MOTU
PROPRIO
"PRIMO
FELICITER"*
l. The first
anniversary of Provida Mater Ecclesia has come and gone, and it has been a year of
blessings. As we look around upon the Catholic scene we now see a multitude of souls
"hid with Christ in God"[1] stretching out
towards sanctity in the midst of the world, their whole lives joyfully consecrated to God,
with "great heart and willing mind"[2] in the new Secular
Institutes. We cannot but give thanks to the Divine Goodness for this new host which has
come to increase the army of those who profess the evangelical counsels in the world; and
also for this great help which in these sad and disturbed times has most providentially
strengthened the Catholic apostolate.
2. The Holy Spirit
who unceasingly remakes and renews[3] the face of the
earth, daily disfigured and blasted by all manner of atrocious evil, by special grace has
called a multitude of our sons and daughters - his blessing be upon them! - to the serried
ranks of the Secular Institutes, to make of them in this nonsensical shadow-world to which
they do not belong[4] but
in which, by God's wise ordering, they must live, a salt, a seasoning, kept salt by the
vocation given, unfailing,[5] a light which
shines out and is not overcome in the darkness of the world,[6]
and the little yeast, always and everywhere at work, kneaded into every kind of society,
from the humblest to the highest, to permeate each and all by word, example and in every
way, until it forms and shapes the whole of it, making of it a new paste in Christ .[7]
It is our desire
and intention that these Institutes, so many of them, sprung up all over the world to our
great comfort through the outpouring of the Spirit of Jesus Christ,[8]
be directed effectively according to the norms of Provida Mater Ecclesia and thus
fulfill abundantly the promise that is in them of a great harvest of sanctity, and that
they be prudently marshaled and wisely deployed to fight the battles of the Lord[9] in the field of
common apostolic endeavor and in those which they find for themselves. With this in mind
we confirm with great joy and after mature reflection the Apostolic Constitution Provida
Mater Ecclesia, and hereby enact the following canonical provisions.
4. I. There is no
longer any acceptable reason for Societies, cleric or lay, professing Christian perfection
in the world, and clearly and fully conforming to the features and requirements prescribed
in Provida Mater Ecclesia for a Secular Institute to be left, or remain on a purely
personal option in the canonical status of ordinary Associations of the Faithful (canons
684-725). They are now to be given the form and status of Secular Institutes, as being
most suitable for their nature and needs.
5. II. The
transference of an Association of the Faithful to the higher canonical status of a Secular
Institute must not obscure, even in special cases, the proper and specific character of
the Institutes, namely, that they are secular and that this is the real nature of their
calling.
Everything
about them must be clearly secular. There will be no paring down of the full profession of
the Christian perfection, solidly founded on the evangelical counsels and essentially the
same as that of Religious, but perfection is to be lived and professed in the
world, therefore adapted to secular life, all along the line, i.e. in all things that
are lawful and compatible with the duties and apostolate of such a life of perfection.
6. The whole life
of a member of a Secular Institute, sacred to God by the profession of perfection, must
become an apostolate so continuous and holy, with such sincerity of mind, interior union
with God, generous self forgetfulness and courageous self-denial, such love of souls, as
to nourish, unceasingly renew and outwardly express the spiritual reality within. This
apostolate of one's whole life is so deeply and sincerely experienced in the Secular
Institutes as to give the impression that, with the help and guiding wisdom of Divine
Providence, the thirst for souls and zeal for their salvation have not only happily given
occasion for a consecration of life but have largely imposed their own way and form upon
it and, in a way which could not have been predicted, to have created and met a need which
is not confined to a specific apostolate but is a new general way of consecrated life. Not
only is this apostolate something that happens in the world, but it may almost be said to
grow out of the world: its existence is in professions, activities, forms, places,
circumstances of a secular nature, and so it must remain.
7. III. Secular
Institutes do not come under the canonical discipline of Religious. As a general rule Provida
Mater Ecclesia neither requires nor allows the application to Secular Institutes of
legislation made for Religious. But some features of Religious life may be compatible with
the secular nature of Institutes, are no impediment to the total commitment of life and
are in keeping with the provisions of Provida Mater Ecclesia : these may be
retained.
8. IV. Secular
Institutes may have inter-diocesan and international structure and organization (art. IX)
and this certainly should make for an increase of vital energy, survival value and
effectiveness. But in this connection a number of things have to be taken into account,
e.g. the aim and purpose of a given Institute, the degree of expansion intended, the
Institute's actual stage of development and maturity, its condition and circumstances and
so forth. A federal basis is also a possibility not to be ruled out or under-estimated,
implying retention and reasonable encouragement of local characteristics, national,
regional, diocesan, provided that these are sound and retain a true sense of the
catholicity of the Church.
9. V. Secular
Institute life is a life totally consecrated to God and souls, in the world, with the
approval of the Church. Its structure extends already in various degrees beyond the bounds
of diocese or nation. These features more than justify the classification given to Secular
Institutes in Provida Mater Ecclesia as states of perfection canonically recognized
and structured by the Church itself and their assignment to the competence and
responsibility of the Sacred Congregation which has care and government of public states
of perfection. Therefore, saving always, according to the tenor of the canons and express
requirements of Provida Mater Ecclesia (Art. IV, l and 2), the rights of the Sacred
Congregation of the Council in what concerns pious sodalities and pious unions of the
faithful (c. 250 ç ²) and of the Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith in
what concerns societies of ecclesiastics at the seminaries for foreign missions, all
societies wherever they may be - including those which have ordinary or pontifical
approval,- as soon as it is clear that they have the features and requirements proper to
Secular Institutes, are to be put into this new form, according to the above mentioned
norms (cf no. I); and, to preserve unity of direction, they become at the level of
universal government the exclusive responsibility and concern of the Sacred Congregation
of Religious in which a special Section has been created for this purpose.
l 0. VI. To
Moderators and assistants of Catholic Action and of other associations of the faithful, in
which so many excellent young people are learning to lead a thoroughly Christian life and
to be apostles, we commend those who feel that God is calling them further, either to
Religious life in an Order or Congregation, or to a Society of common life, or, to a
Secular Institute. Such holy vocations are to be generally assisted. These providential
Secular Institutes are also to be given a helping hand in this way, and their
collaboration, where compatible with the rules of existing associations is to be sought
and welcomed.
Rome, at St.
Peter's, 12th March 1948, the beginning of the tenth year of Our Pontificate.
[2] II Macc. 1-3.
[3] Psalm CIII, 30.
[4] Jn XV, 19.
[5] Mt V, 13; Mk IX, 49; Lk XIV, 34.
[6] Jn IX,5; I, 5; VIII, 12; Eph V, 8.
[7] Mt XIII, 33;1 Cor V,6; Ca V,9.
[8] Rom VIII, 9.
[9] Cant. VI, 3.