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SACRED
CONGREGATION FOR RELIGIOUS
INSTRUCTION
"CUM SANCTISSIMUS"*
l. When Pope Pius
XII promulgated the Constitution Provida Mater Ecclesia he assigned to the
Congregation for Religious, as having competence in this field, the executive
responsibility for carrying it into effect. This means that as need arises, and as
experience suggests, the Congregation should legislate for Secular Institutes in general
and in particular cases by way of interpreting Provida Mater or by supplementary
and practical legislation (Art. II, 82.2).
2. Complete
and fixed legislation is not at present feasible - it would restrict the development of
the Institutes - but there are points which have in fact been imperfectly understood or
interpreted, and these need to be clarified and settled taking into consideration the Motu
Proprio Primo feliciter. The present document is intended to give the broad lines,
the fundamentals, which will keep Secular Institutes on the right lines.
3. l. In
accordance with Art. V, 2 and Art. VI of Provida
Mater, approval and foundation of a Secular Institute is reserved to Bishops, after
consultation of the Sacred Congregation for Religious. It is not therefore possible for an
association to assume the title of a Secular Institute on the grounds that it has the
requisite qualifications, viz. that it is an association professing Christian perfection
and devoted to apostolate in the world, and that it conforms with Articles I and III of Provida
Mater Ecclesia.
4. 2.
All associations which qualify as Secular Institutes, including those in Mission
territories, come under the Sacred Congregation for Religious (Art. IV, l and 2)
and the provisions of Provida Mater Ecclesia. As laid down in Primo feliciter (no.
V), they may not continue as simple associations of the faithful (as in the Codex Book 2,
Part IV). But see no. 5 below.
5. 3. By
"Bishop" in par. 2 above, is meant exclusively the Local Ordinary. The petition
for leave to make the foundation must be accompanied by the information listed in the
Norms for the founding of a Congregation (S.C.R. 6 March 1921, 3-8) as these may be
applicable to Secular Institutes (Art. VII). Six copies of the draft Constitutions are
also required, in Latin or one of the languages accepted in the Curia, and Directories and
other documents relevant to the spirit and way of life and organization of the Institute.
The Constitutions should contain and express the nature of the Institute, the kind or
categories of members, the government, the form of consecration (Art. III, 2), the bond arising from membership (Art. III, 3), the house of residence (Art. III, 5 4),
training methods and devotional customs.
6. 4.
Associations canonically founded or approved by Bishops before the promulgation of Provida
Mater Ecclesia, as also those which had received some form of pontifical approval as
lay associations, may apply for recognition as Secular Institutes of diocesan or
pontifical right. Each case will be considered on its own merits in the light of Art. VI
and VII of Provida Mater. The following documentation is required: The
original documents of foundation or approval; the Constitutions so far observed; a brief
account of the beginnings and of the subsequent history of the Institute; the regulations
they have followed in their way of life, of their apostolate; besides which, particularly
if they are of diocesan right, commendatory letters from the Ordinaries in whose dioceses
they have centres.
7. 5. It is
not considered opportune to present to the Sacred Congregation, with a view to foundation
as a Secular Institute, Associations of comparatively recent foundation, or those not
sufficiently developed, or the new groups continually coming into existence. Such
Associations may have all the marks of a good solid future Secular Institute, but as a
general rule to which exception can only be made for grave reasons subject to close
scrutiny, they are to remain in the care of the Bishop as simple Associations existing
"de facto" rather than "de jure", then, in consecutive stages
gradually be given status as Pious Unions, Sodalities or Confraternities until after a
time of testing by the Ordinary they clearly qualify.
8. 6. During
this period of development and testing (no. 5) to see whether such Associations really
mean to reach full consecration to perfection of life and apostolate, and really have the
requisite features of a Secular Institute, care must be taken not to grant concessions,
private or public, of essentially Secular Institute features not warranted by the stage
they have reached, particularly such as would be difficult to rescind if the application
for Secular Institute status were eventually to be turned down. Such premature concessions
would give the appearance of pressure on the Authorities to grant or facilitate the
permission.
9. 7. For a
practical, safe, positive assessment, namely that the Association really leads its
members, as secular men and women, to a full consecration and dedication recognizable as a
complete state of perfection, substantially that of Religious, the following must be
carefully weighed:
10. a)
Whether those who are enrolled as members in the stricter sense of the word "over and
above the general habitual piety and selfí¤enial" without which a life of
perfection would be empty and illusory, are making firm and real profession of the three
general evangelical counsels in one of the various forms admitted in Provida Mater (Art.
III, 2). But in a broader sense there may be
members, attached and incorporated in various degrees, who aspire to the perfect life of
the Gospel, and try to live it in their own situation but do not, or cannot, rise to a
commitment to all three counsels at the higher level;
11. b)
Whether there is a stable, full, mutual bond between members in the specific sense of a)
above, and the Association, i.e. whether the member gives himself over completely to the
Association and the Association is actually or foreseeably, able and willing to take
charge and be canonically responsible. (Art. III, ç
3,2);
12. c)
Whether the Association has, or is making efforts to acquire, the houses mentioned in Art.
III, ç ´ of Provida Mater, and under what terms, for the purposes there
mentioned.
13. d)
Whether they are steering clear of things incompatible with a true Secular Institute life,
e.g. clothing and common life of a Religious type (Tit. XVII, L. II, C.I.C.) (Art. II, 1; Art. III,
4).
14. 8. As
provided in Art. II, I, 2 of the Constitution
Provida Mater Ecclesia, without prejudice to Art. X, and Art. II, 1,1, Secular Institutes are neither obliged nor
allowed to follow the legislation general or particular, proper to Religious or Societies
of Common Life. But the Sacred Congregation may adapt and apply to Secular Institutes, by
way of exception, some of the rulings proper to those bodies which are equally in place in
a Secular Institute context, and may, due allowance being made for all circumstances,
require of Secular Institutes some well-tried, more or less general, standards which in
the nature of the case apply to both kinds of life.
15. 9. In
particular: a) Can. 500, 23, strictly
interpreted, is not concerned with Secular Institutes and does not, as it stands,
necessarily apply to them, but it will not be unreasonable to see in these rulings a
reliable criterion and a clear guideline for the approval and the framework of Secular
Institutes.
16. b)
Secular Institutes may (Can. 492 ç ¬) by special concession be aggregated to
Religious (be they Orders or other kinds of Religious) and accept their help including a
degree of real though not canonical direction. Requests for closer dependence than this,
implying a diminution of the self-government proper to Secular Institutes, or the
assumption by Religious of any degree of patronage or jurisdiction in this respect, shall
not, in principle, be favorably considered. If an Institute (particularly of women)
positively wishes to accept such dependence and approaches Religious with this in view,
such a request shall not be granted except with appropriate safeguards and after careful
consideration of the good of the Institute itself and of its spirit and of the nature and
manner of the apostolate to which, as a Secular Institute, it is committed.
17. 10.
Profession of a state of perfection, in the complete sense of the word, and total
consecration to apostolate - these are the obligations assumed by members of a Secular
Institute. From both points of view they are in the same field - perfection and apostolate
- as members of lay associations and Catholic Action, but it is clear that more is
expected of an Institute member than of workers - excellent though these may be - in such
associations. Their call is to greater things. But while bearing this in mind they must,
without prejudice to their own internal organization, so fulfil their apostolate and give
their services, in accordance with the purpose for which they were founded, as to avoid
all confusion in the ranks, and to give as far as in them lies a shining example to the
faithful, whose eyes are upon them, of selfless, humble and reliable collaboration with
the Pastors of the Church (cf. Primo feliciter no. VI).
18. 11. a) On
receipt of permission from the Holy See the Ordinary may proceed to raise the existing
association (or Pious Union or Sodality) to the status of a Secular Institute
The
status in the Institute of each of its members is to be established and the existing
situation vis- à¶is the Constitutions of the Institute. In this connection the
Ordinary in his discretion may decide whether steps already taken, in training for
instance or acceptance for consecration, should be taken into account.
19. b) For
the first ten years, as from the date of canonical foundation, the Local Ordinary may, for
the purpose of Office or position of responsibility or seniority or other canonical
effects in the Institute, dispense from constitutional requirements - general or proper to
a given Institute - as to age, period of probation, or years of consecration and so forth.
20. c) By the
act of canonical foundation of the Institute, houses or centres previously established
with consent of the Ordinaries (can. 495 ç ) are incorporated as houses and
centres of the Institute.
Rome, at the
Office of the Sacred Congregation for Religious, the 19th day of March, feast of St.
Joseph, Spouse of the Blessed Virgin Mary, 1948.
ALOYSIUS
Card. LAVITRANO, Prefect
Fr. Luke
Ermenegild Pasetto, Secretary.
* The original text is
in Latin. - A.S.S., 1948, pp. 293-297.