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Constitution
5 Consecration and Commitment

43.
We accept the Lord's
call to pledge ourselves
publicly and perpetually as members
of the Congregation of Holy Cross by
the vows of consecrated celibacy, poverty
and obedience. Great is the mystery
and meaning within these vows. And yet
their point is simple. They are an act
of love for the God who first loved
us. By our vows we are committed to
single-hearted intimacy with God, to
trusting dependence upon God and to
willing surrender to God. We wish thus
to live in the image of Jesus, who was
sent in love to announce God's rule
and who beckons to us to follow him.

44.
We
profess vows for the sake of this
same mission of Jesus. In consecrated
celibacy we wish to love with the freedom,
openness and availability that can be
recognized as a sign of the kingdom.
In consecrated poverty we seek to share
the lot of the poor and to unite in
their cause, trusting in the Lord as
provider. In consecrated obedience we
join with our brothers in community
and with the whole church in the search
for God's will. We do not imagine that
those who commit themselves in other
ways to the following of Jesus are thereby
hindered in their service of neighbor.
On the contrary, we find in them willing
and complementary partners in shared
mission. We want our vows, faithfully
lived, to be witness and call to them
as their commitments, faithfully lived,
are witness and call to us.

45.
We
dedicate ourselves as well to be
prophetic signs through these vows.
We are sojourners in this world, longing
for the coming of the new creation as
we seek to be stewards on this earth.
The world is well provisioned with gifts
from God's hand, but the gifts are often
worshiped and the Giver is ignored.
We want to live our vows in such a way
that our lives will call into question
the fascinations of our world: pleasure,
wealth and power. Prophets stand before
the world as signs of that which has
enduring value, and prophets speak and
act in the world as companions of the
Lord in the service of his kingdom.
We pray to live our vows well enough
to offer such witness and service.

46.
Our
vows bind us together in community.
We commit ourselves to share with one
another who we are, what we have and
what we do. Thereby we form a community
as did those who first believed in Christ's
resurrection and were possessed by his
Spirit. The whole group of believers
was united, heart and soul. No one claimed
as private any possession as everything
they owned was held in common. With
one mind they shared the same teaching,
a common life, the breaking of the bread,
and prayer.

47.
By
our vow of celibacy we commit ourselves
to seek union with God in lifelong chastity,
forgoing forever marriage and parenthood
for the sake of the kingdom. We also
promise loyalty, companionship and affection
to our confreres in Holy Cross. Openness
and discipline in prayer, personal asceticism,
compassionate service, and love given
and received in community are important
supports toward the generous living
of this commitment. Our hope and our
need are to live blessed by faithful
and loving relationships with friends
and companions in mission, relationships
reflective of the intimacy and openness
of God's love for us.

48.
By
our vow of poverty we submit to
the direction of community authority
in our use and disposition of property,
for we commit ourselves to hold our
goods in common and to share them as
brothers. All enumeration for our services,
all income, gifts and benefits are ours
to share or dispose of as a community.
In all of this, our hope is that the
common purse will be expressive of true
reliance upon one another in Holy Cross
and will free our hearts for possession
by the Lord.

49.
At
the same time by this vow we forgo
the use and enjoyment of our own material
goods. Though any of us may own or acquire
private property, we put it at a distance
from our lives by assigning to others
its administration, use and benefits.
Inheritances, legacies and gifts, which
by their very nature or by the intent
of the donor are meant to be the personal
property of a member of the community,
are presumed to be his own. To accept
or renounce an inheritance or legacy
requires permission from one's local
superior or director. As for gifts,
this permission required only to accept
them. To dispossess himself of his property
in whole or in part, a member in perpetual
vows must have permission from the superior
general and follow civil formalities.

50.
By
our vow of obedience we commit ourselves
to adhere faithfully to the decisions
of those in authority in Holy Cross
according to the constitutions; we owe
obedience to the Pope as well. We forgo
the independent exercise of our wills
in order to join with brothers in a
common discernment of God's will as
manifested in prayer, communal reflection,
scripture, the Spirit's guidance in
the church, and the cry of the poor.
This vow includes the entirety of our
life in Holy Cross, and through it we
hope to discover and accept the Lord's
will more surely.

51.
Our
vows not only bind us in community;
they are to mark our life as community.
Open and generous and hospitable love
is to characterize our houses and our
service. As a congregation and in each
of our local communities we are committed
to the use of few belongings and to
simple living. In the discernment of
God's call we are a brotherhood at the
service of the universal church under
the pastoral direction of the Pope;
and we are no less responsive to the
needs of the local churches wherever
we live and work. In what regards worship,
pastoral ministry and our labor for
the kingdom we are under the pastoral
authority of the bishops.

52.
We
live our consecration in many lands
and cultures. Our commitment is the
same wherever we are, but we seek to
express it in a manner rooted in and
enriched by the varying contexts and
cultures in which we live. In this way
we hope to make our witness and service
more effective for the kingdom.

53.
When
we profess our public vows, we declare:
I (name) stand in the presence of Jesus
Christ, the Son of God and my Lord,
in the assembly of his church, amid
the Congregation of Holy Cross and before
you, (name and office of the person
receiving vows) to profess my dedication
and my vows. I believe that I have been
called by the Father and led by the
Spirit to offer my life and my life's
work in the service of the Lord for
the needs of the church and the world.
Therefore I make to God forever/for
...year(s) the vows of chastity, poverty
and obedience, according to the constitutions
of the Congregation of Holy Cross. May
the God who allows and invites me to
make this commitment strengthen and
protect me to be faithful to it.

54.
The religious pronouncing the vows
may propose for the approval of the
provincial or his delegate modifications
in this formula except in the invariable
portion set forth in italics.
55.
Our consecration is
a public one,
for we are called to stand forth in
service and witness. It is desirable
therefore that we ordinarily be known
and seen as members of the congregation.
In conformity with the customs in the
local church and the decision of our
provincial chapters, we wear attire
appropriate for religious. The symbol
of the congregation, the cross and anchors,
is worn to identify us as members of
Holy Cross.
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