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Constitution
2 Mission

9.
God so loved the world that he sent
his only Son that we might have life
and have it abundantly. In the fullness
of time the Lord Jesus came among us
anointed by the Spirit to inaugurate
a kingdom of justice, love and peace.
His rule would be no mere earthly regime:
it would initiate a new creation in
every land. His power would be within
and without, rescuing us from the injustice
we suffer and also from the injustice
we inflict.

10.
This was the good news
that many misunderstood and many rejected.
The Lord Jesus was crucified. But the
Father raised him to glory, and Christ
breathed his Spirit into his people,
the church. Dying and rising with him
in baptism, his followers are sent to
continue his mission, to hasten along
the kingdom.

11.
The same Spirit
moved Father Moreau to found the community
of Holy Cross in which we have responded
to the call to serve Christ. We live
and work as priests and brothers together.
Our mutual respect and shared undertaking
should be a hopeful sign of the kingdom,
and they are when others can behold
how we love one another.

12.
As disciples of Jesus
we stand side
by side with all people. Like them we
are burdened by the same struggles and
beset by the same weaknesses; like them
we are made new by the same Lord's love;
like them we hope for a world where
justice and love prevail. Thus, wherever
through its superiors the congregation
sends us we go as educators in the faith
to those whose lot we share, supporting
men and women of grace and goodwill
everywhere in their efforts to form
communities of the coming kingdom.

13.
Christ was anointed
to bring good news
to the poor, release for prisoners,
sight for the blind, restoration for
every broken victim. Our efforts, which
are his, reach out to the afflicted
and in a preferential way to the poor
and the oppressed. We come not just
as servants but as their neighbors,
to be with them and of them. It is not
that we take sides against sinful enemies;
before the Lord all of us are sinners
and none is an enemy. We stand with
the poor and the afflicted because only
from there can we appeal as Jesus did
for the conversion and the deliverance
of all.

14.
The mission is not
simple, for
the impoverishment we would relieve
are not simple. There are networks of
privilege, prejudice and power so commonplace
that often neither oppressors more victims
are aware of them. We must be aware
and also understanding by reason of
fellowship with the impoverished and
by reason of patient learning. For the
kingdom to come in this world, disciples
must have the competence to see and
the courage to act.

15.
Our concern for the dignity of
every human being as God's cherished
child directs our care to victims of
every injury: prejudice, famine, warfare,
ignorance, infidelity, abuse, natural
calamity...

16.
For many of us
in Holy Cross, mission expresses itself
in the education of youth in schools,
colleges and universities. For others,
our mission as educators takes place
in parishes and other ministries. Wherever
we work we assist others not only to
recognize and develop their own gifts
but also to discover the deepest longing
in their lives. And, as in every work
of our mission, we find that we ourselves
stand to learn much from those whom
we are called to teach.

17.
Our mission sends us
across borders of every sort. Often
we must make ourselves at home among
more than one people or culture, reminding
us again that the farther we go in giving
the more we stand to receive. Our broader
experience allows both the appreciation
and the critique of every culture and
the disclosure that no culture of this
world can be our abiding home.

18.
All of us are involved
in the mission: those who go out to
work and those whose labors sustain
the community itself, those in the fullness
of their strength and those held back
by sickness or by age, those who abide
in the companionship of a local house
and those sent to live and work by themselves,
those in their active assignments and
those who are still in training. All
of us as a single brotherhood are joined
in one communal response to the Lord's
mission.

19.
Periodically we review
how well our ministries fulfill our
mission. We must evaluate the quality,
forms and priorities of our commitments
as to how effectively they serve the
needs of the church and the world.

20.
Our mission is the
Lord's and
so is the strength for it. We turn to
him in prayer that he will clasp us
more firmly to himself and use our hands
and wits to do the work that only he
can do. Then our work itself becomes
a prayer: a service that speaks to the
Lord who works through us.
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