| The Associates of the Religious Hospitallers of Saint Joseph
are women and men who, for evangelical motives, wish to share
the spirituality, charism and mission of the Religious Hospitallers
of Saint Joseph.
This status belongs to those who identify with the spirit and
charism of the R.H.S.J.’s and who after a period of orientation
and mutual evaluation, desire to live the spirituality and collaborate
in the mission, without any canonical, financial or legal obligations.
These persons ordinarily commit themselves for one or two years
without being bound by vows. This commitment is renewable.
General objective
To provide lay people and clerics with the opportunity to respond
to a call from God to share in the spirituality, charism and mission
of our Congregation
Specific Objectives
A) Give Associates the possibility of deepening
their baptismal commitment in the Church.
B) Help Associates to live their faith in the
unity and freedom of the children of God.
C) Invite the Associates to share in the RHSJ
mission in our contemporary world.
In Communion with the Laity
(Starting Afresh from Christ #31)
The experience of communion among consecrated persons
results in an even greater openness to all other members of the
Church.
We can see that a new type of communion and collaboration within
the various vocations and state of life especially among consecrated
persons and laity is beginning. Monastic and contemplative Institutes
can offer the laity a relationship that is primarily spiritual
and the necessary spaces for silence and prayer. Institutes committed
to the apostolate can involve them in forms of pastoral collaboration.
Members of Secular Institutes, lay or clerical, relate to other
members of the faithful at the level of everyday life.
The new phenomenon being experienced in these days is that some
members of the laity are asking to participate in the charismatic
ideals of Institutes. This has given rise to interesting initiatives
and new institutional forms of association.
Communion and mutuality in the Church are never one way streets.
In this new climate of ecclesial communion, priests, religious
ans laity can once again find the just relationships of communion
and a renewed experience of evangelical communion and mutual charismatic
esteem resulting in a complementarity which respects the differences.
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