In all places and at all times, it is possible for true
worshippers 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
- (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, affects interior freedom, and disposes them to promote
a more just distribution of wealth.
- 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.
- 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.
- They should love and practice purity of heart, the source
of true fraternity.
Article 16
- (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.*)
- *) Salutation of the Blessed Virgin
Mary.
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.
- 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.*)
- *) See 2 Celano, 198.
TITLE II
ACTIVE PRESENCE IN THE CHURCH AND IN THE WORLD
Article 17
- (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 in the
environment in which they live and service for building up the
Kingdom of God within the situations of this world.*)
- *) See First Rule 17,3; Legend of
the Three Companions, 36; Letter to All the Faithful, 53.
- The preparation of the brothers and sisters for spreading
the Gospel message "in the ordinary circumstances of the
world"*) and for collaborating in the catechesis within
the ecclesial com-munities should be promoted in the
Fraternities.
- *) Lumen Gentium 35.
- 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 St. 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.
- 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
- Secular Franciscans are called to make their own
contribution, inspired by the person and message of Francis of
Assisi, towards a civilization in which the dignity of the
human person, shared responsibility, and love may be living
realities.*)
- *) See Gaudium et Spes 31 ff.
- (Rule 13)
They should deepen the true foundations of universal
fraternity 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.
- 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.
- Following the example of St. Francis, Patron of Ecology,
they should collaborate with efforts to fight pollution and to
conserve all that is valuable in nature.
Article 19
- (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.
- 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
- (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.
- 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
- (Rule 16)
For St. 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.
- 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
make meaningful use of their leisure time.*)
- *) See Gaudium et Spes
67; Laborem exercens 16
ff.
Article 22
- (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.
- 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.
- 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
- (Rule 19)
Peace is the work of justice and the fruit of reconciliation
and of fraternal love.*) Secular Franciscans are called to be
bearers of peace in their families and in society:
- *) See Gaudium et Spes 78.
-- 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.
- While acknowledging both the personal and national right
to self-defence, they should respect the choice of those who,
because of conscientious objection, refuse to bear arms.
- 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
- (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 till 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 beauty and the strength of the
human love of the spouses is a profound witness for their own
family, the Church, and the world.
- 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 who live in loneliness and in
other conditions of suffering;
(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.
- 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"*) and because of the fascination which St. 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 an appropriate orientation for the
organization of these groups and their relationship to the
fraternity and to the groups of Franciscan youth.
- *) Apostolicam actuositatem
30.
Messengers of Joy and Hope
Article 26
- 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.*)
- *) See 2 Celano, 125; Legend
of Perugia, 43; Major Life, 9.
(Rule 18)
Therefore, Secular Franciscans are called to create conditions
of life and of environment that would not be a threat to any
person, but would lead to the discovery of the mind and will
of God.
- (Rule 19)
In conformity with the Gospel, they affirm their hope and
their joy in living. They make a contribution to counter
widespread distress and pessimism, thus preparing a better
future.
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
- (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".
- 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
- The Fraternity of the SFO finds its origin in the
inspiration of Francis of Assisi to whom the Most High
revealed the essential gospel quality of life in fraternal
communion.*)
- *) See Constitutions 3,3; Testament 14.
- (Rule 20)
"The SFO is divided into Fraternities of various
levels", with the purpose of promoting, in an orderly
form, the union and mutual collaboration among the brothers
and sisters and their active and communal presence both in the
local and in the universal Church.
- 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.*)
- *) See CCL 518.
Article 29
- 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 coordinated and connected according
to the norm of the Constitutions.
- (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.
- 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 judgment of the leaders
of the fraternities concerned and of the national council.
Article 30
- 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.
- The sense of co-responsibility of the members requires
personal presence, witness, prayer, and active collaboration,
in accordance with each one's means and possible obligations
for the animation of the fraternity.*)
- *) The applications deriving from these
principles will be noted in Chapter III, Title III of the
present Constitutions devoted to the fraternities at various
levels.
(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 fraternity should make its financial
contribution for the operation of the fraternities at higher
levels.
Article 31
- (Rule 21)
The fraternities at different levels are animated and guided
by the minister or president, with the council, in accordance
with the Rule, the Constitutions, and their own Statutes.
These offices are conferred through elections.
- 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 of 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.
- 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 a broad and
encompassing vision of the life of the Church and of society,
open to dialogue, and ready to give and receive help and
collaboration.
- 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
- The minister and the council 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.
- The minister's and councilors' duty 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
(Rule 20)
- "The various fraternities are coordinated and united
according the norm of the Rule and of 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.
- In the guidance and coordination 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.
- 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 will be able to give themselves
specific norms relative to their meetings and activities,
firmly remaining faithful, however, to the needs which arise
from membership in the one fraternity. National statutes may
establish criteria suitable for the formation and functioning
of sections or groups.
Article 35
- Priests who recognize that they are called by the
Spirit to participate in the charism of St. Francis within the
secular fraternity should find in it a specific provision in
conformity with their mission among the People of God.
- Secular Franciscan priests, who may develop a valid
service as assistants of fraternities, may also gather in
fraternities of priests in order to pursue the ascetical and
pastoral incentives which the life and doctrine of St. Francis
and the Rule of the SFO offer them to live their vocation in
the Church better. It is proper that the fraternities of
priests have their own statutes which anticipate concrete
forms for fraternal meetings and for spiritual formation as
well as for making their communion with the whole Order living
and functional.
Article 36
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. These brothers
and sisters may gather in groups according to statutes
approved by the national council, and when these groups spread
beyond the borders of a nation, by the International Council
of the SFO. Such statutes should be in harmony with the
present Constitutions.
TITLE II
ENTRANCE INTO THE ORDER AND FORMATION
Article 37
- (Rule 23)
Membership in the Order is attained through a time of
initiation, a time of formation, and the Profession of the
Rule.
- 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
minister with the council, the master of formation, and the
assistant as spiritual guide.
- 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.
- 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
- (Rule 23)
The period 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.
- *) Traditionally called
"postulancy".
- The duration of the period of initiation and the forms
employed in its development are established by the national
statutes.
- It is the duty of the fraternity council to decide
possible exemptions to this period of initiation, keeping in
mind the guidelines of the national council.
Admission to the Order
Article 39
- (Rule 23)
The request for admission to the Order is presented by the
candidate to the minister of a local or personal fraternity by
a formal act, in writing if possible.
- 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.*)
- *) See CCL 316.
- The minister decides collegially with the council of the
fraternity on the request, gives a formal answer to the
candidate, and communicates this to the fraternity.
- The act of admission is to be registered and preserved in
the records of the fraternity.
The Time of Formation
Article 40
- (Rule 23)
The time of formation*), which begins with the rite of
admission performed according to the Ritual, lasts at least
one year.
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.
- *) Traditionally called
"novitiate".
- The candidates are guided to read and meditate on Sacred
Scripture, to come to know the person and writings of St.
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.
- Participation in the meetings of the local fraternity is
indispensable presupposition for initiation into community
prayer and into fraternity life.
- A pedagogy in the Franciscan style and corresponding to
the mentality of the place should be adopted according to the
suggestions which will be formulated by the persons at the
national level responsible for formation.
The Profession or Promise of Evangelical Life
Article 41
- (Rule 23)
Having completed the period of initial formation, the
candidate submits to the minister of the local fraternity a
request to make his or her profession. Having heard the person
responsible for 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.
- The conditions for the Profession or Promise of
evangelical life are:
-- attainment of the age established by the national
statutes;
-- active participation in the period of formation for at
least one year;
-- the consent of the council of the local fraternity.
- Where it is held to be opportune to lengthen the period
of formation, it must not be extended to more than a year
beyond the time established by the statutes.
Article 42
- 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 St. Francis and following the Rule of the
SFO.
- (Rule 23, par. 3)
Profession incorporates the candidate into the Order and is by
its nature a perpetual commitment. It may be preceded by a
temporary Profession, renewable annually for no more than
three years.*)
- *) See Ritual SFO, n.18.
- 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.*)
- *) See Ritual SFO, Preface n.12 ff and
Part I, Chapter II. Profession, a public and ecclesial act, is
received by the minister. If possible, it is done during the
Eucharistic Celebration. The priest spiritual assistant is the
witness of the Church and of the religious Franciscan Order to
which the spiritual care of the fraternity belongs.
- 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.
- The act of Profession is registered and preserved in the
records of the fraternity.
Article 43
(Rule 23 par. 3)
The national statutes establish:
-- 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
- 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*) and everyone and in the fulfillment of
their proper mission in the Church and in society.
- *) See Const. Art. 8, and 1 Celano 103.
- The fraternity has the duty to help its own members with
programs of continuing formation:
(Rule 4, par. 3)
-- to listen to and meditate on the Word of God, "going
from Gospel to life and from life to Gospel";
-- to reflect 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;
-- to realize and deepen the Franciscan vocation.
- The programs of continuing formation should help the
brothers and sisters to develop their vocation in fraternity
and to follow the life of the Church by means of courses,
meetings, and experiences.
Promotion of vocations
Article 45
- 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.
- 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
- (Rule 22)
The canonical establishment of the local fraternity is the
duty of 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 bishop 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.*)
- *) See CCL 312.
- For the valid establishment of a local fraternity, at
least five 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.
- If there is not yet a fraternity of the SFO in a nation,
it is the duty of the Presidency of the International Council
of the SFO to make provision in this regard.
Article 47
- (Rule 22)
Each local fraternity, the primary cell of the one SFO, is
entrusted to the pastoral care of the religious Franciscan
Family that canonically established it.
- A local fraternity may pass to the pastoral care of
another religious Franciscan Obedience in the ways provided by
the national statutes.*)
- *) See Const. 76 ff.
Article 48
- 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.
- 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
- The local fraternity is animated and guided by a
minister and a council elected by the professed members of the
fraternity. Only by way of exception in the first phase of
their establishment may fraternities exist without a regular
council. The council of a higher level will provide for this
lack only for the time strictly needed to insure the beginning
of the new fraternity, the formation of its animators and the
carrying out of its elections.
- The council of the local fraternity is composed of the
following offices: minister, vice-minister, secretary,
treasurer, and the person responsible for 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.
- The fraternity, meeting in an elective assembly or
chapter, elects the minister and the other leaders in the way
provided by the national statutes.*)
- *) See Const. 76 ff.
Article 50
It is the duty of the council of the local
fraternity:
-- to promote the initiatives necessary for fostering
fraternal life, for improving the human, Christ- ian, 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.
The duties of the council are also:
- to decide on the acceptance and admission to
Profession of new brothers and sisters;*)
- *) See Const. 39, 3 and 41,1.
- to establish a fraternal dialogue with members in
particular difficulties and to adopt consequent measures;
- to receive the request for withdrawal and to decide on
the suspension of a member from the fraternity;
- to decide on the establishment of sections or groups in
conformity with the Constitutions and the statutes;
- to decide on the destination of available funds and, in
general, to deliberate on matters concerning the financial
conduct and economic affairs of the fraternity;
- to assign duties to the councilors and to the other
professed members;
- to request from the competent superiors of the First
Order and the TOR suitable and prepared religious as
assistants;
- 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
- While firmly preserving the coresponsibility of
the council for the animation and guidance of the fraternity,
it is the duty of the minister, who is the person primarily
responsible in the fraternity, to ensure that the directions
and decisions of the fraternity and of the council are put
into practice. He or she will keep the council informed
concerning his or her activities.
The minister also has the following duties:
- 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;
- 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;
- to request, with the consent of the council, the pastoral
and fraternal visits, at least once every three years.
- to put into effect those acts which the Constitutions
refer to his or her competence.
- The minister represents the fraternity in all its
relations with ecclesiastical and civil authorities. In
addition, when the fraternity acquires a juridical personality
in the civil order, the minister becomes, when possible, its
legal representative.
Article 52
- The vice-minister has the following duties:
- to collaborate with the minister in a
fraternal spirit and to support him in carrying out the duties
proper to him;
- to exercise those functions which are entrusted to him by
the council and/or by the assembly or chapter;
- to take the place of the minister in both his
competencies and responsibilities in case of absence or
temporary incapacity;
- to assume the functions of the minister when the office
remains vacant.*)
- *) See Const. 81.1.
- The secretary has the following duties:
- to compile the official acts of the fraternity
and of the council and to assure that they are sent to their
respective proper recipients;
- to see to the updating and preservation of the records
and the registers, noting admissions, professions, deaths,
withdrawals, and transfers from the fraternity;*)
- *) Each local fraternity is to have at
least a register of enrollments (admissions, professions,
transfers, deaths, and every other important annotation
relative to the individual members), the register of minutes
of the council and the register of administration.
- 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.
- The master, or the person responsible for formation, has
the following duties:
- to coordinate the formative activities
according to Arts. 40 ff of these Constitutions;
- to instruct and animate the brothers and sisters in the
period of formation;*)
- *) See Const. 39 ff. Concerning the
participation of the spiritual assistant in formation, see
Art. 89,4 of the Constitutions.
- to inform the council of the fraternity concerning the
suitability of the candidate, prior to admission and
profession;*)
- *) See Const. 41.
- The treasurer, or bursar, has the following duties:
- 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;
- 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.
- 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.
- The provisions regarding 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
- (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.
- (Rule 6 - 8)
The fraternity should come together periodically as an
ecclesial community to celebrate the Eucharist in a climate
which strengthens the fraternal bond and characterizes 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.
- 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.
Article 54
- 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 civil, juridical
personality must be followed in conformity with the national
statutes.
- Based on the respective civil legislation, the national
statutes must establish precise criteria for the civil
juridical person, for the administration of the material goods
and 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.
TRANSFER TO ANOTHER FRATERNITY
WITHDRAWAL, SUSPENSION, AND DISMISSAL FROM THE FRATERNITY
AND FROM THE ORDER
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
- (Rule 23 par. 4)
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 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.
- The repeated and prolonged default in the obligations of
the life of the fraternity and other conduct in serious
opposition to the Rule ought to be discussed by the council in
dialogue with the person at fault. Only in the case of
obstinacy or habitual default may the council decide, with a
secret vote, to suspend someone. It communicates its decision
in writing to the person concerned.
- 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
- 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.
- 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
- For definitive, voluntary withdrawal from the
Order, the person concerned presents the request to the
minister of the fraternity who, after a fraternal dialogue,
refers it to the council. The latter makes a decision 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.
- The brother or sister who has publicly rejected the
faith, or has defected from ecclesiastical communion, or upon
whom an excommunication has been imposed or declared, is
dismissed from the Order by the council of the higher level
after having been admonished.*)
- *) See CCL 316; 1733 ff.
- For other causes, provided that they are grave, external,
imputable, and juridically proved, the council of the higher
level has the competence to declare dismissal from the Order
at the request of the council of the local fraternity of the
person concerned. 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.*)
- *) The preceding Constitutions of 1957,
in Art. 147, recommended: "The visitators...and the
ministers shall strive to lead the erring members to a better
way of life. But, bearing in mind the words and example of our
holy Father Francis, they shall always act with charity and
with prudence, and never use harsh words or be too
strict." This spirit should animate the "observance
of the directives of the Law".
- The decree of dismissal, in order to become effective,
must be confirmed by the national council to whom all the
documentation will be sent.
Article 59
Anyone who considers himself aggrieved by a measure
adopted against him may appeal within three months to the
council of the level above the one that adopted the decision
and, in successive instances, to further levels up to the
Presidency of the International Council of the SFO, and, as
the last instance, to the Holy See.*)
- *) See CCL 1732 - 1739. The rights of
the person are guaranteed at all levels by the universal law
of the Church and by these Constitutions.
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
- 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 realities. While
respecting the unity of the SFO and with the collegial
integration of the various Franciscan Obediences which may
provide spiritual assistance within the area, it assures the
link between the local fraternities and the national
fraternity.
- 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.
- The regional fraternity has its own seat and is animated
and guided by a minister, or president, and by a council who
are duly elected. The national statutes define its structure
and duties.
Article 62
The regional council has the following duties:
- to prepare the celebration of the elective
chapter;
- to promote, animate, and coordinate the life and
activities of the SFO and its insertion into the local Church
within the regional area;
- to elaborate the program of the SFO within the region and
to publicize it among the local fraternities, according to the
directives of the national council and in collaboration with
it;
- to communicate the directives of the national council and
of the local Church to the local fraternities;
- to provide for the formation of those responsible for
animation;
- to offer to local fraternities activities which support
all their formative and operative needs;
- to discuss and approve the annual report to the national
council;
- to make decisions concerning the fraternal visitation of
the local fraternities when the circumstances recommend it,
even when not requested;
- to make decisions regarding the disbursement of available
funds and, in general, to deliberate on matters regarding the
financial conduct and the economic affairs of the regional
fraternity;
- to perform such other duties as are indicated by the
Constitutions or necessary to achieve its own aims.
Article 63
- 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.
- In addition, the regional minister has the duty:
- to convoke and preside at the meetings of the
regional council; to convoke the regional elective chapter
every three years;
- to preside at and to confirm the elections of the local
fraternities, personally or through a delegate who is a member
of the regional council;
- to make fraternal visitations of the local fraternities,
personally or through a proper delegate who is a member of the
council;
- to participate in the meetings called by the national
council;
- to represent the fraternity in the civil order whenever
it has acquired a juridical personality;
- to prepare the annual report to the national council;
- to request the pastoral visitation and the fraternal
visitation 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 in a region, with elective and
deliberative power.
The national statutes provide for the formalities of
convocation, composition, frequency and competencies.
The National Fraternity
Article 65
- The national fraternity is the organic union of
the local fraternities existing within the territory of states
or of national entities which are joined and coordinated among
themselves through regional fraternities, wherever they
exist.
- It is the duty of the Presidency of the International
Council to provide for the establishment of new national units
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.
- The national fraternity:
-- is governed by its own statutes;
-- has its own seat;
-- is animated and guided by a minister or president and by a
council who are duly elected.
Article 66
The national council has the duty:
- to prepare the celebration of the national
elective chapter, according to its own statutes;
- to make known and to promote the Secular Franciscan
spirituality in its own nation;
- to decide upon programs of annual activities of a
national character;
- to seek, indicate, publish, and distribute the necessary
instruments for the formation of the Secular Franciscans;
- to animate and coordinate the activities of the regional
councils;
- to maintain the connection with the Presidency of the
International Council SFO;
- to elect the national representative to the International
Council and to assume the responsibility for the expenses
which he or she must bear to carry out this commission;
- to discuss and approve the annual report to the
International Council;
- to see to the presence of the SFO in the ecclesial bodies
at the national level;
- to make decisions concerning the fraternal visitation to
the councils of the regional and local fraternities when the
circumstances require it, even if not requested;
- to make decisions regarding the disbursement of the
available funds and, in general, regarding the economic
affairs of the fraternity;
- to perform such other duties as are indicated by the
Constitutions or necessary to achieve its own aims.
Article 67
- While firmly preserving the co-responsibility of
the council in the animation and guidance of the national
fraternity, it belongs to the minister, who has the primary
responsibility, to see that the directions and decisions of
the council are put into practice and to inform the council
concerning his or her activities.
- The national minister has the duty:
- to convoke and preside at the meetings of the
national council; to convoke the national elective chapter
every three years, according to the national statutes;
- to direct and coordinate with the national leaders the
activities at the national level;
- to give a report to the national council and chapter on
the life and activity of the SFO in his own country;
- 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;
- to preside at and to confirm the regional elections,
personally or through a delegate who is a member of the
national council;
- to make fraternal visitations of the regional councils,
personally or through a proper delegate who is a member of the
national council;
- to request the pastoral visitation and the fraternal
visitation with the consent of the council, at least once
every three years.
Article 68
- The national chapter is the representative organ
of the fraternities existing within the confines of a state or
nation. It has legislative, deliberative, and elective
powers.
In conformity with the Rule and the Constitutions, it may make
legislative decisions and produce norms valid within its
national confines. The national statutes determine the
composition, the frequency, the competencies, and the method
of convoking the national chapter.
- 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
- 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.
- The International Fraternity is guided and animated by
the Minister or President with the International Council
(CIOFS), that has its seat in Rome, Italy.
Article 70
- 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;
-- Franciscan religious of the First Order and the TOR who are
spiritual assistants of the SFO;
-- Representatives of the Franciscan Youth.*)
- *) See Const. 97,2.
In
addition, the four General Assistants to the SFO form part of
the International Council.
- The Presidency of the International Council SFO is
constituted within the International Council of which it forms
an integral part.
- The International Council meets in the SFO General
Chapter with legislative, deliberative, and elective
powers.
- The general elective chapter is celebrated every six
years according to the norms established by the Constitutions
and by its own Statutes.
Article 71
The purposes and duties of the International Council
SFO are:
- to promote and sustain the evangelical life
according to the spirit of St. Francis of Assisi within the
secular condition of the faithful living throughout the
world;
- to strengthen the bond of communion, collaboration, and
sharing among the national fraternities; to make the
interdependence and reciprocity of the SFO a reality at the
various levels of fraternity; to increase the sense of unity
of the SFO with respect to the pluralism of the persons and
groups, and to increase the sense of awareness of a particular
responsibility with respect to that unity;
- to harmonize 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;
- to contribute, in line with the tradition of the SFO, to
the spreading of the ideas and initiatives which are valuable
for promoting the availability of Secular Franciscans in the
life of the Church and of society;
- to participate in providing fraternal aid in the
clarification and resolution of grave and urgent problems of
the SFO, in a spirit of service, through its own presidency,
according to the circumstances and its own prudent
evaluation.
- to strengthen reciprocal relationships of collaboration
between the SFO and the other components of the Franciscan
Family at the world level;
- to collaborate with the organizations and associations
which defend the same values.
Article 72
- The Presidency of the International Council SFO is
composed of;
-- the Minister General;
-- the Vice-Minister;
-- the International Councilors elected to represent the
linguistic areas according to the norms of the Statutes of the
International Council SFO;
-- a member of the Franciscan Youth;
-- the General Assistants of the SFO.
Article 73
The duties and tasks of the Presidency, as the
executive organ of the International Council, are:
- to coordinate, animate, and guide the SFO at
the international level;
- to see that the decisions of the General Chapter are
carried out;
- to attend to the resolution of urgent problems that arise
relative to the greater good of the SFO and not foreseen by
the Constitutions and the Statutes of the International
Council SFO. It informs the national council concerned and the
next General Chapter of its action.
Article 74
- While firmly preserving the co-responsibility of
the Presidency in the guidance and animation of the
International Council, it belongs to the Minister General, who
has the primary responsibility, to see that the directions and
decisions of the International Council and of the Presidency
are put into practice and to inform them concerning his or her
activities.
- In addition, the Minister General has the duty:
- to convoke and preside at the meetings of the
Presidency according to its own Statutes;
- to convoke the meetings of the General Chapter with the
consent of the Presidency, and to preside at them.
- to be a visible and effective sign of the communion and
life-giving reciprocity between the SFO and the Ministers
General 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;
- to represent the SFO at the world level before
ecclesiastical and civil authorities;
- to make the fraternal visitation to the national
councils, personally or through a delegate who is a member of
the International Council SFO;
- to preside at the elections of the National Councils,
personally or through a delegate who is a member of the
International Council SFO.
- to request, with the consent of the Presidency, the
pastoral visitation by the Union of the Ministers General of
the First Order and the TOR;
- to intervene in urgent cases, informing the Presidency of
them;
- to sign the official documents of the SFO;
- to exercise the civil rights of the International
Council, with the consent of the Presidency, and jointly with
another councilor of the Presidency designated by the same.
Article 75
The specific duties of the International Councilors
are determined by the Statutes of the International Council
SFO.
TITLE IV
ELECTION TO AND TERMINATION OF OFFICES
Elections
Article 76
- The elections at the various levels will take
place according to the norms of the law of the Church*) 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.
- *) See CCL 164 ff.
- The elective assembly, or chapter, will be presided over
by the minister of the council of the immediately higher
level, or by his or her delegate, who confirms the
election.
In the local and regional fraternities, the president or the
delegate to preside is not to be a member of the fraternity in
which the elections take place.
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 Union of the Ministers General of the
First Order and the TOR presides at and confirms the elections
of the International Presidency.
- The president of the chapter and the assistant of the
higher level do not have the right to vote.
- For every elective assembly a secretary and two
scrutineers are to be designated.*)
- *) See CCL 173.
Article 77
- In the local fraternity the perpetually professed
of the same fraternity have active and passive voice. The
temporarily professed and the spiritual assistant have only
active voice.
- At the other levels, the following have active voice: the
members of the outgoing council, the representatives of the
immediately lower level, of the Franciscan Youth, if
professed, and of the spiritual assistants. It is the
competence of the particular statutes to establish more
concrete norms for the 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.
Article 78
- 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.
- The election of the vice-minister proceeds in the same
manner.
- 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.
- The secretary announces the result of the elections; the
president confirms the election according to the Ritual*) if
all has been carried out properly and those elected have
accepted their office.
- *) See Ritual SFO, Part II, Chapt. II.
Article 79
- The ministers may be elected for two consecutive
terms of three years each. When exceptional circumstances
require it, for a third and final successive election to the
office of minister, a majority of two-thirds of the votes of
those present, which must be obtained on the first ballot,
will be necessary, as well as the confirmation by the
president of the elective assembly.
- The same norms are valid for the election of the Minister
General of the SFO, whose term is six years.*)
- *) See Const. 70,4.
- 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 will be necessary.
This should be carried out in such a way that after two terms
of three years, at least one third of the council is
replaced.
- The same norms are valid for the election of the
councilors of the Presidency of the International Council SFO,
whose term is six years.
- 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 prescribed norms.
Article 80
The particular statutes may include further directives
concerning elections, as long as they are not contrary to the
Constitutions.
PROVISIONS FOR VACANCY, RESIGNATION, AND DISMISSAL
Vacant Offices
Article 81
- When the office of minister remains vacant as a
result of death, accepted resignation, removal, absence, or
other impediment of a definitive character, the vice-minister
assumes the functions until the end of the term for which he
or she was elected, if two years have passed since the
election; at the international level, four years must have
passed. Otherwise, the vice-minister assumes the functions of
the minister until the elective chapter which he or she must
convoke with the consent of the council within six months of
the date on which the office became vacant.
One of the councilors is elected to the office of
vice-minister by the council of the fraternity for the same
period.
- When the office of councilor becomes vacant, the council
will proceed to substitute for him or her in conformity with
the proper statutes. The substitution is valid until the
elective chapter.
Incompatible Offices
Article 82
The following are incompatible:
- the office of minister at two different
levels;
- the offices of minister, vice-minister, secretary and
treasurer at the same level.
Resignation of Office
Article 83
- The resignation in chapter of the minister of
whatever level must be accepted by the same chapter.
The resignation of the minister, outside of the chapter, must
be presented to the proper council. If the resignation is
accepted, it must be confirmed by the minister of the higher
level*) and, for the Minister General, by the Union of the
Ministers General of the First Order and the TOR.
- *) See Const. 76; 78. The minister of
the higher level presides at and confirms the elections.
- 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
- In the case in which the minister does not fulfill
his or her duties, the council concerned should inform the
minister and the council of the higher level whose competence
it is to examine the case and, if required, to authorize the
election of a new minister.
- For a serious, public, and proved reason, the minister of
a higher level, with the consent of his council, manifested by
a secret vote, may order the removal of a minister of a lower
level.
- The removal from the other offices of the council, when
there is a serious reason, belongs to the minister of the
council to which they belong, with the consent of that council
expressed by a secret ballot.
- A suspending recourse may be interposed against the
removal, within an effective period of thirty days, before the
council of the level immediately higher to that which imposed
the sanction; then, in succession, of the other levels of the
Order.
- The case in which the Minister General is to be removed
is in the competence of the Union of the Ministers General of
the First Order and the TOR.
TITLE V
SPIRITUAL AND PASTORAL ASSISTANCE OF THE SFO
Article 85
- 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.*)
- *) From Franciscan history and from the
Constitutions of the First Order and the TOR, it is clearly
evident that these Orders recognize that they are committed to
the spiritual and pastoral assistance of the SFO in virtue of
their common origin and charism and by the will of the Church.
See Constitutions OFM, 60; Constitutions OFM Conv., 116;
Constitutions OFM Cap., 95; Constitutions TOR, 157; Rule of
the Third Order of Pope Leo XIII, 3,3; Rule approved by Paul
VI, 26.
- 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 Ministers General and Provincial.
The altius moderamen, of which canon 3O3 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.*)
- *) See Rule SFO, Art. 6; Ritual of the
SFO, II, 29 ff.
Article 86
- The Ministers General and Provincials 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 their own
delegate.
- This service of the religious ministers is a valid help,
but does not substitute for the secular minsters and
councilors to whom belong the guidance, coordination, and
animation of the frater-nities at the various levels.
Article 87
- For all that concerns the SFO as a whole, the
altius moderamen must be exercised by the Ministers
General collegially.
- It belongs to the Union of the Ministers General of the
First Order and the TOR:
-- to care for the relations with the Holy See concerning the
approval of the legislative or liturgical documents, which
approval is the competence of the Holy See;
-- to visit the International Council of the SFO and its
Council of the Presidency.*)
- *) See Const. 94, 2-3.
--
to confirm the election of the Minister General of the
SFO;
-- to confirm the Statutes of the International Council of the
SFO.*)
- *) See Const. 6,1.
- Each Minister General, within the area of his own
competence, 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
In the exercise of their office, the religious
ministers provincial take into account the organization of the
SFO.
The ministers provincial of the different Obediences with
jurisdiction in the same territory shall seek collegially the
most suitable method of developing their own mission in
relation to the SFO.
Article 89
- By virtue of the vital reciprocity between
religious and seculars of the Franciscan Family and by virtue
of the responsibilities of the major superiors, spiritual
assistance, as a fundamental element of communion, must be
assured to all the fraternities of the SFO. This service is
provided by spiritual assistants, appointed according to the
norms of the present Constitutions and the statutes for the
spiritual assistance to the SFO.
- It is the right and duty of the council of the fraternity
at each level to request suitable and prepared assistants.
The council of the fraternity at each level requests suitable
and prepared assistants from the competent superiors of the
First Order and the TOR, who have the competency to appoint,
having heard the council of the fraternity concerned.*)
- *) See Const. 91.
- The spiritual assistant, who is normally a Franciscan
religious, ought to be a witness of Franciscan spirituality
and of the fraternal affection of the religious towards the
Secular Franciscans. He ought also to be a bond of communion
between his Order and the SFO.
- The spiritual assistant is a member of the council of the
fraternity to which he gives assistance and collaborates with
it in all its activities. It is the particular task of the
assistant to cooperate in the initial and continuing formation
of the brothers and sisters.
- The spiritual assistant does not exercise the right to
vote in financial questions.
Article 90
- The General Assistants are appointed by the
respective Ministers General after consultation with the
Presidency Council of the International Council SFO. The
General Assistants give their service to the International
Council and to its Presidency and they collegially see to the
spiritual assistance to the SFO as a whole.
- At the national level, norms for spiritual assistance
should be established, which are agreed upon by the
interobediential union of the ministers provincial with the
national council of the SFO. The national assistants are
appointed by the respective Conferences of Superiors (or by
the Superior, if there is only one within the nation), having
heard the national council. The national assistants act
collegially in their service to the national council and in
the coordination of the regional assistants at the national
level.
- The spiritual assistance to the national fraternity is
guided and coordinated by the college of the National
Assistants (or by the National Assistant) according to the
Constitutions and its own statutes.
- The spiritual assistance to the regional fraternity is
guided and coordinated by the college of the regional
assistants (or by the regional assistant) according to the
Constitutions and its own statutes.
- In the fraternities established in Franciscan churches or
in Franciscan houses, fraternal unity should be promoted
between the two communities, the religious and the secular.
Article 91
- The spiritual assistant is to be a religious
Franciscan priest, belonging to the First Order or the
TOR.
- Priests belonging to other Franciscan Institutes or
diocesan priests belonging to the SFO may be delegated to
assist the fraternities, given the authorization of the
respective Superior or of the diocesan Ordinary.
- To promote the life of the fraternities and in particular
when it is not possible to give a spiritual assistant to the
fraternity, or when one assistant must attend to many
fraternities, the Franciscan major superior, having heard the
council of the fraternity concerned, may request the
collaboration of suitable and prepared animators, men and
women, religious and lay, giving priority to the witness of
life and to the capacity to communicate Franciscan
spirituality. The Superior, or the provincial assistant,
remains responsible for the spiritual assistance as well as
for the pastoral and sacramental service to the
fraternity.
- Exceptionally, and so that the fraternity has adequate
pastoral care, the Franciscan major superior may delegate the
spiritual assistance of the local fraternity to a diocesan
priest or to a religious priest who is not a Franciscan, given
the authorization of the respective Superior in all cases.
TITLE VI
THE FRATERNAL VISIT AND THE PASTORAL VISIT
Article 92
- (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.
- 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.
- In the visits to the local fraternities and to the
councils at the various levels, the visitor will communicate
the object and the program of the visit to the interested
council in ample time. He or she will examine the registers
and the acts, including those relative to the election of the
council and to the administration of goods. He will draw up a
report of the visit carried out, appending it to the acts in
the appropriate register of the fraternity visited, and will
inform the council by whom the visit was requested.
- 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 the period of
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 which they had to
confront.
- If it is useful for the service of the fraternity, the
two visitors, religious and secular, 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.
- The pastoral and fraternal visits, carried out by the
immediately higher level, do not hinder the visited fraternity
in maintaining the right to appeal to the council or to the
religious superior of a higher level, informing the religious
or lay leader who carried out the preceding visit.
The Fraternal Visit
Article 93
- The fraternal visit is a moment of communion, an
expression of the service and concrete interest of the lay
leaders at the various levels, so that the fraternity may grow
and be faithful to its vocation.*)
- *) See Const. 51, 1c; 63, 2g; 67, 2g.
- The minister of the fraternity of whatever level, with
the consent of the council, should request a fraternal visit
from the minister of the immediately higher level at least
every three years.*)
- *) When the visit is not requested as
it should be, see Const. 62 h; 66,1.
- In this spirit, the visitor will promote dialogue and
collaboration among the brothers and sisters and will provide
stimulation towards the concrete realization of the Franciscan
options, of which the Secular Franciscans ought to be
witnesses and promoters within society.
- Among the different 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
various levels, with the Franciscan Youth, and with the entire
Franciscan Family.
-- to the observance of the directives and of the guidelines
of the International Council SFO and of the other
councils;
-- to the presence in the local Church.
- The visitor will check 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.
Wherever he or she deems it opportune, the visitor will obtain
the assistance of a competent person in these aspects.
- 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 is not sufficiently developed to meet the needs of the
fraternity, the visitor will promote appropriate initiatives,
having taken into account the provisions concerning
resignation and removal from office*), given special
circumstances.
- *) See Const. 83; 84.
- The visitor may not carry out the visit of his or her own
fraternity, nor of the council of another level of which he or
she is a member.
The Pastoral Visit
Article 94
- The pastoral visit is an expression of the
altius moderamen and of the pastoral care of the SFO
entrusted by the Church to the First Order and the TOR. It is
carried out 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 Minister General of the SFO with the consent of the
Presidency Council requests the visit from the Union of the
Ministers General at least every six years.
- The national minister with the consent of the council
requests the visit from the Conference of General Assistants
at least every three years.
- The ministers of the regional and local fraternities,
with the consent of the respective councils, request the visit
from the religious superiors according to their own statutes
at least every three years.
- For urgent and serious reasons or in case of failure on
the part of the minister or the council to request it, the
pastoral visit may be carried out upon the initiative of the
competent religious superior.
Article 95
- The visitor will carry out his task with respect
to the organization and the law proper to the SFO.
- Having verified the canonical establishment of the
fraternity, he will concern himself with the relations between
the fraternity and its spiritual assistant and the local
Church. He will meet the pastors (bishop or parish priest)
when this is opportune for fostering communion and service for
building up the Church.
- He will promote collaboration and a sense of
co-responsibility among the secular leaders and the religious
assistants. He 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.
- He 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
- 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 St. Francis of Assisi and to seek
the means of adequately presenting it to them.
- The Franciscan Youth, 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 St. Francis of Assisi, deepening their own
vocation within the context of the Secular Franciscan
Order.
- 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.
- The members of the Franciscan Youth who wish to make
profession in the SFO should satisfy the requirements of the
Rule, the Constitutions, and the Ritual of the SFO.
- 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. Wherever the Franciscan Youth of a
particular country intends to give itself its own statutes,
these should be presented by the national council of the SFO
to the Presidency of the International Council SFO, for
approval.
- The Franciscan Youth, as a component of the Franciscan
Family, requests spiritual, pastoral, and fraternal assistance
from the religious superiors and from the competent secular
leaders.
Article 97
- The SFO will seek the most appropriate means to
promote the vitality and the spreading of the Franciscan
Youth. It will stand by the youth to encourage them and to
procure the means which can help them to progress in their
journey of human and spiritual growth.
- To promote a close communion with the SFO, the leaders of
the Franciscan Youth at the international and national levels
and at the level immediately below are to be professed Secular
Franciscan Youth.
- A representative of the Franciscan Youth, who must be a
professed Secular Franciscan, is to be designated to form part
of the SFO councils at the various levels; analogously, a
representative of the SFO, designated by the respective
council, is to form part of the council of the Franciscan
Youth at the same level.
In addition, where a Franciscan Youth group exists whose
members are not professed Secular Franciscans, the council of
the local fraternity should invite the respective
representative to participate in the activity of the council,
without the right to vote.
TITLE VIII
IN COMMUNION WITH THE FRANCISCAN FAMILY AND THE CHURCH
Article 98
- (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 St. Francis as a model and
inspiration in order to collaborate in spreading the Gospel,
removing the causes of marginalization, and serving the cause
of peace.
- They must cultivate a special affection, which expresses
itself in concrete initiatives of fraternal communion, towards
the sisters of the contemplative life who, like St. Clare of
Assisi, bear witness in the Church and in the world and by
whose mediation they await the abundance of grace for the
fraternity and for the works of the apostolate.
Article 99
- (Rule 6)
As a living part of the people of God and conforming
themselves to 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.*) 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.
- *) Lumen Gentium 12.
- 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
- 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 realize their apostolic commitment,
aware that in the diocese the Church of Christ is truly
functioning.*)
- *) Christus Dominus 11; CCL
396; See 2 Celano 10, and 1 Celano 18.
- The Secular Franciscans should fulfill 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.*) 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.
- *) See CCL 311.
- 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
- 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 coordinators of the various forms of apostolate in the
local Church.*)
- *) See CCL 394; 756; 775.
- The fraternities are subject to the vigilance of the
Ordinary in so far as they perform their activities within the
local Churches.*)
- *) See CCL 305; 392.
Article 102
- The fraternities established in a parish church
should seek to cooperate 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.
- 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
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.
Contents