Search Results for: Pira

Dominus ac Redemptor (1773)

Pope Clement XIV suppressed the Society of Jesus on July 21, 1773. In the preceding decades, the Jesuits had suffered expulsions from the Catholic empires of Portugal (1759), France (1764), and Spain (1767), where they had become handy scapegoats for kings or princes under civic pressure. In Portugal, for example, charges against the Society included

Dominus ac Redemptor (1773) Read More »

Decree 6: “Collaboration at the Heart of Mission,” General Congregation 35 (2008)

The last decree issued by the 35th General Congregation concerned the “dynamism” begun by the previous congregation of Jesuit delegates in 1995. The decree below contains the delegates’ call for renewal by the members of the Society of Jesus of “our commitment to apostolic collaboration and to a profound sharing of labor of the life

Decree 6: “Collaboration at the Heart of Mission,” General Congregation 35 (2008) Read More »

Decree 3: “Challenges to Our Mission Today,” General Congregation 35 (2008)

The third of six decrees promulgated by the delegates at the 35th General Congregation of the Society of Jesus articulated some of the main challenges facing the Jesuits and their works. The decree, appearing below, reaffirms the Society’s mission in the face of challenges, places that mission the new context of the dawn of the

Decree 3: “Challenges to Our Mission Today,” General Congregation 35 (2008) Read More »

Decree 13: “Cooperation with the Laity in Mission,” General Congregation 34 (1995)

The delegates of the 34th General Congregation of the Society of Jesus argued that Catholic Church of the 21st century was to be “unmistakably…the ‘Church of the Laity.’” To praise, foster, and guide further collaboration with the laity, the Jesuits at the congregation issued the following the decree. It considers what the Society can offer

Decree 13: “Cooperation with the Laity in Mission,” General Congregation 34 (1995) Read More »

Decree 11: “On Having a Proper Attitude of Service in the Church,” General Congregation 34 (1995)

The “long and permanent tradition of service proper to the Society” is reaffirmed by the following decree from the 34th General Congregation of the Society of Jesus. The decree notes that Jesuit service can be “the dangerous commitment of witness and struggle against the forces of injustice and persecution, both social and religious, a witness

Decree 11: “On Having a Proper Attitude of Service in the Church,” General Congregation 34 (1995) Read More »

Decree 9: “Poverty,” General Congregation 34 (1995)

“In order to ‘feel’ [sentir] the anxieties and aspirations of the dispossessed in an Ignatian way,” the following decree from the 34th General Congregation declares that Jesuits “need direct personal experience” of poverty.  The decree explains poverty’s “apostolic and prophetic dimension” (it serving as the “unequivocal condition of our credibility”), offers guidelines to “renew our

Decree 9: “Poverty,” General Congregation 34 (1995) Read More »

Decree 6: “The Jesuit Priest: Ministerial Priesthood and Jesuit Identity,” General Congregation 34 (1995)

The delegates at the 34th General Congregation of the Society of Jesus undertook a “specific consideration of the priestly dimension of Jesuit life.” In the decree below, they conclude that, despite the continuing reverberations of the Second Vatican Council, “it remains important that Jesuits continue to have confidence in the value of the apostolic service

Decree 6: “The Jesuit Priest: Ministerial Priesthood and Jesuit Identity,” General Congregation 34 (1995) Read More »

Decree 5: “Our Mission and Interreligious Dialogue,” General Congregation 34 (1995)

In the decree below, the Jesuit delegates attending the 34th General Congregation of the Society of Jesus argue, given the worldwide religious diversity and division, that it is “imperative that we collaborate with others to achieve common goals.” The decree offers guidelines for how Jesuits can foster dialogue within the Catholic Church and between different

Decree 5: “Our Mission and Interreligious Dialogue,” General Congregation 34 (1995) Read More »

Scroll to Top