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All eyes are turned to Rome following the formal opening last
Monday, 7th January, of the 35th General Congregation of
the Society of Jesus (Jesuits) since the death of its founder, St Ignatius
Loyola, in 1556. Fr
Paul Pace, SJ is the
representative of the Maltese Province for the proceedings in the General
Congregation in Rome.
A General Congregation (called Chapter in
other relgious Orders) is the highest ultimate governing body in the Society of
Jesus. A General
Congregation is not convoked at definite intervals, but it is summoned on the
death of a General to elect his successor, when the need arises to deal with
long-lasting and important matters. Whenever it meets it also deals with two important concerns: What would preserve and advance
Jesuit religious life, what would best help the Society carry on its works to
serve God and the Church, and it may legislate changes in the structure and work of the Order
considered advisable to respond to the needs and challenges according to the
signs of the time.
This General
Congregation is particular. In its first phase, which may take about two weeks,
will deal with the resignation of the Society’s present Superior General, Fr
Peter Hans Kolvenbach. Fr Kolvenbach, who visited our shores in October 2007 to
inaugurate the centenary year of Jesuit-run
St Aloysius College in Birkirkara, was elected
Superior General of the Jesuit Order in 1983 on the first ballot. According to
the Jesuit Constitutions, a Jesuit Superior General is elected for life. But
since 1966, for grave reasons, he may present his resignation to a General
Congregation. In his letter of February 2, 2006
to convoke General Congregation 35, Father General wrote that “after having
obtained the consent of His Holiness Benedict XVI and with the unanimous
favourable response from his Assistants and all the Provincials of the
Society”, he was convoking the 35th General Congregation to decide on
the governance of the Society at the highest level”.
In 1983 Father Kolvenbach was elected when
Father Pedro Arrupe, with the consent of John Paul II, resigned on account of a
sickness which incapacitated him to govern the Society. This time the situation
was different: Father Kolvenbach has been Superior General for almost 25 years
and his age is close to 80 years. While agreeing to the resignation of Father
Kolvenbach, Benedict XVI wanted to maintain the prescription of the Constitutions
of a Superior General elected ad vitam with the possibility that he could resign when age or other justified circumstances would warrant it.
Congregation 35th, therefore, will receive the
resignation of Father Kolvenbach and proceed to elect a new Superior General.
At the same time the Congregation will deliberate on issues of particular
importance confronting the life and apostolic activity of the Society of Jesus
in the 21st century.
Last Monday, 7th January, in a solemn, and carefully
prepared two hour Eucharistic Litugy in the ‘Gesú’, the mother church of the
Society in Rome, Cardinal Franc Rodé, Prefect of the Congregation for the
Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life, expressed a
“heartfelt gratitude” to Father Kolvenbach for his fidelity, his wisdom, his righteousness and his example of humility and
poverty. In the rest of the homily, the Cardinal highlighted the core
elements of the Society as St Ignatius wished it: its apostolic charism,
obedience to the Holy Father and the sentire
cum ecclesia.
At the end
of the Mass, accompanied by Father General, the Cardinal moved to the altar of
Saint Ignatius. Above the altar is the magnificent statue of St. Ignatius
hidden by the recently restored gloriously painted canvas of Brother Pozzo, SJ.
The canvas, conceived with a touch of the theatrical taste of the time, was
intended to hide this famous statue and reveal it only on special occasions. On
this occasion, the canvas was lowered to reveal the statue. In front of the altar,
Father General lit a lamp which will burn during the General Congregation as a
symbol of the continuous prayer of the Society throughout the world.
The
Congregation, which can take up to mid-March, is expected to proceed to discuss
matters of importance to the Society and its mission, and may choose to issue
decrees and/or entrust to Father General some mandates.
The
Society of Jesus, with almost 20,000 Jesuits worldwide, is the largest Catholic
religious order. The 35th General Congregation, which includes some
225 delegates hailing from Africa, Latin America, Asia and Australia, Europe and North
America, will determine the Society’s way forward in the coming
years. This Congregation also gathers together to treat important and very
difficult matters that touch all members of the Society, such as the direction
that the Society is presently taking. The themes upon which the General
Congregation will reflect have to do with basic elements for the life of the
Society, the identity of today’s Jesuit, the meaning and value of the vow of
obedience to the Holy Father, the mission of the Society in the context of
globalization and marginalization, community life, apostolic obedience,
vocation recruitment and other important themes.
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