(ENG) Superior General To CM Members - SVP Feast 2016
(ENG) Superior General To CM Members - SVP Feast 2016
(ENG) Superior General To CM Members - SVP Feast 2016
GENERAL CURIA
Vi a d e i C a p a s s o 3 0
Tel. (39) 06 661 3061
0 0 1 6 4 Ro m a I t a l i a
e-mail: [email protected]
Superior General
Rome, 19 September 2016
with the eyes of Abba and Jesus and embraced everyone with the unconditional love,
warmth and energy of the Holy Spirit.
Vincents mysticism was the source of his apostolic action. The Mystery of Gods
love and the Mystery of the Poor were the two poles of Vincents dynamic love. But
Vincents Way had a third dimension, which was how he regarded time. Time was the
medium through which the Providence of God made itself known to him. He acted
according to Gods time, not his own. Do the good that presents itself to be done,
he advised. Do not tread on the heels of Providence.
Another aspect of time for Vincent was the presence of God here and now
God is here! (influence of Ruysbroek). God is here in time. God is here in persons, in
events, in circumstances, in poor people. God speaks to us now in and through them.
Vincent was a man of unfolding history in the deepest sense. He followed the lead of
Providence step by step. He had neither an ego-agenda nor an ideology. It took him
decades to arrive at such interior freedom, which is why Vincents journey to holiness
and freedom (1600-1625) is the key to understanding the daily dynamic of the
Apostle of Charity.
The more inclusive sense might be something like this. A mystic is one who listens to
and gets caught up into Gods love for creation, and who then commits himself both
to recognizing that love in the world and also bringing it there. For Vincent, this love
(better, loving) of God revealed itself especially in people who were poor and
marginalized. He came to recognize them both as privileged bearers of Gods love
and as particularly deserving recipients of it. And he followed up on this by actively
bringing the Good News of that love to those poor ones.
Much like the way the right lyrics can draw out the deeper beauty of a melody,
the words from Isaiah that Jesus spoke in Luke chapter 4 gave a particularly resonant
expression to Vincents experience of God. Here was Jesus announcing not only His
own mission from His Father, but also His own experience of His Abba as Love for the
world, especially for the downcast: I have been sent to bring the Good News to the
poor. To paraphrase, The fire of my Fathers love (loving) is burning within me, and
it drives me to bring just that love to the world, most especially to the poor ones in it.
To follow the analogy, Vincent recognized these words as the lyrics to a melody that
had been playing deeper and deeper within him. It was as if on hearing this text at a
particular juncture in his life, Vincent said something like Aha! Thats it! Those words
catch just how Im experiencing Gods love and just how I want to spend my life in
responding and spreading it.
Another angle. You might describe Vincent as a bi-spectacled mystic. That is
to say, he was (seeing) experiencing the same God through two different lenses, both
at much the same time. One lens was his own prayer; the other was the person who
was poor as well as the world he or she lived in. Each angle of view influenced the
other, the one deepening and sharpening the perception of its opposite. Vincent
saw (and felt) Gods love through both these perspectives at the same time and
acted vigorously to respond to what he was seeing.
To keep our reflecting, planning, and acting in the right direction as members
of the Congregation of the Mission, as missionaries who follow Jesus Christ the
Evangelizer of the Poor in the steps of Saint Vincent, to help us reflect on Vincent as a
Mystic of Charity, we have our Constitutions and our Common Rules, which are the
compendium and synthesis of all our spirituality and the base for our life as members
of the Congregation of the Mission.
B) Each confrere should carry, together with the breviary and Holy
Bible, in the chapel, on the road, on vacation, the Constitutions and
the Common Rules. If for any reason a confrere does not have a copy
of the Constitutions and our Common Rules, he should ask his
provincial or superior to help him get one.
I suggest, and wish with my whole heart, that each one of us, from the youngest
to the oldest confrere, follow and respond to Saint Vincents call in our first
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Constitutions, the Common Rules, as written by him in the last paragraph, Each one
is to have his own copy ... and should read them through, or hear them read, every
three months (CR 12, 14).
In this regard I suggest you take into consideration both: our present
Constitutions and the Common Rules and read and pray them alternatively: the first
three months, the Common Rules, followed the next three months by the
Constitutions and so on and that this become a lifelong commitment. As we pray the
breviary and read and pray the Bible on a daily basis, we will make sure to do the
same with our Common Rules and Constitutions.
To assist us in the reflection of what it means to me to see Vincent as a Mystic of
Charity, his other writings and conferences certainly will accompany us, as well as the
writings and conferences of other blessed and saints of the Vincentian Family.
As we approach the Feast of Saint Vincent de Paul that we will celebrate with
the whole Vincentian Family, as well as with many other people, groups, and
organizations whom we touch and serve, may we be deeply encouraged by this
moment of special grace that Providence is putting in front of us.
I wish each of us a wonderful celebration, as we continue our prayers for one
another!
Toma Mavri, CM
Superior General