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Constitution
6 Formation and Transformation

56.
The disciples followed
the Lord Jesus
in his ministry of proclaiming the kingdom
and healing the afflicted. Jesus also
spent long days alone with his disciples,
speaking to them of the mysteries of
his kingdom and forming them to the
point when they too could be sent on
his mission. Later they would return
for his comment and for a deeper hearing
because of what they had experienced.
Later still they were visited by the
fire of his Spirit, who transformed
their understanding of all he had ever
taught them. We too are sent to his
mission as men formed and in need of
lifelong formation for his service

57.
We
pronounce our vows in a moment,
but living them for the sake of the
kingdom is the work of a lifetime. That
fulfillment demands of us more than
the mere wish, more even than the firm
decision. It demands the conversion
of our habits, our character, our attitudes,
our desires.

58.
It
is so with our commitment as Christians.
Our consecration in baptism is a departure
on a journey that requires us, as it
does all his people, to be refashioned
by the Lord's creating grace over and
over again. Likewise with our lives
in a religious community, we must have
formed in us by God's enablement the
living likeness of Jesus Christ.

59.
The journey begins
before our profession and ends only
at our resurrection. We would be created
anew to the point when we can say, "It
is no longer I who live, but Christ
who lives in me." It is the Lord
who gives us both the desire and the
accomplishment. For our part we must
submit to the wisdom and the discipline
that will purify us of our selfishness
and will make us wholehearted in the
service of his people.

60.
Our
experience in Holy Cross is demanding.
It is joyful as well. And so it should
give us a life to which we would happily
invite others. The Lord's call will
be heard in our steadfast witness to
the gospel, the companionship we offer
one another, the cheerfulness with which
we serve in our mission without counting
the cost, and the sincere welcome we
openly offer men who join us. If we
delight in our vocation, we will share
it with others.

61.
Candidates
who come to the congregation deserve
from us the cultivation of their maturity,
faith, generosity, learning and ability
to live in community. With them we assess
their character and growth as Christians,
and we both discern and assist them
to discern whether they are disposed
and able to move towards joining our
congregation. The duration of each one's
candidacy is determined by the provincial,
and it is he who admits candidates to
the novitiate.

62.
The
novitiate is the beginning of life
in the congregation. Novices are helped
to form themselves in meditation and
prayer, in the mutual services of a
common life, in apostolic service, and
in knowledge of the history and spirituality,
character and mission of Holy Cross.
In short they are challenged and helped
to open their hearts to the gospel,
to live under the same roof with one
another, and to create a brotherhood
of disciples. The novitiate is their
apprenticeship in celibacy, poverty
and obedience. The director, or master
of novices, appointed by the provincial
and under his authority, has full personal
responsibility for the formation of
the novices.

63.
The
provincial reviews the qualifications
of candidates for valid admission and
with the consent of his council admits
them to the novitiate. He determines
as well the date and the manner in which
the novitiate period begins.

64.
The
novitiate takes place in a house
designated by the superior general with
the consent of his assistants. Its duration
is at least twelve months in the novitiate
house, and no more than two years, including
brief periods of active ministry. Absences
are regulated according to canon law.
The novitiate concludes with profession
of temporary vows, to which a novice
is admitted by the provincial. His vows
are received, as at every later state
of profession, by the provincial or
his delegate, unless the superior general
receives them.

65.
Prior
to his profession
the novice freely cedes the administration
of his goods to whomever he wishes,
and disposes of their use and benefits
for the entire period of vows. This
he does in written form, valid under
civil law, with the stipulation that
it is revocable.

66.
No
one admitted as a novice
for one society in Holy Cross may transfer
to the other society except by agreement
of the provincial(s) concerned with
the consent of the provincial councilors
and by permission of the superior general
given with the consent of his assistants.

67.
This
profession of vows
is ordinarily followed by a program
of formation that involves new members
in further study and internship directed
towards their eventual form of service
and the needs of our mission. All members
are given theological and pastoral training
for a lay or ordained ministry. They
are encouraged to reflect upon their
apostolic, community and life experience
in the light of the gospel and systematic
theological inquiry. They are likewise
brought to a deepening of their spiritual
life and prayer, especially through
the relationship of regular spiritual
direction. In the meantime the maturity,
judgment and generosity needed for mission
and common life are both cultivated
and evaluated. Thus each time the provincial
admits a member to renewal of his vows,
it represents our affirmation of his
growth towards a character that is soundly
human, explicitly Christian and better
prepared for a lifetime in Holy Cross.
68.
The
period of initial formation
in annual vows after the novitiate is
for at least three years and ordinarily
no more than six years. It may be extended
in individual cases up to another three
years by the provincial. It concludes
with the profession of perpetual vows,
to which a member is admitted by the
superior general. This profession is
preceded by a time of immediate preparation
determined by the provincial.

69.
Before
pronouncing these vows,
the member makes a will which must be
valid according to civil law and provide
for all present or future property.
Any change in this will or in his earlier
cession of administration and disposition
of benefits requires the permission
of the provincial. Permission of the
local superior or director suffices
for a change in one's will when urgency
does not allow recourse to the provincial,
for routine acts required by civil law,
and for the disposition of property.
If a religious leaves the community,
this cession of administration is thereby
nullified and his will is returned to
him.

70.
Those
who come to us
from other religious institutes, if
they are in perpetual vows, follow a
program of at least three years determined
by the provincial in accord with canon
law.

71.
All should be provided
the opportunity
for the best pastoral and theological
training and advanced education that
is appropriate and that, as a community
committed to poverty, we can provide.
But since everyone in the congregation
should, for the benefit of his ministry
and of himself, cultivate an inquiring
and well-nourished mind broadened by
his experience and reflection, there
is no age when we can lay aside further
systematic or experientaial learning,
or continuing education.

72.
We
should give members
in initial formation access to the distinctive
benefits of being in the Congregation
of Holy Cross. We are a community of
clerical and lay religious. Initiation
for members of each society is more
complete if they have some experience
of the other society. Cooperative formation
programs between societies and provinces
and, if feasible, with our sisters in
Holy Cross make these advantages even
more accessible. Also, since we are
a worldwide congregation, there is benefit
then some can receive a portion of their
portion of their formation in other
provinces or districts or cultures.

73.
Opportunity
for direct supervised experience
of the life, suffering and hopes of
the poor should be provided during initial
formation and for the sake of ongoing
formation as well. For religious of
every age this can be an experience
that is both formative and transforming.

74.
Initial formation
is supervised
and principally provided by members
of the congregation in perpetual vows.
The staff of a house of formation shares
the responsibility with the superior
for the development of all the members
in the program. They should be effective
educators in the faith, have extensive
experience of life and ministry in Holy
Cross and be adequately prepared for
their tasks. They work together as a
team and live in one community with
those in formation. The formation programs
are arranged to permit each person to
assume appropriate responsibility for
his formation and to allow both him
and the congregation to discern the
reality of his vocation.

75.
At
the completion
of initial formation the supervision
proper to that period comes to an end.
But it is precisely at this time of
transition to more autonomy, when we
feel less accountable for our personal,
communal and apostolic lives, that we
form habits that are long-lived. The
provinces provide for this transition
in the life and work of members so that
formation truly continues.

76.
It
is commonly imagined that our formation
is most extensive when we are beginners.
But often our most radical formative
experiences come upon us when we are
well into adulthood. Indeed, we can
better grasp and accept profound self-scrutiny,
the questioning of our established assumptions
and ambitions, and deepening initiation
into Christ when we have walked the
path of adult experience and responsibility.
Programs of continuing renewal in the
community are one very helpful way of
sharing that lifelong formation.
77.
Lifelong formation is lifelong growth.
As a daily aid for self-knowledge and
self-governance, the examination of
conscience allows us to find how we
succeed or fall short in both our common
life and our mission. A grace more powerful
still is given in appropriately frequent
sacramental confession, whereby each
of us opens his conscience to the Lord,
to the Lord's minister and to himself
and there finds reconciliation with
his neighbors and pardon from the Lord,
who gave his life lest any of us be
lost to him. Spiritual direction becomes
even more advantageous as we grow older
in the congregation, for as we gain
in seniority and responsibility in our
work, we may find it more difficult
to account honestly to ourselves in
God's sight for what we are doing with
our life and why. All of these practices
are part of ordinary and desirable formation
throughout our lives. And all of them
assist us to fasten our minds and our
hearts more attentively and more generously
upon the Lord and our service to his
people.
78.
Notwithstanding
our concern that every priest and
brother in Holy Cross benefit from a
lifelong formation into Christ, we also
know that some of the most decisive
transformations are God's gracious gift
to us not when we conform to his will
but when we have gravely failed him.
For one man the crisis may come as a
breakdown, a failure to negotiate one
of life's passages. For another it may
be a long course of self-indulgence
and deception ended by collapse. However
the benefits of our formation may disintegrate,
however we may fall, we need the supportive
confrontation and sensitive encouragement
of our confreres for us to be rehabilitated.
This is the way some of the wisest and
strongest men in our community have,
by God's grace, been raised up among
us. Similarly Peter became the Lord's
true and reliable disciple not during
the days he followed in Galilee but
after he disowned his Lord and wept
and was given the opportunity not to
become as he once was but to serve as
he never had served.
79.
Thus
we learn that formation and transformation
are both the Lord's gifts which
we as a community can help one another
to receive.
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