of the First Order or the TOR. [31]
2. For the valid establishment of a local
fraternity, at least five perpetually professed members are required.
The admission and profession of these first brothers and sisters will
be received by the council of another local fraternity or by the
council of a higher level which will have provided for their formation
in appropriate ways. The acts of admission and profession and the
decree of establishment are preserved in the records of the fraternity.
Copies are sent to the council of the higher level.
3. If there is not yet a fraternity of the SFO in
a nation, it belongs to the Presidency of the International Council of
the SFO to make provision in this regard.
Article 47
1. Rule 22 Each local fraternity, the
primary cell of the one SFO, is entrusted to the pastoral care of the
religious Franciscan Order that canonically established it.
2. A local fraternity may pass to the pastoral
care of another religious Franciscan Order in the ways determined by
the national statutes.
Article 48
1. In the case of cessation of a fraternity, the
patrimonial goods of the same, the library and the records are acquired
by the fraternity of the immediately higher level.
2. In the case of revival according to the
canonical laws, the fraternity will repossess any remaining goods, its
own library, and records.
The Fraternity Council
Article 49
1. The council of the local fraternity is
composed of the following offices: minister, vice-minister, secretary,
treasurer, and master of formation. Other offices may be added
according to the needs of each fraternity. The spiritual assistant of
the fraternity forms part of the council by right [32] .
2. The fraternity, meeting in an assembly or
chapter, discusses questions regarding its own life and organization.
Every three years, in an elective assembly or chapter, the fraternity
elects the minister and the council in the way established by the
Constitutions and statutes.
Article 50
1. It is the duty of the council of the local
fraternity:
-- to promote the initiatives necessary for fostering fraternal life,
for improving the human, Christian, and Franciscan formation of its
members and for sustaining their witness and commitment in the
world;
-- to make concrete and courageous choices, appropriate for the
situation of the fraternity, from among the numerous activities
possible in the field of the apostolate.
2. The duties of the council are also:
a. to decide on the acceptance and admission to profession of new
brothers and sisters [33] ;
b. to establish a fraternal dialogue with members in particular
difficulties and to adopt consequent measures;
c. to receive the request for withdrawal and to decide on the
suspension of a member from the fraternity;
d. to decide on the establishment of sections or groups in conformity
with the Constitutions and the statutes;
e. to decide on the destination of available funds and, in general, to
deliberate on matters concerning financial management and economic
affairs of the fraternity;
f. to assign duties to the councilors and to the other professed
members;
g. to request from the competent superiors of the First Order and the
TOR suitable and prepared religious as assistants;
h. to perform such other duties as are required by these Constitutions
or which are necessary to carry out its proper purposes.
The Offices in the Fraternity
Article 51
1. While firmly upholding the co-responsibility
of the council to animate and guide the fraternity, the minister, as
the primary person responsible for the fraternity, is expected to make
sure that the directions and the decisions of the council are put into
practice and will keep the council informed about what he or she is
doing.
2. The minister also has the following
duties:
a. to call, to preside at, and to direct the meetings of the fraternity
and council; to convoke every three years the elective chapter of the
fraternity, having heard the council on the formalities of the
convocation;
b. to prepare the annual report to be sent to the council of the higher
level after it has been approved by the council of the fraternity;
c. to represent the fraternity in all its relations with ecclesiastical
and civil authorities. When the fraternity acquires a juridical
personality in the civil order, the minister becomes, when possible,
its legal representative;
d. to request, with the consent of the council, the pastoral and
fraternal visits, at least once every three years.
e. to put into effect those acts which the Constitutions refer to his
or her competence.
Article 52
1. The vice-minister has the following
duties:
a. to collaborate in a fraternal spirit and to support the minister in
carrying out his or her specific duties;
b. to exercise the functions entrusted by the council and/or by the
assembly or chapter;
c. to take the place of the minister in both duties and
responsibilities in case of absence or temporary impediment;
d. to assume the functions of the minister when the office remains
vacant [34] .
2. The secretary has the following duties:
a. to compile the official acts of the fraternity and of the council
and to assure that they are sent to their respective proper
recipients;
b. to see to the updating and preservation of the records and the
registers, noting admissions, professions, deaths, withdrawals, and
transfers from the fraternity [35]
;
c. to provide for the communication of the more important facts to the
various levels and, if appropriate, to provide for their dissemination
through the mass media.
3. The master of formation has the following
duties:
a. to co-ordinate, with the help of the other members of the council,
the formative activities of the fraternity;
b. to instruct and enliven the inquirers during the time of initiation,
the candidates during the period of initiation formation, and the newly
professed;
c. to inform the council of the fraternity prior to profession,
concerning the suitability of the candidate for a commitment to live
according to the Rule.
4. The treasurer, or bursar, has the following
duties:
a. to guard diligently the contributions received, recording each
receipt in the appropriate register, with the date on which it was
given, the name of the contributor, or the one from whom it was
collected;
b. to record in the same register the items of expense, specifying the
date and the purpose, in conformity with the directions of the
fraternity council;
c. to render an account of his or her administration to the assembly
and to the council of the fraternity according to the norms of the
national statutes.
5. The provisions regarding the rights and duties
of the vice-minister, the secretary and the treasurer apply, with the
appropriate adaptations, to all levels.
Participation in the Life of the
Fraternity
Article 53
1. Rule 24 The fraternity must offer to
its members opportunities for coming together and collaborating through
meetings to be held with as great a frequency as allowed by the
situation and, with the involvement of all its members.
2. Rule 6; 8 The fraternity should come
together periodically, also as an ecclesial community to celebrate the
Eucharist in a climate which strengthens the fraternal bond and
characterises the identity of the Franciscan family. Where, for
whatever reason, this particular celebration may not be possible, they
should participate in the celebration of the larger ecclesial
community.
3. Insertion into a local fraternity and
participation in fraternity life is essential for belonging to the SFO.
Appropriate initiatives should be adopted according to the directives
of the national statutes, to keep those brothers and sisters united to
the fraternity who - for valid reasons of health, family, work, or
distance - cannot actively participate in community life.
4. The fraternity remembers with gratitude its
brothers and sisters who have passed away and continues its communion
with them by prayer and in the Eucharist.
5. The national statutes can indicate special
forms of association with the fraternity for those who, without
becoming a member of the SFO, want to participate in its life and
activities.
Article 54
1. In cases where the fraternity of whatever
level has property or real estate at its disposal, the procedures
necessary for that fraternity to acquire a juridical personality in the
civil order must be followed in conformity with the national
statutes.
2. Based on the respective civil legislation, the
national statutes must establish precise criteria regarding the purpose
of the juridical person, the administration of its material goods and
the relevant internal controls. They must also contain instructions so
that the establishing document may provide for the disposal of its
property in case the juridical person ceases to exist.
3. The national statutes must also set up precise
criteria for local fraternities that possess or administer property or
real estate, so that the respective council, before its term of office
is finished, has the fraternity's financial and real estate situation
audited either by an expert who is not a member of the council or by
the fraternity's board of examiners.
Transfer
Article 55
If a brother or sister, for any reasonable cause,
desires transfer to another fraternity, he or she first informs the
council of the fraternity to which he or she belongs and then makes the
request, including the reasons for the transfer, to the minister of the
fraternity to which he or she wishes to belong. The council makes its
decision after having received the necessary information in writing
from the fraternity of origin.
Temporary Provisions
Article 56
1. Rule 23 Members who find themselves in
difficulty may ask, with a formal act, temporary withdrawal from the
fraternity. The council will evaluate the request with love and
prudence, after a fraternal dialogue between the minister and the
assistant with the person concerned. If the reasons appear to be well
founded, after the brother or sister in difficulty has been given time
to reconsider, the council agrees to the request.
2. The repeated and prolonged default in the
obligations of the life of the fraternity and other conduct in serious
opposition to the Rule have to be discussed by the council in dialogue
with the person at fault. Only in the case of obstinacy or relapse may
the council decide, with a secret vote, to suspend someone. It
communicates its decision in writing to the person concerned.
3. Voluntary withdrawal or the provision for
suspension must be noted in the registers of the fraternity. It
involves exclusion from the meetings and activities of the fraternity,
including the right of active and passive voice, but membership in the
Order itself is not affected.
Article 57
1. In the case of voluntary withdrawal or of
suspension from the fraternity, the secular Franciscan may ask to be
readmitted by addressing an appropriate written request to the
minister.
2. After examining the reasons offered by the
person involved, the council evaluates whether the causes which led to
the withdrawal or suspension can be considered as overcome. If the
conclusion is affirmative, it readmits him or her and the decision is
recorded in the proceedings of the fraternity.
Definitive Provisions
Article 58
1. The brother or sister who intends to withdraw
definitively from the Order, communicates so in writing to the minister
of the fraternity. The minister and the assistant of the local
fraternity, with charity and prudence, discuss the matter with the
person concerned and keep the Council informed. If the brother or
sister confirms the decision in writing, the Council takes notice and
communicates it in writing to the person concerned. The definitive
withdrawal is recorded in the register of the fraternity and
communicated to the council of the higher level.
2. In case of serious causes, provided that they
are external, imputable, and juridically proven, the minister and the
assistant of the local fraternity, with charity and prudence, discuss
the matter with the brother or sister concerned and keep the council
informed. The brother or sister is given time to reflect and to
discern, eventually with the help of an external and competent expert.
If the time set aside for reflection passes without any result, the
council of the fraternity request the council of the higher level to
dismiss the brother or sister from the Order. The request must be
accompanied by all the documentation relative to the case.
The council of the higher level will issue the decree of
dismissal after having collegially examined the request with the
relative documentation and having verified observance of the directives
of the Law and of the Constitutions.
3. The brother or sister who publicly rejects the
faith, or defects from ecclesiastical communion, or upon whom an
excommunication is imposed or declared, by the fact itself ceases to be
a member of the Order. This does not mean, however, that the council of
the fraternity should not discuss the matter with the person concerned
or offer fraternal help. The council of a higher level, upon request of
the council of the local fraternity, collects the proofs and officially
declares that the person has ceased to be a member of the Order.
4. The decree of dismissal or the declaration
that the person has ceased to be a member of the Order, in order to
become effective, must be confirmed by the national council to whom all
the documentation will be sent.
Article 59
If anyone is convinced that he or she has been
wronged by a measure adopted, that person may appeal within three month
to the council above the one that adopted the decision in question and,
in successive cases, to further levels all the way up to the Presidency
of the International Council of the SFO and, in the final instance, to
the Holy See.
Article 60
What is said in these Constitutions with respect to
the local fraternities is valid, to the extent that it is applicable,
for the personal fraternities also.
The Regional Fraternity
Article 61
1. The regional fraternity is the organic union
of all the local fraternities existing in a territory or which can be
integrated into a natural unity, either by geographic proximity, or by
common problems and pastoral circumstances. It assures the link between
the local fraternities and the national fraternity in respect to the
unity of the SFO and in accord with the cooperative efforts of the
Franciscan religious orders to provide spiritual assistance within the
area.
2. It is for the national council to compose the
regional fraternity according to the Constitutions and to the national
statutes. The competent religious superiors, from whom spiritual
assistance must be sought, should be informed of it.
3. The regional fraternity:
-- is animated and guided by council and a minister;
-- is ruled by the national statutes and by its own statutes;
-- has its own seat.
Article 62
1. The regional council is constituted according
to the provisions of the national statutes and of its own regional
statutes. At the heart of the regional council there can be set up an
executive council (or board) whose duties are determined by those same
statutes.
2. The regional council has the following
duties:
a. to prepare the celebration of the elective chapter;
b. to promote, animate, and co-ordinate the life and activities of the
SFO and its insertion into the local Church within the regional
area;
c. to detail the action plan of the SFO within the region according to
the directives of the national council and in collaboration with it and
to publicize that program to the local fraternities;
d. to communicate the directives of the national council and of the
local Church to the local fraternities;
e. to provide for the formation of those responsible for animation;
f. to offer to local fraternities activities which support their
formative and operative needs;
g. to discuss and approve the annual report to the national
council;
h. to schedule, when circumstances recommend so, the fraternal visit to
the local fraternities, even if it is not requested;
i. to make decisions regarding the use of available funds and, in
general, to deliberate on matters regarding the financial management
and the economic affairs of the regional fraternity;
j. to have, before its term of office is finished, the regional
fraternity's financial and real estate situation audited either by an
expert who is not a member of the council or by the fraternity's board
of examiners;
k. to perform such other duties as are indicated by the Constitutions
or necessary to achieve its own aims.
Article 63
1. While firmly preserving the co-responsibility
of the council for the animation and guidance of the regional
fraternity it is the duty of the minister, who has the primary
responsibility, to see that the directions and decisions of the council
are put into practice. He or she will keep the council informed
concerning his or her activities.
2. In addition, the regional minister has the
duty:
a. to convoke and preside at the meetings of the regional council; to
convoke every three years the elective chapter of the fraternity after
having listened to the council on the formalities of the
convocation;
b. to preside at and to confirm the elections of the local fraternities
either in person or through a delegated member of the regional council,
with the exception of the spiritual assistant;
c. to make fraternal visits to the local fraternities, personally or
through a delegate who is a member of the council;
d. to participate in the meetings called by the national council;
e. to represent the fraternity whenever it has acquired a juridical
personality in the civil order;
f. to prepare the annual report to the national council;
g. to request the pastoral and fraternal visits with the consent of the
council, at least once every three years.
Article 64
The regional chapter is the representative organ of all
the fraternities existing within the confines of a regional fraternity,
with elective and deliberative power.
The national statutes provide for the formalities of
convocation, its composition, frequency and powers.
The National Fraternity
Article 65
1. The national fraternity is the organic union
of the local fraternities existing within the territory of one or more
states which are joined and co-ordinated among themselves through
regional fraternities, wherever they exist.
2. It is the duty of the Presidency of the
International Council of the SFO to provide for the establishment of
new national fraternities upon request and in dialogue with the
councils of the fraternities concerned. The competent religious
superiors of the nation, of whom spiritual assistance will be
requested, should be informed.
3. The national fraternity:
-- is animated and guided by a council and a minister;
-- is governed by its own statutes;
-- has its own seat.
Article 66
1. The national council is constituted according
to the provisions of the national statutes. At the heart of the
national council there can be set up an executive council (or board)
whose duties are determined by those same statutes.
2. The national council has the duty:
a. to prepare the celebration of the national elective chapter,
according to its own statutes;
b. to make known and to promote the secular Franciscan spirituality in
the whole area of its own national fraternity;
c. to decide upon programs of annual activities of a national
character;
d. to seek, indicate, publish, and distribute the necessary instruments
for the formation of the secular Franciscans;
e. to animate and co-ordinate the activities of the regional
councils;
f. to maintain the connection with the Presidency of the International
Council of the SFO;
g. to make sure that the national fraternity be represented in the
international council and to assume the responsibility for the expenses
involved;
h. to discuss and approve the annual report to Presidency of the
International Council of the SFO;
i. to see to the presence of the SFO in the ecclesial bodies at the
national level;
j. to schedule, when circumstances recommend so, the fraternal visit to
the regional and local fraternities, even if it is not requested;
k. to make decisions regarding the management of the available funds
and, in general, regarding the economic affairs of the fraternity;
l. to have, before its term of office is finished, the national
fraternity's financial and real estate situation audited either by an
expert who is not a member of the council or by the fraternity's board
of examiners;
m. to perform such other duties as are indicated by the Constitutions
or necessary to achieve its own aims.
Article 67
1. While firmly preserving the co-responsibility
of the council for the animation and guidance of the national
fraternity it is the duty of the minister, who has the primary
responsibility, to see that the directions and decisions of the council
are put into practice. He or she will keep the council informed
concerning his or her activities.
2. In addition, the national minister has the
duty:
a. to convoke and preside at the meetings of the national council; to
convoke every three years the elective chapter of the national
fraternity, according to the national statutes, after having listened
to the council on the formalities of the convocation;
b. to direct and co-ordinate with the national leaders the activities
at the national level;
c. to give a report to the national council and chapter on the life and
activity of the SFO in the country;
d. to represent the national fraternity in contacts with ecclesiastical
and civil authorities. When the national fraternity has a civil
juridical personality, its legal representation belongs to the
minister;
e. to preside at and to confirm the elections of the regional
fraternities either in person or through a delegated member of the
regional council, with the exception of the spiritual assistant;
f. to make fraternal visits to the regional councils, personally or
through a delegate who is a member of the national council;
g. to request the fraternal and pastoral visits, with the consent of
the council, at least once every six years.
Article 68
1. The national chapter is the representative
organ of the fraternities existing within the confines of a national
fraternity. It has legislative, deliberative, and elective powers. In
conformity with the Rule and the Constitutions, it may make legislative
decisions and give norms valid within its national confines. The
national statutes determine the composition of the national chapter,
its frequency, its powers, and how to convoke it.
2. The national statutes may envisage other forms
of meetings and assemblies to promote the life and apostolate at the
national level.
The International Fraternity
Article 69
1. The international fraternity is constituted by
the organic union of all the Catholic secular Franciscan fraternities
in the world. It is identical to the SFO. It has its own juridical
personality within the Church. It is organized and it functions in
conformity with the Constitutions and its own statutes.
2. The international fraternity is guided and
animated by the International Council of the SFO (CIOFS), with its seat
in Rome (Italy), by its Presidency and by the general minister or
international president.
Article 70
1. The international council is composed of the
following members, elected according to the norms of the Constitutions
and its own statutes:
-- professed brothers and sisters of the SFO;
-- representatives of the Franciscan Youth.
In addition, the four General Assistants to the SFO form
part of the international council.
2. The Presidency of the International Council of
the SFO is constituted within the international council of which it
forms an integral part.
3. The International Council convened in General
Chapter is the highest governing body of the SFO with legislative,
deliberative, and elective powers. It can make legislative decisions
and give norms in conformity with the Rule and the Constitutions.
4. The international council meets every six
years in elective general chapter, and at least once between two
elective general chapters, according to the norms established by the
Constitutions and by the international statutes.
Article 71
1. The purposes and duties of the International
Council of the SFO are:
a. to promote and sustain the evangelical life according to the spirit
of Saint Francis of Assisi within the secular condition of the faithful
living throughout the world;
b. to increase the sense of unity of the SFO while respecting the
pluralism of the persons and groups, and to strengthen the bond of
communion, collaboration, and sharing among the national
fraternities;
c. to harmonise the sound traditions, according to the original nature
of the SFO, with advances in theological, pastoral, and legislative
fields, with a view to a specific evangelical Franciscan formation;
d. to contribute, in line with the tradition of the SFO, to the
spreading of ideas and initiatives which are valuable for promoting the
availability of secular Franciscans in the life of the Church and of
society;
e. to determine the orientations and establish priorities for the
actions of its Presidency;
f. to interpret the Constitutions according to article 5,2.
2. The international statutes specify the
composition of the international council and how to convoke its
meetings.
Article 72
1. The Presidency of the International Council of
the SFO is composed of:
-- the general minister;
-- the vice-minister;
-- the presidency councilors;
-- a member of the Franciscan Youth;
-- the general assistants of the SFO.
2. The presidency councilors are elected
according to the international statutes, which determine their number
and the areas represented.
Article 73
The duties and tasks of the Presidency are:
a. to see that the decisions and orientations of the general chapter
are carried out;
b. to co-ordinate, animate, and guide the SFO at the international
level, in order to make the interdependence and reciprocity of the SFO
a reality at the various levels of fraternity;
c. to intervene in a spirit of service, according to the circumstances,
providing fraternal aid in the clarification and resolution of grave
and urgent problems of the SFO, informing the national council
concerned and the next general chapter;
d. to strengthen reciprocal relationships of collaboration between the
SFO and the other components of the Franciscan family at the world
level;
e. to organize meetings or assemblies, according to the norms of the
international statutes, to promote the life and the apostolate of the
SFO at the international level;
f. to collaborate with organizations and associations which defend the
same values;
g. to fulfil the other duties indicated in the Constitutions or needed
in order to reach its own proper goals.
Article 74
1. While firmly preserving the co-responsibility
of the Presidency of the International Council of the SFO in the
guidance and animation of the international fraternity, it belongs to
the general minister, who has the primary responsibility, to see that
the directions and decisions of the general chapter and of the
Presidency are put into practice and to inform them concerning his or
her activities.
2. In addition, the general Minister has the
duty:
a. to convoke and preside at the meetings of the Presidency according
to its own statutes;
b. to convoke the meetings of the general chapter, with the consent of
the Presidency, and to preside at them;
c. to be a visible and effective sign of the communion and life-giving
reciprocity between the SFO and the general ministers of the Franciscan
First Order and the TOR, among whom he or she represents the SFO, and
to preserve the bond with the conference of general assistants;
d. to represent the SFO at the world level before ecclesiastical and
civil authorities. When the international fraternity has a civil
juridical personality, its legal representation belongs to the
minister;
e. to make the fraternal visit to the national councils, personally or
through a delegate;
f. to preside at the elections of the national councils, personally or
through a delegate;
g. to request, with the consent of the Presidency, the pastoral visit
by the Conference of the General Ministers of the First Order and the
TOR;
h. to intervene in urgent cases, informing the Presidency of them;
i. to sign the official documents of the international fraternity;
j. to exercise, with the consent of the Presidency, the property rights
of the international fraternity together with another councilor of the
Presidency designated by that same body;
k. before every general chapter, have the financial and property
situation of the international fraternity verified by a qualified
accountant who is not involved in the economic and financial management
of the Presidency.
Article 75
The specific duties of the international councilors
are determined by the international statutes.
Title IV
Election to and Termination of Offices
Elections
Article 76
1. The elections at the various levels will take
place according to the norms of the law of the Church [36] and of the Constitutions.
The convocation should be carried out at least one month
in advance, indicating the place, the day, and the time of the
election.
2. The elective assembly, or chapter, will be
presided over by the minister of the immediately higher level, or by
his or her delegate, who confirms the election.
The president or the delegate cannot preside the
elections in his or her local fraternity, nor the elections of the
council of a higher level, of whose council he or she is a member.
The spiritual assistant of the immediately higher level
or his delegate is to be present as a witness of the communion with the
First Order and the TOR.
A representative of the Conference of General Ministers
of the First Order and the TOR presides at and confirms the elections
of the Presidency of the International Council of the SFO.
3. The president of the chapter and the assistant
of the higher level do not have the right to vote.
4. The president of the chapter designates, among
the members of that chapter, a secretary and two tellers.
Article 77
1. In the local fraternity the perpetually
professed of the same fraternity have active voice, that is can elect,
and passive voice, that is can be elected. The temporarily professed
have only active voice.
2. At the other levels, the following have active
voice: the secular members of the outgoing council, the representatives
of the immediately lower level and of the Franciscan Youth, if
professed. It belongs to the particular statutes to establish more
concrete norms in application of the preceding norm, taking care to
assure the broadest elective base. The perpetually professed secular
Franciscans of the corresponding area have passive voice.
3. Both the national and the international
statutes - each for its own area - can establish objective
qualifications regarding who can be elected to the various
offices.
4. The presence of more than half of the number
of those having the right to vote is required for the valid celebration
of an elective chapter. For the local level, the national Statutes can
establish a different norm.
Article 78
1. An absolute majority of the votes of those
present, cast in secret, is required for the elections of the minister.
After two inconclusive ballots, the voting continues between the two
candidates who have obtained the largest number of votes or, in case
there are more than two, between the two candidates who are oldest by
profession. If there is still a tie after the third ballot, the older
by profession will be considered elected.
2. The election of the vice-minister proceeds in
the same manner.
3. For the election of the councilors, after a
first ballot without an absolute majority, a relative majority of the
votes of those present, cast in secret, is sufficient, unless the
particular statutes require a greater majority.
4. The secretary announces the result of the
elections; the president confirms the election according to the Ritual
[37] if all has been carried out
properly and those elected have accepted their office.
Article 79
1. The minister and vice-minister may be elected
for two consecutive terms of three years each. For a third and final
successive election to the office of minister or vice-minister, a
majority of two-thirds of the votes of those present, which must be
obtained on the first ballot, will be necessary.
2. The out-going minister cannot be elected
vice-minister.
3. The councilors may be elected for additional
successive terms of three years. Beginning with the third successive
election, a majority of two-thirds of the votes of those present, which
must be obtained on the first ballot, will be necessary.
4. The general minister, vice-minister and
presidency councilors can only be elected for two consecutive terms of
six years.
5. The council of the higher level has the right
and duty to invalidate the elections and to call them anew in all cases
of inobservance of the preceding norms.
Article 80
The particular statutes may include further
directives concerning elections, as long as they are not contrary to
the Constitutions.
Vacant Offices
Article 81
1. When the office of minister remains vacant as
a result of death, resignation or other impediment of a definitive
character, the vice-minister assumes the office until the end of the
term for which the minister was originally elected.
2. If the office of vice-minister becomes vacant,
one of the councilors is elected to the office of vice-minister by the
council of the fraternity, to serve until the next elective
chapter.
3. When the office of councilor becomes vacant,
the council will proceed to substitute for him or her in conformity
with its own statutes, to serve until the next elective chapter.
Incompatible Offices
Article 82
The following are incompatible:
a. the office of minister at two different levels;
b. the offices of minister, vice-minister, secretary and treasurer at
the same level.
Resignation of Office
Article 83
1. When a minister of whatever level resigns
during a chapter, that same chapter can accept the resignation.
When a minister resigns outside the time of chapter,
that resignation must be presented to the council. If the resignation
is accepted, it must be confirmed by the minister of the higher level;
if the general minister is resigning, the confirmation comes from the
Conference of General Ministers of the First Order and the TOR.
2. The resignation of other offices is presented
to the minister and to his or her council, who are competent to accept
the resignation.
Removal
Article 84
1. In the case in which the minister does not
fulfil his or her duties, the council concerned manifests its concerns
in a fraternal dialogue with the minister. If this does not produce
positive results, the council should inform the council of the higher
level whose competence it is to examine the case and, if needed, by
secret ballot, decide to remove the minister.
2. For a serious, public, and proved reason, the
council of a higher level, after a fraternal dialogue with the person
concerned, may, by a secret ballot, order the removal of a minister of
a lower level.
3. When there is a serious reason to remove those
who hold other offices of the council, it is the responsibility of that
council to which they belong to make its decision by a secret ballot
after there has been a fraternal dialogue with the person
involved.
4. A recourse, which by itself suspends the
action to remove someone from office, can be presented within thirty
days to the council of the level immediately higher than the one which
imposed the sanction.
5. The removal of the general minister belongs to
the competence of the Conference of the General Ministers of the First
Order and the TOR.
6. When there is a case of serious lack of
concern or evidence of irregularities on the part of a minister or a
council, the council of the next higher level conducts a fraternal
visit of the council in question and, eventually, requests a pastoral
visit. With charity and prudence it will evaluate the circumstances
uncovered and decide on the best way to proceed, not excluding the
eventual removal of the council or leaders involved.
Title V
Spiritual and Pastoral Assistance of the SFO
Article 85
1. As an integral part of the Franciscan family
and called to live the charism of Francis within the secular dimension,
the SFO has particular and close relations to the First Order and the
TOR [38] .
2. The spiritual and pastoral care of the SFO,
entrusted by the Church to the Franciscan First Order and the TOR, is
the duty above all of their general and provincial ministers. The
altius moderamen, of which canon 303 speaks, belongs to them.
The purpose of the altius moderamen is to guarantee the fidelity
of the SFO to the Franciscan charism, communion with the Church and
union with the Franciscan family, values which represent a vital
commitment for the secular Franciscans.
Article 86
1. The general and provincial ministers exercise
their office with respect to the SFO through:
-- the establishment of fraternities;
-- the pastoral visits;
-- the spiritual assistance to the fraternities at the various
levels.
They may exercise this office personally or through a
delegate.
2. This service of the religious ministers
completes but does not substitute for the secular councils and
ministers to whom belong the guidance, co-ordination, and animation of
the fraternities at the various levels.
Article 87
1. For all that concerns the SFO as a whole, the
altius moderamen must be exercised by the general ministers
collegially.
2. It belongs to the Conference of General
Ministers of the First Order and the TOR:
a. to take care of the relations with the Holy See concerning the
approval of the legislative or liturgical documents, which need to be
approved by the Holy See;
b. to visit the Presidency of the International Council of the SFO;
c. to confirm the election of the Presidency of the International
Council of the SFO.
3. Each general minister, for his own Order, sees
to the interest of the religious for the SFO and to their preparation
for service to it according to the respective Constitutions and the
Constitutions of the SFO.
Article 88
1. The provincial ministers and the other major
superiors, in the area of their own jurisdiction, guarantee the
spiritual assistance to the local fraternities entrusted to the
jurisdiction. They see to it that their own religious are interested in
the SFO and that capable and well-prepared persons are appointed for
the service of spiritual assistance.
2. It is the specific competence of the major
superiors, in name of their jurisdiction:
a. to establish canonically new local fraternities and guarantee them
spiritual assistance;
b. to animate spiritually and visit the local fraternities assisted by
their own jurisdiction;
c. to keep themselves informed on the spiritual assistance given to the
SFO.
3. The major superiors are responsible for the
spiritual assistance to the local fraternities which they have
established.
4. The major superiors with jurisdiction in the
same territory, are to establish together the most adequate means to
guarantee spiritual assistance to local fraternities which, because of
causes beyond their control, could remain without such assistance.
5. The major superiors with jurisdiction in the
same territory, are to establish together the most adequate means for
carrying out collegially their mission with respect to the regional and
national fraternities of the SFO.
Article 89
1. By virtue of the vital reciprocity between the
religious and the secular members of the Franciscan Family and in
regard to the responsibilities of major superiors, spiritual assistance
to the fraternities of the SFO at all levels must be assured as a
fundamental element of communion.
2. The spiritual assistant is the person
designated by the competent major superior to carry out this service
for a specific fraternity of the SFO.
3. To be a witness of Franciscan spirituality and
of the fraternal affection of the religious towards the secular
Franciscans, and to be a bond of communion between his Order and the
SFO, the spiritual assistant should be a Franciscan religious, member
of the First Order or the TOR.
4. When it is not possible to give such a
spiritual assistant to the fraternity, the competent major superior can
entrust the service of spiritual assistance to:
a. religious brothers or sisters of other Franciscan institutes;
b. diocesan clerics or other persons, specially prepared for such
service, who are members of the SFO;
c. other diocesan clerics or non-Franciscan religious.
5. The previous authorisation of the superior or
the local ordinary, when needed, does not exempt the Franciscan major
superior of the responsibility for the quality of the pastoral service
and of the spiritual assistance given.
Article 90
1. The principal task of the assistant is to
communicate Franciscan spirituality and to co-operate in the initial
and continuing formation of the brothers and sisters.
2. The spiritual assistant is by right, with
vote, a member of the council of the fraternity to which he or she
gives assistance and collaborates with it in all activities. The
spiritual assistant does not exercise the right to vote in financial
questions.
3. Specifically:
a. the general assistants give their service to the Presidency of the
International Council of the SFO, form a conference, and collegially
see to the spiritual assistance to the SFO as a whole;
b. the national assistants give their service to the national council,
see to the spiritual assistance to the SFO in the whole territory of
the national fraternity and, at the national level, to the
co-ordination of the regional assistants. If they are more than one,
they form a conference and give their service collegially;
c. the regional assistants give their service to the regional council
and see to the spiritual assistance to the regional fraternity. If they
are more than one, they form a conference and give their service
collegially;
d. the local assistants give their service to the local fraternity and
its council.
Article 91
1. The council of the fraternity at each level
requests suitable and prepared assistants from the competent superiors
of the First Order and the TOR.
2. Specifically:
a. the Presidency of the International Council of the SFO requests the
general assistant from the respective general minister;
b. the national council requests the national assistant from the major
superior, indicated collegially by the major superiors with
jurisdiction in the territory of the national fraternity;
c. the regional council requests the assistant from the major superior,
indicated collegially by the major superiors with jurisdiction in the
territory of the regional fraternity;
d. the local council requests the assistant from the major superior of
the jurisdiction responsible for the assistance.
3. The competent major superior, having heard the
council of the fraternity concerned, appoints the assistant according
to the norms of these Constitutions and of the Statutes for
Spiritual and Pastoral Assistance to the Secular Franciscan
Order.
Title VI
The Fraternal Visit and the Pastoral Visit
Article 92
1. Rule 26 The purpose of both the
pastoral and fraternal visits is to revive the evangelical Franciscan
spirit, to assure fidelity to the charism and to the Rule, to offer
help to fraternity life, to reinforce the bond of the unity of the
Order, and to promote its most effective insertion into the Franciscan
family and the Church.
2. With the consent of the appropriate council,
the request for the fraternal visit as well as for the pastoral visit
is made:
a. by the minister of the local and regional fraternity, at least every
three years, to the council of the immediately higher level and to the
respective conference of spiritual assistants;
b. by the national minister, at least every six years, to the
Presidency of the International Council of the SFO and to the
conference of general assistants;
c. by the general minister, at least every six years, to the Conference
of General Ministers.
3. For urgent and serious reasons or in case of
failure on the part of the minister or the council to request it, the
fraternal and pastoral visit may be carried out upon the initiative of
the respectively competent council or conference of spiritual
assistants.
Article 93
1. In the visits to the local fraternities and to
the councils at the various levels, the visitor will verify the
evangelical and apostolic vitality, the observance of the Rule and
Constitutions, and the insertion of the fraternities into the Order and
into the Church.
2. In the visits to the local fraternities and to
the councils at the various levels, the visitor will in time
communicate the object and the program of the visit to the interested
council. He or she will examine the registers and the records,
including those relative to the preceding visits, to the election of
the council and to the administration of goods.
The visitor will draw up a report of the visit carried
out, appending it to the records in the appropriate register of the
fraternity visited, and will inform the council of the level which has
held the visit.
3. In the visit to the local fraternity, the
visitor will meet with the entire fraternity and with the groups and
sections into which it is divided. He or she will give special
attention to the brothers and sisters in formation and to those
brothers and sisters who may request a personal meeting. Where
required, he or she will proceed to the fraternal correction of the
shortcomings eventually encountered.
4. If it is useful for the service of the
fraternity, the two visitors, secular and religious, may make the visit
at the same time, agreeing beforehand on the program, in a way most
consonant with the mission of each of them.
5. The fraternal and pastoral visits, carried out
by the immediately higher level, do not deprive the visited fraternity
of the right to appeal to the council or to the conference of spiritual
assistants of a higher level.
The Fraternal
Visit
Article 94
1. The fraternal visit is a moment of communion,
an expression of the service and concrete interest of the secular
leaders at the various levels, so that the fraternity may grow and be
faithful to its vocation [39] .
2. Among the various initiatives to achieve the
purpose of the visit, the visitor will give special attention:
-- to the validity of the formation, both initial and permanent;
-- to the relations entertained with other fraternities at the
different levels, with Franciscan youth, and with the entire Franciscan
family.
-- to the observance of the directives and of the guidelines of the
International Council of the SFO and of the other councils;
-- to the presence in the local Church.
3. The visitor will check the report of the
previous audit or verification of the financial and property management
of the Council, the register of the accounts and every document
pertaining to the property of the fraternity and, if applicable, the
condition of the juridical personality in the civil order, including
the fiscal aspects. In absence of the required audit of the financial
and property management of the council, the visitor can commission such
an audit, to be paid by the visited fraternity, to an expert who is not
a member of the council concerned. Wherever he or she deems it
opportune, the visitor will obtain the assistance of a competent person
in these aspects.
4. The visitor will check the records of the
election of the council. He or she will evaluate the quality of the
service offered to the fraternity by the minister and by the other
leaders, and will study with them the solution to problems which may
arise.
If, for whatever reason, he or she should find that
their service does not meet the needs of the fraternity, the visitor
will promote appropriate initiatives, taking into account also the
provisions concerning resignation and removal from office, given
special circumstances [40] .
5. The visitor may not carry out the visit of his
or her own local fraternity, nor of the council of another level of
which he or she is a member.
The Pastoral Visit
Article 95
1. The pastoral visit is a privileged moment of
communion with the First Order and the TOR. It is carried out also in
the name of the Church and serves to guarantee and promote the
observance of the Rule and the Constitutions and fidelity to the
Franciscan charism. The visit is carried out with respect to the
organization and the law proper to the SFO itself.
2. Having verified the canonical establishment of
the fraternity, the visitor will give attention to the relations
between the fraternity and its spiritual assistant and the local
Church. The visitor will meet the pastors (bishop or parish priest)
when this is opportune for fostering communion and service for building
up the Church.
3. The visitor will promote collaboration and a
sense of co-responsibility among the secular leaders and the religious
assistants. The visitor is to examine the quality of the spiritual
assistance given to the visited fraternity, encourage the spiritual
assistants in their service and promote their continuing spiritual and
pastoral formation.
4. The visitor will give special attention to
programs, methods and experiences of formation, to the liturgical and
prayer life, and to the apostolic activities of the fraternity.
Title VII
The Franciscan Youth
Article 96
1. The SFO, by virtue of its very vocation, ought
to be ready to share its experience of evangelical life with the youth
who feel attracted to Saint Francis of Assisi and to seek the means of
adequately presenting it to them.
2. The Franciscan Youth (YouFra), as understood
by these Constitutions and in so far as the SFO considers itself to be
particularly responsible for it, is formed by those young people who
feel called by the Holy Spirit to share the experience of the Christian
life in fraternity, in the light of the message of Saint Francis of
Assisi, deepening their own vocation within the context of the Secular
Franciscan Order.
3. The members of the Franciscan Youth consider
the Rule of the SFO as an inspirational document for the growth of
their own Christian and Franciscan vocation either individually or in a
group. After a suitable period of formation, of at least one year, they
confirm this option with a personal pledge before God and in the
presence of the brothers and sisters.
4. The members of the Franciscan Youth who wish
to belong to the SFO should satisfy the requirements of the Rule, the
Constitutions, and the Ritual of the SFO.
5. The Franciscan Youth has a specific
organization, methods of formation, and teaching methods adequate for
the needs of the world of youth, according to the existing realities in
the various countries. The national statutes of the Franciscan Youth
should be approved by the respective national council of the SFO, or in
its absence, by the Presidency of the International Council of the
SFO.
6. The Franciscan Youth, as a component of the
Franciscan family, requests from the competent secular leaders and
religious superiors, respectively, fraternal animation and spiritual
assistance.
Article 97
1. The SFO fraternities will promote the vocation
to the Franciscan Youth by means of appropriate and dynamic
initiatives. They should see to the vitality and the expansion of the
Franciscan Youth fraternities and will accompany the youth in their
journey of human and spiritual growth with proposals for specific
activities and contents.
2. The SFO fraternities commit themselves to give
to the Franciscan Youth fraternities a fraternal animator, who together
with the spiritual assistant and the council of the Franciscan Youth
guarantees an adequate secular Franciscan formation.
3. To promote a close communion with the SFO, all
leaders of the Franciscan Youth at the international level and at least
two members of the national council of the Franciscan Youth are to be
professed secular Franciscan youth.
4. A representative of the Franciscan Youth is to
be designated by his or her council to form part of the SFO council of
the corresponding level; a representative of the SFO, designated by his
or her own council, forms part of the council of the Franciscan Youth
of the same level. The representative of the Franciscan Youth has a
vote in the SFO council only if he or she is a professed secular
Franciscan
5. The representatives of the Franciscan Youth in
the international council of the SFO are elected according to the
international statutes which also determine how many there are, what
fraternities they represent, and what their responsibilities are
supposed to be.
Title VIII
In Communion with the Franciscan Family and the Church
Article 98
1. Rule 1 Secular Franciscans should seek
to live in life-giving reciprocal communion with all the members of the
Franciscan family. They should be ready to promote common initiatives
or participate in them with the religious of the First, Second and
Third Orders, with Secular institutes, and with other lay ecclesial
groups that recognize Francis as a model and inspiration in order to
work together to spread the Gospel, remove the causes of
marginalization, and serve the cause of peace.
2. They must cultivate a special affection, which
expresses itself in concrete initiatives of fraternal communion,
towards the sisters of the contemplative life who, like Saint Clare of
Assisi, bear witness in the Church and in the world and by whose
mediation they expect the abundance of grace for the fraternity and for
the works of the apostolate.
Article 99
1. Rule 6 As a living part of the people
of God and inspired by the Seraphic Father, the secular Franciscans,
"living in full communion with the Pope and the bishops", should seek
to know and deepen the doctrine proposed by the teaching Church through
its more important documents and they should be attentive to the
presence of the Holy Spirit who vivifies the faith and charity of the
people of God. [41] They should
collaborate in the initiatives promoted by the Holy See, in a
particular way in those areas in which they are called to work by
virtue of their secular Franciscan vocation.
2. The SFO, as an international public
association, is connected by a special bond to the Roman Pontiff from
whom it has received the approval of its Rule and the confirmation of
its mission in the Church and in the world.
Article 100
1. The vocation to "rebuild" the Church ought to
induce the brothers and sisters sincerely to love and to live the union
with the local Church in which they develop their own vocation and
realise their apostolic commitment, aware that in the diocese the
Church of Christ is truly functioning [42] .
2. The secular Franciscans should fulfil with
dedication the duties with which they are occupied in their relations
to the local Church. They should lend their help to activities of the
apostolate as well as to the social activities existing in the diocese.
[43] In the spirit of service, they
should make themselves present, as the fraternity of the SFO, within
the life of the diocese. They should be ready to collaborate with other
ecclesial groups and to participate in pastoral councils.
3. Fidelity to their own charism, Franciscan and
secular, and the witness of building fraternity sincerely and openly
are their principal services to the Church, which is the community of
love. They should be recognized in it by their "being", from which
their mission springs.
Article 101
1. The secular Franciscans should collaborate
with the bishops and follow their directions in so far as they are the
moderators of the ministry of the Word and of the Liturgy and the
co-ordinators of the various forms of apostolate in the local Church [44] .
2. The fraternities are subject to the vigilance
of the Ordinary in so far as they perform their activities within the
local Churches [45] .
Article 102
1. The fraternities established in a parish
church should seek to co-operate in the animation of the parochial
community, in the liturgy and in fraternal relations. They should
integrate themselves into the pastoral apostolate as a whole, with
preference for those activities more congenial to the secular
Franciscan tradition and spirituality.
2. In the parishes entrusted to Franciscan
religious, the fraternities constitute the mediation and the secular
witness of the Franciscan charism in the parochial community through
their exercise of the fruitful life-giving reciprocity. Therefore,
united with the religious, they see to the spreading of the gospel
message and of the Franciscan lifestyle.
Article 103
1. Remaining faithful to their own identity, the
fraternities will take care to make the most of each occasion for
prayer, formation, and active collaboration with other ecclesial
groups. They should welcome with pleasure those who, without belonging
to the SFO, wish to share its experiences and activities.
2. The Fraternities will promote, wherever
possible, fraternal relations with non-Catholic associations inspired
by Francis.
Notes
- See Can. 210; 214; Lumen Gentium 40.
- It is also called "Secular Franciscan
Fraternity", or "Franciscan Third Order" (TOF). See Rule 2,
footnote 5.
Canon 303 of the CCL defines third orders: "Associations whose members
live in the world, but share in the spirit of some religious institute,
under the overall direction (altius moderamen) of the same
institute, and who lead an apostolic life and strive for Christian
perfection, are known as third orders, or are called by some other
suitable title."
- After the Rules approved by Pope Nicholas IV in
1289 and by Pope Leo XIII in 1883, the present Rule was approved by
Pope Paul VI, June 24, 1978.
- See general constitution SFO 85,2. When
the Constitutions are cited without any other specification, the
reference is to the present text.
- See Can. 116; 301,3; 312; 313.
- See Can 225, and the Discourse of Pope John Paul
II to the SFO, September 27, 1982 in L'Osservatore Romano,
September 28, 1982.
- See Can. 275 ff, Presbyterorum ordinis
12; 14; 15 ff.
- See Can. 304.
- See Rule of 1221, Chapt. 22; Second
Letter to All the Faithful 51.
- See Dei verbum 10.
- Rule of 1223, Chapt. 10.
- Ordo Poenitentiae. Praenotanda 22
ff.
- See Second Letter to All the Faithful 25
ff.
- Ritual SFO, Appendix 26,
27.
- Salutation of the Blessed Virgin
Mary.
- See 2 Celano, 198.
- See Rule 1221, 17,3; Legend of the
Three Companions
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