To mark the 50th anniversary of
the Second Vatican Council and reflect on the major changes it brought
to consecrated life, the Vatican's congregation for religious has
overhauled the course it offers on theology and canon law.
The Second Vatican Council's call for religious to return to the
founding inspiration of their orders and, at the same time, to respond
to the needs of the modern world "was not an easy task," said Sister
Nicla Spezzati, a member of the Adorers of the Blood of Christ and
undersecretary of the Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life
and Societies of Apostolic Life.
"Laudable initiatives were undertaken by various institutes and
organizations," she told L'Osservatore Romano, the Vatican newspaper.
At the same time, she said, there was also "a certain 'experimental'
character," which made it "difficult to find a wise balance" in how
religious orders could remain faithful to their founding inspiration
while adapting to modern needs and concerns.
In the past 50 years, Sister Spezzati said, religious orders faced
enormous challenges and most of them experienced "tensions that were
painful at times" as they rewrote their constitutions and attempted to
minister in the church and to a changing world by in a way that flowed
from the original inspiration of their order.
The congregation for religious, which for 60 years has offered a
two-year course in theology and canon law, has revised and expanded the
program in the hopes that it will help leaders in religious
congregations and diocesan officials working with religious better
respond to challenges posed by the Gospel, the tradition of the church
and papal teaching, and their vows to follow Christ in poverty, chastity
and obedience, Sister Spezzati said.
"The essence of consecrated life is simple and must be proposed and
lived as such," she said. "Nevertheless, this simplicity must be able to
respond to the questions that today's culture poses."
"One must be able to identify the path that brings everything back to
the essential, which is and always will remain the mystery of a vocation
to follow Christ in the radical style of the Gospel," she said.
Religious orders experienced the same tensions as the wider Catholic
community because of the way they interpreted the teachings of Vatican
II -- seeing them as a complete break with tradition or viewing them a
development of tradition, Sister Spezzati said.
"Within the reality of consecrated life where a 'hermeneutic of
discontinuity' prevailed, there were more serious problems," both in
relations between members and in identifying and living the specific
identity of each order, she said.
The congregation's new course includes 200 hours of lectures and
seminars over a two-year period. Courses begin Oct. 24 at the Pontifical
Urbanian University in Rome. It is open to religious, priests and
laypeople interested in the topic. Those who successfully complete the
program will be awarded a diploma recognizing them as an "expert" in
church teaching and canon law on consecrated life.