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The Rule of the Friars Minor

and

the Testament

of Saint Francis of Assisi


THE RULE OF THE FRIARS MINOR OR LESSER BROTHERS

[Chapter I]

In the Name of the Lord!

The Life of the Lesser Brothers Begins

The rule and life of the Lesser Brothers is this: To observe the holy gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ, living in obedience, without anything of our own, and in chastity. Brother Francis promises obedience and reverence to the Lord Pope Honorius and his canonically elected successors, and to the Roman Church; and the rest of the brothers are obliged to obey Francis and his successors.

2Brother Francis promises obedience and reverence to our Lord Pope Honorius, his successors canonically elected, and to the Roman Church.

3Let the other brothers be bound to obey Brother Francis and his successors.

[Chapter II]

Those Who Wish to Adopt This Life

and How They Should Be Received

1If there are any who wish to accept this life and come to our brothers, let them send them to their Provincial Ministers, to whom alone—and not to others—is permission granted to receive the brothers. 2Let the ministers examine them carefully concerning the Catholic faith and the sacraments of the Church. 3If they believe all these things, will profess them faithfully, and observe them steadfastly to the end; 4and if they have no wives, or if they have wives who have already taken a vow of continence and are of such an age that suspicion cannot be raised about them, and who have already entered a monastery or have given their husbands permission by the authority of the bishop of the diocese, 5let the ministers speak to them the words of the holy Gospel that they go and sell all they have and take care to give it to the poor. 6If they cannot do this, their good will may suffice.

7Let the brothers and the minister be careful not to interfere with their material goods, so that they may dispose of their belongings as the Lord inspires them. 8If they ask advice, the minister may send them to some God-fearing persons according to whose advice their goods may be distributed to the poor.

9Then they may be given the clothes of probation, namely, two tunics without a hood, a cord, short trousers, and a little cape reaching to the cord, 10unless, at times, it seems good to these same ministers, before God, to act otherwise. 11When the year of probation has come to an end, they may be received to obedience promising always to observe this rule and life. 12On no account shall it be lawful for them to leave this Order, according to the decree of our Lord the Pope, 13for, according to the Gospel: no one who puts a hand to the plough and looks to what was left behind is fit for the kingdom of God.

14Those who have already promised obedience may have one tunic with a hood and another, if they wish, without a hood. 15And those who are compelled by necessity may wear shoes. 16Let all the brothers wear poor clothes. They may mend them with pieces of sackcloth or other material with the blessing of God. 17I admonish and exhort them not to look down upon or judge those whom they see dressed in soft and fine clothes and enjoying the choicest food and drink, but rather let everyone judge and look down upon himself.

[Chapter III]

The Divine Office, Fasting

and How the Brothers Should Go About in the World

1 The cleric brothers are to recite the Divine Office according to the rite of the holy Roman Church excepting the psalter, 2 for which reason they may have breviaries.

3The lay brothers, however, may say twenty-four Our Fathers for Matins, and five for Lauds; seven for each of the Hours of Prime, Terce, Sext, and None, twelve for Vespers, and seven for Compline. 4Let them also pray for the dead.

5They are to fast from the feast of All Saints until the Lord’s Nativity. 6May those be blessed by the Lord who fast voluntarily during that holy Lent that begins at the Epiphany and lasts during the forty days which our Lord consecrated by His own fast; but those who do not wish to keep it will not be obliged. 7Let them fast, however, during the other [Lent] until the Lord’s Resurrection.

8At other times they may not be bound to fast except on Fridays. 9In cases of obvious need, however, the brothers are not bound by bodily fasting.

10I counsel, admonish and exhort my brothers in the Lord Jesus Christ not to quarrel or argue or judge others when they go about in the world; 11but let them be meek, peaceful, modest, gentle, and humble, speaking courteously to everyone, as is becoming. 12They should not ride on horseback unless compelled by an obvious need or infirmity.

13Into whatever house they enter, let them first say: “Peace be to this house!” 14According to the holy Gospel, let them eat whatever food is set before them.

[Chapter IV]

Let the Brothers Never Receive Money

1I strictly command all my brothers not to receive coins or money in any form, either personally or through intermediaries. 2Nevertheless, the ministers and custodians alone may take special care through their spiritual friends to provide for the needs of the sick and the clothing of the others according to places, seasons and cold climates, as they judge necessary, 3saving always that, as stated above, they do not receive coins or money.

[Chapter V]

The Manner of Working

1Those brothers to whom the Lord has given the grace of working may work faithfully and devotedly 2so that, while avoiding idleness, the enemy of the soul, they do not extinguish the Spirit of holy prayer and devotion to which all temporal things must contribute. 3In payment for their work they may receive whatever is necessary for the bodily support of themselves and their brothers, excepting coin or money, 4and let them do this humbly as is becoming for servants of God and followers of most holy poverty.

 

[Chapter VI]

Let the Brothers Not Make Anything Their Own;

Begging Alms; the Sick Brothers

1Let the brothers not make anything their own, neither house, nor place, nor anything at all. 2As pilgrims and strangers in this world, serving the Lord in poverty and humility, let them go seeking alms with confidence, 3and they should not be ashamed because, for our sakes, our Lord made Himself poor in this world. 4This is the sublime height of most exalted poverty which has made you, my most beloved brothers, heirs and kings of the Kingdom of Heaven, poor in temporal things but exalted in virtue. 5Let this be your portion which leads into the land of the living. 6Giving yourselves totally to this, beloved brothers, never seek anything else under heaven for the name of our Lord Jesus Christ.

7Wherever the brothers may be and meet one another, let them show that they are members of the same family. 8Let each one confidently make known his need to the other, for if a mother loves and cares for her son according to the flesh, how much more diligently must someone love and care for his brother according to the Spirit! 9When any brother falls sick, the other brothers must serve him as they would wish to be served themselves.

[Chapter VII]

The Penance To Be Imposed

on the Brothers Who Sin

1If any brother, at the instigation of the enemy, sins mortally in regard to those sins concerning which it has been decreed among the brothers to have recourse only to the Provincial Ministers, let him have recourse as quickly as possible and without delay. 2If these ministers are priests, with a heart full of mercy let them impose on him a penance; but, if the ministers are not priests, let them have it imposed by others who are priests of the Order, as in the sight of God appears to them more expedient. 3They must be careful not to be angry or disturbed at the sin of another, for anger and disturbance impede charity in themselves and in others.

[Chapter VIII]

The Election of the General Minister of This Fraternity

and the Chapter of Pentecost

1Let all the brothers always be bound to have one of the brothers of this Order as General Minister and servant of the whole fraternity and let them be strictly bound to obey him. 2When he dies, let the election of his successor be made by the Provincial Ministers and custodians in the Chapter of Pentecost, at which all the Provincial Ministers are bound to assemble in whatever place the General Minister may have designated. 3They shall do this once in every three years, or at other longer or shorter intervals, as determined by the aforesaid minister.

4If, at any time, it appears to the body of the Provincial Ministers and custodians that the aforesaid General Minister is not qualified for the service and general welfare of the brothers, the aforesaid brothers, to whom the election is committed, are bound to elect another as custodian in the name of the Lord. 5Moreover, after the Chapter of Pentecost, the Provincial Ministers and custodians may each, if they wish and it seems expedient to them, convoke a Chapter of the brothers in their custodies once in the same year.

[Chapter IX]

Preachers

1The brothers may not preach in the diocese of any bishop when he has opposed their doing so. 2And let none of the brothers dare to preach in any way to the people unless he has been examined and approved by the General Minister of this fraternity and the office of preacher has been conferred upon him.

3Moreover, I admonish and exhort those brothers that when they preach their language be well-considered and chaste for the benefit and edification of the people, announcing to them vices and virtues, punishment and glory, with brevity, because our Lord when on earth kept His word brief.

[Chapter X]

The Admonition and Correction of the Brothers

1Let the brothers who are the ministers and servants of the others visit and admonish their brothers and humbly and charitably correct them, not commanding them anything that is against their soul and our rule.

2Let the brothers who are subject, however, remember that, for God’s sake, they have renounced their own wills. 3Therefore, I strictly command them to obey their ministers in everything they have promised the Lord to observe and which is not against their soul or our Rule.

4And wherever the brothers may be who know and feel they cannot observe the Rule spiritually, they can and should have recourse to their ministers. 5Let the ministers, moreover, receive them charitably and kindly and have such familiarity with them that these same brothers may speak and deal with them as masters with their servants, 6for so it must be that the ministers are the servants of all the brothers.

7Moreover, I admonish and exhort the brothers in the Lord Jesus Christ to beware of all pride, vainglory, envy and greed, of care and solicitude for the things of this world, of detraction and murmuring. Let those who are illiterate not be anxious to learn, 8but let them pay attention to what they must desire above all else: to have the Spirit of the Lord and Its holy activity, 9to pray always to Him with a pure heart, to have humility and patience in persecution and infirmity, 10and to love those who persecute, rebuke and find fault with us, because the Lord says: Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute and calumniate you. 11Blessed are those who suffer persecution for the sake of justice, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. 12But whoever perseveres to the end will be saved.

[Chapter XI]

The Brothers May Not Enter the Monasteries of Nuns

1I strictly command all the brothers not to have any suspicious dealings or conversations with women, 2and not to enter the monasteries of nuns, excepting those brothers to whom special permission has been granted by the Apostolic See. 3Neither shall they be godfathers to men or women, so that scandal may not arise among the brothers or concerning them.

ty[

[Chapter XII]

Those Going Among the Saracens and Other Non-Believers

1Let those brothers who wish by divine inspiration to go among the Saracens or other non-believers ask permission to go from their Provincial Ministers. 2The ministers, however, may not grant permission except to those whom they see fit to be sent.

3In addition, I command the ministers through obedience to ask our Lord the Pope for one of the Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church, to serve as governor, protector and corrector of this fraternity, 4so that, being always submissive and subject at the feet of the same Holy Church and steadfast in the Catholic Faith, we may observe poverty, humility, and the Holy Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ as we have firmly promised.

It is forbidden, therefore, for anyone to tamper with this decree which we have confirmed, or rashly dare to oppose it. If anyone presumes to attempt this, let him know that he shall incur the anger of Almighty God and of His blessed Apostles Peter and Paul.

Given at the Lateran, the twenty-ninth day of November,

in the eighth year of Our pontificate.


THE TESTAMENT OF SAINT FRANCIS

(1226)

 

1In this way did the Lord give me, Brother Francis, the grace to begin doing penance: when I was in sin, it seemed too bitter for me to see lepers. 2And the Lord Himself led me among them and I showed mercy to them. 3And when I left them, what had seemed bitter to me was changed into sweetness of soul and body. And afterwards I delayed a little and left the world.

4And the Lord gave me such faith in churches that I would pray with simplicity in this way and say: 5“We adore You, Lord Jesus Christ, in all Your churches throughout the whole world and we bless You, because by Your holy cross You have redeemed the world.”

6Afterwards the Lord gave me, and gives me still, such faith in priests who live according to the rite of the holy Roman Church because of their orders that, were they to persecute me, I would still want to have recourse to them. 7And if I had as much wisdom as Solomon and found priests of this world impoverished, I would not preach in their parishes against their will. 8And I desire to respect, love and honour them and all others as my lords. 9And I do not want to consider any sin in them because I discern the Son of God in them and they are my lords.

10And I act in this way because, in this world, I see nothing materially of the most high Son of God except His most holy Body and Blood which they receive and they alone administer to others. 11I want to have these most holy mysteries honoured and venerated above all things and I want to reserve them in precious places. 12Wherever I find our Lord’s most holy name and written words in unbecoming places, I want to gather them up. And I beg that they be gathered up and placed in a becoming place. 13And we must honour all theologians and those who minister the most holy divine words, and respect them as those who minister to us spirit and life.

14And after the Lord gave me some brothers, no one showed me what I had to do, but the Most High Himself revealed to me that I should live according to the pattern of the Holy Gospel. 15And I had this written down simply and in a few words and the Lord Pope confirmed it for me. 16And those who came to receive life gave whatever they had to the poor and were content with one tunic, patched inside and out, with a cord and short trousers. 17We desired nothing more. 18We cleric brothers said the Office as other clerics did; the lay brothers said the Our Fathers. And we quite willingly remained in churches. 19And we were simple and subject to all.

20And I worked with my hands, and I still desire to work; and I earnestly desire all brothers to give themselves to honest work. 21Let those who do not know how to work learn, not from desire to receive wages, but for example and to avoid idleness. 22And when we are not paid for our work, let us have recourse to the table of the Lord, begging alms from door to door. 23The Lord revealed a greeting to me that we would say: “May the Lord give you peace.”

24Let the brothers be careful not to receive in any way churches or dwellings or anything else built for them unless they are according to the holy poverty we have promised in the Rule. As pilgrims and strangers, let them always be guests there.

25I strictly command all the brothers through obedience, wherever they may be, not to dare to ask any letter from the Roman Curia, either personally or through an intermediary, whether for a church or another place or under the pretext of preaching or the persecution of their bodies. 26But, wherever they are not received, let them flee into another country to do penance with the blessing of God.

27And I firmly wish to obey the General Minister of this fraternity and the other guardians whom it pleases him to give me. 28And I so wish to be a captive in his hands that I cannot go anywhere or do anything beyond obedience and his will, for he is my master.

29And although I may be simple and infirm, I nevertheless want to have a cleric always with me who will celebrate the Office for me as it is prescribed in the Rule.

30And let all the brothers be bound to obey their guardians and to recite the Office according to the Rule. 31And if any are found who do not recite the Office according to the Rule and want to change it in some way, or who are not Catholics, let all the brothers, wherever they may have found such a one, be bound through obedience to bring him before the custodian of that place nearest to where they found him. 32And the custodian is strictly bound by obedience to keep him securely day and night as a prisoner, so that he cannot be taken from his hands until he can personally deliver him into the hands of his minister. 33And the minister is bound by obedience to send him with such brothers who shall guard him as a prisoner until they deliver him to the Lord of Ostia, who is the Master, the Protector and the Corrector of this fraternity.

34And the brothers may not say: “This is another rule.” Because this is a remembrance, admonition, exhortation, and my testament, which I, little brother Francis, make for you, my blessed brothers, that we may observe the Rule we have promised in a more Catholic way.

35 And let the General Minister and all the other ministers and custodians be bound through obedience not to add to or take away from these words. 36And let them always have this writing with them together with the Rule. 37And in all the chapters which they hold, when they read the Rule, let them also read these words. 38And I strictly command all my cleric and lay brothers, through obedience, not to place any gloss upon the Rule or upon these words saying: “Let them be understood in this way.” 39But as the Lord has given me to speak and write the Rule and these words simply and plainly, may you understand them simply and without gloss and observe them with a holy activity until the end.

40And whoever observes these things, may he be blessed in heaven with the blessing of the Most High Father, and on earth with the blessing of His Beloved Son with the Most Holy Spirit, the Paraclete, and all the powers of heaven and with all the saints. 41And, as far as I can, I, little brother Francis, your servant, confirm for you, both within and without, this most holy blessing.


The Constitutions

of the Capuchin Friars Minor

and

the Ordinances

of the General Chapters


ABBREVIATIONS and Acronyms

I PCO First Plenary Council of the Order, Quito, 1971
II PCO Second Plenary Council of the Order, Taizé, 1973
III PCO Third Plenary Council of the Order, Mattli, 1978
IV PCO Fourth Plenary Council of the Order, Rome, 1981
V PCO Fifth Plenary Council of the Order, Garibaldi, 1986
VI PCO Sixth Plenary Council of the Order, Assisi, 1998
VII PCO Seventh Plenary Council of the Order, Assisi, 2004
1C Thomas of Celano, The Life of Saint Francis
1Cor First Letter to the Corinthians
1Jn First Letter of John
1LtC1 Letter to the Clergy, earlier edition
1LtCus First Letter to the Custodians
1LtF First Letter to the Faithful
1Pt First Letter of Peter
1Thes First Letter to the Thessalonians
1Tm First Letter to Timothy
2C Thomas of Celano, The Remembrance of the Desire of a Soul
2Cor Second Letter to the Corinthians
2LtCl Second Letter to the Clergy (later edition)
2LtCus Second Letter to the Custodians
2LtF Second Letter to the Faithful
2Thes Second Letter to the Thessalonians
2Tm Second Letter to Timothy
3C Thomas of Celano, The Treatise on the Miracles
3LAg Clare of Assisi, Third Letter to Agnes of Prague
AA Vatican II, decree Apostolicam actuositatem, 1965
AC The Assisi Compilation
Adm Admonitions
AG Vatican II, decree Ad gentes, 1965
AP The Anonymous of Perugia
BlL Blessing of Brother Leo
CCC Catechism of the Catholic Church
CCFW John Corriveau, Circular Letter 24: Courageous Choices for a More Fraternal World, 2005
CD Vatican II, decree Christus Dominus, 1965
CDRL Sacred Congregation for Religious and for Secular Institutes, The Contemplative Dimension of Religious Life, 1980
CDWDS Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments
ChL John Paul II, apostolic exhortation Christifideles laici, December 30, 1988
CIC Code of Canon Law (Codex Iuris Canonici), January 25, 1983
CLBE Thomas of Eccleston, The Coming of the Lesser Brothers to England
COFS Constitutions of the Secular Franciscan Order
Col Letter to the Colossians
Const Constitutions of the Order of Capuchin Lesser Brothers
CSDC Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church, April 2, 2004
CStg Consideration of the Stigmata of Saint Francis
CtC Canticle of Brother Sun, 1225
CV Benedict XVI, encyclical Caritas in veritate, June 29, 2009
DD John Paul II, apostolic letter Dies Domini, March 31, 1998
DH Vatican II, declaration Dignitatis humanae, December 7, 1965
DPPL Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments, Directory on Popular Piety and the Liturgy, December 17, 2001
Dt Book of Deuteronomy
DV Vatican II, dogmatic constitution Dei verbum, November 18, 1965
EA John Paul II, apostolic exhortation Ecclesia in America, January 22, 1999
EBr John Corriveau, Circular Letter 11: Evangelical Brotherhood, 1997
EE Sacred Congregation for Religious and for Secular Institutes, Essential Elements in the Church’s Teaching on Religious Life, May 21, 1983
Eim John Paul II, apostolic letter Euntes in mundum, January 25, 1988
EN Paul VI, apostolic exhortation Evangelii nuntiandi, December 8, 1975
EP Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments, Eucharistiae participationem, April 27, 1973
Eph Letter to the Ephesians
ER Earlier Rule, 1221
ES Paul VI, encyclical Ecclesiam suam, August 6, 1964
ESa Paul VI, motu proprio Ecclesiae sanctae, August 6, 1966
ET Paul VI, apostolic exhortation Evangelica testificatio, June 19, 1971
EV John Paul II, encyclical Evangelium vitae, March 25, 1995
ExhP Exhortation to the Praise of God
FC John Paul II, apostolic exhortation Familiaris consortio, November 22, 1981
FFCh Mauro Jöhri, Circular Letter 4: Let us Fan the Flame of our Charism, 2009
FLC Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life, Fraternal Life in Community, 1994
FrCh John Corriveau, Circular Letter 9: On Our Fraternal Charism, 1996
FV Form of Life for the Poor Ladies
Gal Letter to the Galatians
GBCW John Corriveau, Circular Letter 20: Gospel Brotherhood in a Changing World, 2002
GC07 Benedict XVI, address to the Conventual General Chapter, 2007
GC68 Paul VI, address to the Capuchin General Chapter, October 21, 1968
GC74 Paul VI, address to the Capuchin General Chapter, October 30, 1974
GC88 John Paul II, address to the Capuchin General Chapter, July 12, 1988
GILH Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments, General Instruction for the Liturgy of the Hours, February 2, 1971
GIRM Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments, General Instruction of the Roman Missal, March 26, 2010
GNLYC Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments, General Norms for the Liturgical Year and Calendar, February 14, 1969
GrW John Corriveau, Circular Letter 17: The Grace of Working, 2000
GS Vatican II, pastoral constitution Gaudium et spes, December 7, 1965
GUW Mauro Jöhri, Circular Letter 8: Get Up and Walk, 2010
Heb Letter to the Hebrews
Hos Book of Hosea
HTrb Angelo of Clareno, The History of the Seven Tribulations
ICF Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life, Inter-Institute Collaboration for Formation, December 8, 1998
IM Vatican II, decree Inter mirifica, December 4, 1963
Ir John Paul II, message Il ricordo, November 23, 2003
Is Book of Isaiah
Jer Book of Jeremiah
Jn Gospel of John
L3C Legend of the Three Companions
LBL Letter to Brother Leo
LC Paul VI, apostolic constitution Laudis canticum, November 1, 1970
LE John Paul II, encyclical Laborem exercens, September 14, 1981
LFl The Little Flowers of Saint Francis
LG Vatican II, dogmatic constitution Lumen gentium, November 21, 1964
Lk Gospel of Luke
LMin Letter to a Minister
LMj Saint Bonaventure, Major Legend
LMn Saint Bonaventure, Minor Legend
LR The Later Rule (with papal seal), 1223
LtAnt Letter to Brother Anthony
LtOrd Letter to the Entire Order
LtRPrp Letter to the Rulers of the People
LW Last Will to the Poor Ladies
MCB John Paul II, Message to the XIV General Assembly of the Conference of Religious of Brazil, July 11, 1986
MCult Paul VI, apostolic exhortation Marialis cultus, February 2, 1974
MD John Paul II, apostolic letter Mulieris dignitatem, August 15, 1988
MG Paul VI, message Magno gaudio, May 23, 1964
MHO Mauro Jöhri, Circular Letter 5: Mission at the Heart of the Order, 2009
MisEp Roman Missal, Eucharistic Prayers I-IV (third typical edition), 2002
MisPref Roman Missal, Preface (third typical edition), 2002
Mk Gospel of Mark
MyP Paul VI, motu proprio Mysterii paschalis, February 14, 1969
MP Mirror of Perfection (longer version)
Mr John Paul II, discourse Mi rivolgo, October 29, 2003
Mt Gospel of Matthew
NA Vatican II, declaration Nostra aetate, October 28, 1965
NMI John Paul II, apostolic letter Novo millennio ineunte, January 26, 2001
OL John Paul II, apostolic letter Orientale lumen, May 2, 1995
OfP Office of the Passion
OT Vatican II, decree Optatam totius, October 28, 1965
PC Vatican II, decree Perfectae caritatis, October 28, 1965
PGFP International Convention on Ongoing formation, Piano generale di formazione permanente, 1991
Phil Letter to the Philippians
PI Sacred Congregation for Catholic Education, Potissimum institutioni, Directives on Formation in Religious Institutes, 1990
PO Vatican II, decree Presbyterorum ordinis, December 7, 1965
PostNov Convention on Post-Novitiate, final document, 2004
POT John Corriveau, Circular Letter 16: The Poor – Our Teachers, 1999
PrCr The Prayer before the Crucifix
PrG Praises of God, 1224
PrOF A Prayer inspired by the Our Father
Ps Psalm
PVI Nc Paul VI, address Noi concludiamo, December 7, 1965
PVI Nm Paul VI, address Nel momento, October 4, 1965
PVI Paen Paul VI, apostolic constitution Paenitemini, February 17, 1966
PVP International Convention on Prenovitiate, Pastorale vocazionale e postulato, 1993
Ratio Sacred Congregation for Catholic Education, Basic Plan for Priestly Formation, March 19, 1985
RD John Paul II, apostolic exhortation Redemptionis donum, March 25, 1984
Rel06 John Corriveau, Relatio Ministri Generalis, 2006
Rel82 Paschal Rywalski, Relatio sexennialis de Ordinis statu (1976-1982), 1982
Rel88 Flavio Roberto Carraro, Relatio de statu Ordinis in sexennio 1982-1988, 1988
RH Rule for Hermitages
RM John Paul II, encyclical Redemptoris missio, December 7, 1990
RMat John Paul II, encyclical Redemptoris Mater, March 25, 1987
ROFS Rule of the Secular Franciscan Order
Rom Letter to the Romans
RomM Roman Missal, third typical edition, 2002 – USA edition, November 27, 2011
ROrd International Committee on English in the Liturgy, Rites of Ordination of a Bishop, of Priests, and of Deacons, second typical edition, 2002
RSC Rule of Saint Clare of Assisi
RSP Conference of General Ministers of the Franciscan Family, Rito Romano-Serafico della Professione religiosa, 2000
Rv Book of Revelation
SAFC Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life, Starting Afresh from Christ, May 19, 2002
SalBVM Salutation of the Blessed Virgin Mary
SalV Salutation of the Virtues
SAO Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life, The Service of Authority and Obedience, 2008
SC Vatican II, constitution Sacrosanctum Concilium, December 4, 1963
ScEx The Sacred Exchange between Saint Francis and Lady Poverty
Sg Song of Songs
SMD John Corriveau, Circular Letter 15, Solidarity and Mutual Dependence, 1999
Smo John Paul II, discourse Sono molto onorato, May 28, 1983
Sp John Paul II, discourse to the General Chapter of Third Order Regular, Sono pervaso, June 15, 1989
Sqr John Paul II, discourse Siete qui riuniti, July 11, 1986
SRS John Paul II, encyclical Sollicitudo rei socialis, December 30, 1987
StatAbr Flavio Roberto Carraro, Letter to the Provincial Minister of Abruzzo, in Statuto particolare dei Frati Minori Cappuccini d’Abruzzo, 1988
StatAlb Statutes of Albacina
StatSA Conference of General Ministers of the Franciscan Family, Statutes for Spiritual and Pastoral Assistance to the Secular Franciscan Order, 2002
Test Testament, 1226
TestS Testament of Siena, April-May 1226
TestSC Testament of Saint Clare of Assisi
Ti Letter to Titus
TMA John Paul II, apostolic letter Tertio millennio adveniente, November 10, 1994
TPJ True and Perfect Joy
UR Vatican II, decree Unitatis redintegratio, November 21, 1964
VC John Paul II, apostolic exhortation Vita consecrata, March 25, 1996
VD Benedict XVI, apostolic exhortation Verbum Domini, September 30, 2010
WG The Word of God in the Life and Mission of the Church, Synod, 2008


CONGREGATION FOR INSTITUTES OF CONSECRATED LIFE

AND SOCIETIES OF APOSTOLIC LIFE

Prot.n. C.37 - 1/ 2013

The General Minister of the Order of Capuchin Friars Minor, in the name of the General Chapter, requests Your Holiness to approve the Constitutions of his Institute.

The Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life, having carefully examined the Constitutions presented, approves and confirms them by the present Decree, in accordance with the text drafted in the Italian language and presented with the letters dated 28 September and 2 October, 2013, a copy of which is kept in our own Archives.

Anything to the contrary notwithstanding.

Vatican City, 4 October 2013,

Solemnity of St Francis of Assisi

Joao Braz Card, de Aviz

Prefect

Jose Rodriguez Carballo OFM.

Archbishop Secretary


FOREWORD

Brother Francis of Assisi, led by divine inspiration and burning with an ardent love for Christ, chose for himself and his brothers the form of gospel brotherhood in poverty and minority, and, in few and simple words, presented it in a Rule. Pope Innocent III approved this Rule and way of life of the lesser brothers by word of mouth, but Pope Honorius III confirmed it in the Bull Solet annuere on November 29, 1223. When the holy Founder was close to death, he left his remembrance, admonition and exhortation as a Testament for the brothers who were living and those who were to come, so that we may observe in a more Catholic way the Rule we have promised to the Lord.

As the years passed, Francis' disciples had to adapt their life, activity and legislation to the varying needs of the times. This was done in General Chapters by way of Constitutions.

Clement VII, in Religionis zelus, published on July 3 1528, approved the Order of Capuchin Friars Minor. From its very beginning this Order has desired to preserve the faithful, simple and pure observance of the spiritual heritage of the Founder Saint Francis, according to his Rule and Testament and under the magisterium of the Church, and to hand it on to subsequent generations of brothers.

To renew this faithful observance, a Chapter of the Order held in 1536 drafted Constitutions which were later amended at various times when necessary, and especially adapted to new prescriptions of the Church. This occurred, for example, following the Council of Trent, after changes in some ecclesiastical laws were made in the course of time, and after the promulgation of the new Code of Canon Law at the beginning of this century. Nevertheless, our Constitutions have always retained their spiritual character and the fundamental intention of Saint Francis.

Another event of the greatest importance for the renewal of the life and legislation of members of religious Orders was the Second Vatican Council, especially its dogmatic Constitution Lumen gentium and the Decree Perfectae caritatis.

In his Apostolic Letter Ecclesiae sanctae, published motu proprio on August 6 1966, Pope Paul VI required all religious Institutes to revise their legislation. The criteria for this revision of the Constitutions are found in the texts of the Second Vatican Council and in other later documents of the Church. These criteria are chiefly: a continual return to the sources of all Christian life and to the original inspiration of the Institutes, taking into account the signs of the times, and the necessary fusion of the spiritual, juridical and merely exhortatory elements.

Our special Chapter of 1968 revised the Constitutions, which were then promulgated for an experimental period, and slightly reworked by the General Chapters of 1970 and 1974.

In the General Chapter of 1982 they were again revised in accordance with Ecclesiae sanctae (II, nn.6 and 8), and with the will of the Congregation for Religious and Secular Institutes, made known in the Letter of November 15 1979, so that definitive approval could be sought from the Holy See.

The same General Chapter, anticipating the new Code of Canon Law and in obedience to the directives of the Congregation for Religious and Secular Institutes published on August 4 1981, set up a capitular Commission to revise the language of the text, and to adapt it to the prescriptions of the Code of Canon Law.

The General Definitory, concluding the mandate it had received from the General Chapter and having obtained the appropriate faculty from the Holy See in the Letter dated November 12 1982, published the definitive text of the revised Constitutions. This text came into force on March 25 1983, the Solemnity of the Annunciation of the Lord, until it was duly approved by the Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life.

When the Code of Canon Law was promulgated on January 25 1983, the text of the Constitutions had to be adapted to it in some parts. For this reason, the Congregation gave to General Superiors and their councils the faculty of promulgating provisional norms for those matters which were required by the new Code but had not yet been inserted into the text of the Constitutions. These norms were to be presented to the next General Chapter.

In the meantime, the text of the carefully revised Constitutions was sent to the Congregation, which approved it on December 25 1986.

The General Chapter of 1988 carefully examined and approved the proposals prepared by the General Definitory, which, in accordance with the Code of Canon Law, had to be incorporated into the text of the Constitutions. The Congregation approved the proposals in a Letter dated February 7 1990.

Finally, in accordance with a decision of the General Chapter in 2000, further refined and repeated by the General Chapter of 2006, the Constitutions were once again revised. This was in response to the need to transfer some norms to the Ordinances of the General Chapters and to adapt them to the most recent teachings of the Magisterium of the Church, enriching them at the same time in the light of inisghts that had been growing in the thinking of our own Order, especially as a result of Plenary Councils VI and VII.

Subsequently, the text of the Constitutions was carefullty examined and ratified by the General Chpter of 2012. The same text, duly approved by the Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life in a Decree dated 4 October 2013 (Prot. N. C. 37 – 1/2013), was promulgated by the General Minister in his Decree dated 8 December 2013 (Prot. N. 00935/13).

Therefore, the present text of the Constitutions, rendered in Italian and definitively approved by the Holy See, must be considered authentic, and all vernacular versions must conform to it.

The text is as follows:

Rome, May 18 2014

Feast of Saint Felix of Cantalice


In the name of our Lord Jesus Christ

Begin

the Constitutions

of the

Capuchin Lesser Brothers


CHAPTER I

THE LIFE OF THE CAPUCHIN LESSER BROTHERS

Article I

Our Life according to the Gospel

1C 84; FV 1

2C 15;

1

1The holy Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ is in every age the source of the entire life of the Church and the message of salvation for the whole world.

2Thes 3:1-3; 1Cor 4:15;

LG 20; DV 7; AG;

CIC 225 §1; 747 §2

Adm I 6; 1LtF 2:19; 2LtF 3; ER XXII 29-31; Test 13

2In fact, it is through the Gospel that the Church, led by the Holy Spirit, comes to know Christ, and, with faith, accepts His deeds and words, which are spirit and life for those who believe.

Jn 6:63; Lk 24: 19; Heb 1:1; DV 2,4; 17,19; CIC 225 §1; 747 §1

1C 22-25; LMj III 1; L3C 25;

LR I 1; XII 14; Test 14;

IV PCO 1; 4; 13; VI PCO 2

3Saint Francis, the founder of our Brotherhood, embraced the Gospel from the very beginning of his conversion and made it the guiding principle of his life and activity. For this reason, at the beginning and end of the Rule, he expressly commanded its observance and, in the Testament, confirmed that it had been revealed to him that he must live according to the pattern of the holy Gospel.

CIC 578; 587 §1; 631 §1

2C 102-104

4Since we are his sons, we commit ourselves, under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, to make continuous progress in understanding the Gospel.

DV 8

Adm VII 3; XX 1; XXI 1; SalBVM

1C 84; 90; 110; 2C 102; 105; 216; LMj XIV 5;

5We follow the Gospel as the highest law in all the circumstances of life. Let us attentively read and meditate on the words of salvation, and, in imitation of the Blessed Virgin Mary, carry them in our hearts. In this way our life will be ever more formed by the Gospel, and we will grow to the full stature of Christ in all things.

Lk 2:19.51; Eph 4:15;

LG 57;

DV 8; 21; 25; PC 2°; 6

ER VII 16; IX 1; LR VI 3; X 7-9; LtOrd 50-52; Adm VII 1-2; 2LtF 11-13; 1C 84; 89; 2C 61; 90; 148; LMj I 9; 42; 49;

2

1Saint Francis, a true disciple of Christ and an outstanding example of Christian living, taught His brothers to walk joyfully in the footprints of Christ poor, humble, and crucified, so that through Him, in the Holy Spirit, they might be led to the Father.

Mt 11:29; 1Pt 2:21; Eph 2:28; 1Cor 12:13

2LtF 4-5; 8-13; Adm I 14-18; Test 10; LtOrd 14-16; 27-32; 1C 84; 2C 199-201; LMj I 2; VI 1; IX 2; X 7

2Burning with the love of Christ, we contemplate Him in the kenosis of the Incarnation and the Cross in order to become more like Him. By celebrating the Eucharist in brotherly joy we participate in the Paschal Mystery as a foretaste of the glory of His Resurrection while awaiting His coming.

Rom 8:24; Phil 2:7; Heb 2:46; 1Cor 11:26; SC 47; CIC 897; 1246 §1

LR I 1; 2,11; VI 4-5; X 3; Adm III 6-9; XVI 1-2; 2LtF 36-39; 1C 4; 103; 129; 2C 80; 191; 220; 251; LMj VII 1

3We observe the gospel counsels with a generous and faithful heart, especially those we have promised: loving obedience, poverty — which is for us the special way of salvation, and chastity consecrated to God.

LG 42; PC 1; 2 a-b, 12-14; 25; RD 8; VC 93; CIC 207 §2; 573 §2; 574 §1-2; 575

LFl 13; LMj XIV 4; XIII 5;

3

1The Lord granted Brother Francis the grace to begin to do penance by leading him among lepers. He showed mercy to them and after hearing the voice of the crucified Lord at San Damiano he embarked upon the gospel life in order to follow in the footsteps of Christ, with a burning desire to pattern his life upon Him in everything. In this way, true love of Christ transformed the lover into the image of the Beloved.

Phil 2:5

1C 34; 38; 45; 2C 149; 221; LMj Prol 1;

Const 1536, 6

2In order to take on the features of a true disciple of Jesus Christ, so wonderfully evident in Francis, we commit ourselves to imitating him, or, rather, Christ in him. Therefore we diligently cultivate the spiritual inheritance of our Founder in our life and work, and share it with people of every age.

PC 2b; 20;

CIC 578

Test 1, 14; LR I 1; LMj Prol 1;

IV PCO 6; V PCO 64; 82ff

4

1After giving him brothers, the Lord revealed to Francis that they were to live according to the form of the holy Gospel. In this way the brotherhood of lesser ones came into being so that, living in communion, they might witness to the kingdom of God preaching penance and peace by example and word.

CIC 577

 

2Brotherhood and minority are original features of the charism given to us by the Spirit. They also shape the contemplative and apostolic dimensions of our vocation. Docile to the same Spirit, we commit ourselves to live this gospel ideal to the full.

 

IV PCO 1; 13

5

1Our specific form of life as Capuchin lesser brothers flows from the sound tradition initiated by our first brothers who were inspired by their intention to be faithful to the gospel insights of Saint Francis.

 

IV CPO 1; 13

2 It is necessary, therefore, to know the nature and purpose of our brotherhood in order to remain faithful to the Gospel and to our genuine tradition. We do this by returning through conversion of heart to the original inspiration, that is, to the life and Rule of our Father Saint Francis, so that our Order may be constantly renewed.

PC 2

ER VII 1-2; XXII 19-27; LR I 1; V 1-2; X 8-9; XII 4; LtOrd 2,29; 50-52; LtAnt 2; Test 19; 2LtF 47; Adm VI 1-3;

3For this purpose we make every effort to give priority to a life of prayer, especially contemplative prayer. Living as pilgrims and strangers in this world, we practise, both individually and communally, radical poverty inspired by minority, and we propose a life of austerity and joyful penance out of love for the cross of the Lord.

PC 13

ER IX 2.16; LR VI 7;

IV PCO 46-48; V PCO 29-40

4Gathered together in Christ as a single distinctive family, we develop among ourselves relationships that are fraternally spontaneous, and gladly live among those who are poor, weak and infirm, sharing in their lives and maintaining our characteristic closeness to people.

GS 1; 27; AG 20;

 

5We promote the apostolic dimension of our life by proclaiming the Gospel and in other various ways that are in harmony with our charism, while always preserving a spirit of minority and service.

 

GC 1968;

6

1Creative fidelity to the charism of the Capuchin Lesser Brothers requires us to safeguard and lovingly develop the spiritual heritage of our Brotherhood.

MCB 1, 4

VC 37; 110

 

2To this end let us frequently read the life and writings of Saint Francis, as well as other books that reveal his spirit. Let us also ensure that we are familiar with the Franciscan sources and with Capuchin tradition, especially everything referring to our brothers renowned for their holiness, apostolic work, and erudition.

 
 

3In the light of the signs of the times, we work hard to find suitable ways, approved by the legitimate superiors, of living our form of the gospel life and giving our apostolic witness in the different regions and cultures.

Test 14; 1C 32; 2C 208; AP 76

7

1The Rule of Saint Francis, which flows from the Gospel, spurs us on to live the gospel life.

 
ER II 11; IV 2; V 3-4; V 8; VII 15; XII 3-4; XVII 15; XXII 26; XXII 29; XXIII 1; XXIV 1-3; LR IV 2; VI 8; X 4; X 9; Test 13; 38-39; Adm I 20; 1LtF I 10; II 8; 2LtF 53; 67; LtOrd 14; 41-42; 2C 208

2With untiring dedication let us apply ourselves to the task of understanding it spiritually. As our holy Founder exhorts us in his Testament, we strive to observe it “simply and purely and with holy activity,” in accordance with the spirit and gospel intentions of the first Capuchins and the Order’s living tradition, following the example of our saints.

 

2C 185

3Let the ministers and guardians, together with the fraternities, make it their heartfelt concern to promote knowledge, love, and observance of the Rule.  

ER V 6; IX 16; LR II 9-10; IV 2; 7,2; LBL 3;

I PCO 1,1; 4; 2,13; 17,19; 21ff.; IV PCO 3ff; 9ff.; 23ff; 32

4In order that the Rule and intentions of our Father and lawgiver may be faithfully observed throughout the world, let the ministers make sure to seek the most suitable ways for the brothers to live their lives and conduct their apostolates. This may be done in a variety of forms, in accordance with different regions and cultures and the needs of times and places.

PC 20

2C 23ff; 2MP 78;

GC 1968

5This variety of forms, when authentic, always safeguards the unity of the same original spirit and is based on fraternal communion and obedience to superiors. In this way, gospel freedom of action is guaranteed, especially in what concerns the renewal of our life, so that the spirit is not extinguished.

1Thes 5:19; Eph 4:3

LMj IV 11;

ER XXIV 1-3; Test 40;

8

1Shortly before his death, after receiving the sacred stigmata, being filled with the Holy Spirit and desiring our salvation more eagerly, our seraphic Father dictated the Testament.

 

Test 36ff

2In it he recalls and re-presents his gospel experience, declares his last will, and entrusts to us the precious inheritance of his spirit.

CIC 587 §1

Test 34

3The Testament has been given to us so that, day by day, we may observe the Rule we have professed ever more perfectly, according to the mind of the Church.

LG 45; PC 2;

CIC 587 §1

Const 1536

4Therefore, continuing the tradition of our Order, we accept the Testament as the primary spiritual exposition of the Rule and an outstanding source of inspiration for our life.

PC 2;

CIC 587 §1

 

9

1The purpose of the Constitutions is to show us how best to observe the Rule in the changing circumstances of life in order to safeguard our identity and to give it concrete expression.

CIC 578 §1; 207 §2; 573 §1; 598 §2; 607 §1; 662; 758

ER XVI 10

2In them we find a sure means of spiritual renewal in Christ and effective help for each brother to bring to completion the total consecration of his life to God.

PC 4

  3We observe these Constitutions, to which we are bound by virtue of our religious profession, not as slaves but as sons yearning to love God above all else, heeding the voice of the Holy Spirit who teaches us, and dedicating ourselves to the glory of God and the salvation of our neighbour.

Jn 14:26; 16:13-15; Gal 4:31-5:1; Rom 8:15; 2Cor 3:17; 1Pt 2:15-16

  4Let us lovingly devote ourselves to the personal and communal study of the Rule, the Testament and the Constitutions so that we absorb their spirit.

PC 18

  5May we also endeavour to know and observe all the other norms of our particular law.  

Article II

Our Life in the Church

LR VI 1-2; Test 24; 2C 59

10

1The Church, the universal sacrament of salvation, namely the sign and instrument of intimate union with God and of the unity of the whole human race, appears as the People of God making its pilgrim journey in the world. Established by Christ in a communion of life, charity, and truth, this people is enriched by the Holy Spirit with a multitude of gifts or charisms useful for its renewal and further development, in order to usher in the kingdom of God.

Rom 12:5ff; 1Cor 12:4ff; Eph 4:2; LG 1; 5; 6; 9; 12; 14; 44; 48; 68. CIC 204 §1; RomM, Easter Vigil, Prayer after 7th Reading

  2Among such a variety of charisms, the consecrated life is an outstanding gift that the Church has received from the Lord. Profoundly rooted in the example and teaching of Christ, it expresses the innermost nature of the Christian calling and belongs to the life of the Church, to its holiness, and to its mission.

LG 43; 44; PC 1; AG 18; VC 1; 3

CIC 573; 574 §1

Test 14; 2C 24

3The Church has accepted the Franciscan Brotherhood as one of the spiritual families raised up by the Holy Spirit. After approving it with her hierarchical authority, the Church continues to protect with motherly care the form of life presented by Saint Francis. In this way the image of Christ, poor, humble, and devoted to the service of people, especially the poor, may shine more brightly upon her face.

LG 45; PC 1; GS 27; CIC 574 §1; 577; 590; 593

  4The Church has also approved the Order of Capuchin Friars Minor in the decree Religionis zelus issued by Pope Clement VII on July 3, 1528.

CIC 576; 577; 590 §1; 593

ER II 12; XVII 1; XXIII 7; LRIII 1; XII 3-4; TestS 6; Test 5; LtOrd 30; ER XIX 1-2;

2C 25; 148

5Therefore, let us love holy Mother Church wholeheartedly, meditate upon her mystery, apply ourselves to the study of her teachings, while observing them faithfully, and actively share in her life and mission.

LG 44; PC 2c; CD 33; CIC 578; 675 §1; 783

ER Prol. 2; XIX 1-2; XXIII 7; LR I 2; II 2-5; XII 4; 2LtF 32; OfP Vesp. ant. 1; Test 31

6Professing our faith in the one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church, which breathes with its two lungs—East and West—and also finds expression in our Order, we commit ourselves with all our strength to build up the Body of Christ and to manifest its unity.

11

1After the example of Saint Francis who was a catholic and totally apostolic man, we offer faithful obedience to the Spirit of Christ living and working in the Church.

LG 8; Smo 6; RMat 34; DD 17; Eim 12; EA 48; Eph 4:4.11-16; 1Cor 10:16-17; 12:12-27; Col 1:22

AG 4; CD 33ff; ESa I,22ff

ER Prol. 2; LR I 2; XII 4; 1C 100

2We offer obedience and reverence to the Pope as our highest superior, to whom religious are subject also by virtue of their vow of obedience, and to the college of bishops, which, together with him, is a visible sign of the unity and apostolicity of the Church.

LG 22,45; CD 35; OT 9; CIC 212 §1; 273; 330; 336; 590 §1-2

LR IX 1; Test 25-26; 2C 141; 146; 147; LMj VI 8; 2MP 10; 54; AC 15

3Wherever we may be, we contribute to the good of the particular church through our fraternal and prophetic presence, working together for its growth and progress in accordance with our charism and under the guidance of the diocesan bishop, offering our apostolic service to the People of God and to the entire human community.

CD 33; CIC 394 §1; 678 §1; 680; 681 §1; 757; 790 §1; LG 45; CD 34; 35, 1.3

LR IX 1; Test 25-26; 2C 141; 146; 147; LMj VI 8; 2MP 10; 54; AC 15

4Let us show due honour to priests and to all others who minister spirit and life to us, and actively work with them.

PO 9;

CIC 275 §1

ER Prol. 3-4; LR I 3; VIII 1; X 1; Test 17-28; 2C 184-186; 193; 222

12

1With a generous heart let us love and obey the General Minister who is constituted for the service and welfare of the entire brotherhood as the successor of our holy Founder, and as the living bond uniting us with the authority of the Church and among ourselves.

LG 18; PC 14; CIC 596 §1-3; 601; 617; 619; 622; 678 §2

LR X 2-3; XII 1-2; 2C 145

2We also show love, as well as active and responsible obedience, to the other ministers of the brotherhood whom the Lord has given to us as shepherds and in whom the brothers have placed their trust, so that we may be more closely and more securely bound to the service of the Church in a spirit of faith and love for Christ.

PC 14

LtOrd 51; 2LtF 63; CtC; LMj VIII 6; IX 1; 1C 80; 2C 165; PCO I 1,9; IV 15ff, 33; V 28; VI 26

13

1Saint Francis, inflamed by the Holy Spirit, drew from his adoration of the Father, Who is the highest Good, that sense of universal brotherhood which enabled him to see in every creature the image of Christ, the firstborn and Saviour.

Col 1:15; Eph 1:15, 19-20

LtOrd 9; ER XVII 17; PrsG 11; 2LtF 62; ExhP 1,1-7; PrOF 2;

2C 172

2As children of this Father we regard ourselves as brothers of all without any distinction. When we encounter every creature with a brotherly spirit, we continually offer the praise of creation to God, the source of all good.

Jn 8:39; GS 29; AG 12

ER II 1; XI 1-13; LR VI 7-8;

1C 38; 39; 46; 2C 180;

IV PCO 17; V PCO 28

3Gathered into one by the Holy Spirit to share the same calling, we foster a sense of brotherhood throughout the entire Order through common prayer and action, particularly in our provincial and local communities. We cultivate that same sense toward all our brothers and sisters, whether religious or secular, who with us form one single Franciscan family.

PC 15

  4Our life as brothers is a fruit and a sign of the transforming power of the Gospel and of the coming of the kingdom. Like the leaven of the Gospel, it calls us to promote genuine relationships among all people and nations so that the world may live as a single family under the gaze of its Creator.

AA 14; GS 42; 78;

CCL 02/84 42;

VC 51

ER IV 6; V 10ff; Adm I; IV 1-3;

I PCO 1,4; IV PCO 43ff;

VI PCO 9-10;

14

1The Son of God, assuming the condition of a servant, came not to be served but to serve and to give His life for the salvation of all. His kenosis is perpetuated in the sacrament of the Eucharist where He daily humbles himself and comes to us under humble appearances.

Mt 20:28; Mk 10:45; Lk 22:25; Phil 2:7; LG 8; PC 14; GS 1,27; PO 6; AG 20

ER V 7-12; IX 1-3; XXII 1-4; LR X 9-11; Adm   XII 1-3; 1C 38,40; 2C 61; 71; 145; 148; PCO: I 1,4,13; III 9, 21, 38, 40; IV 1; V 29-40; VI 9-10; VII31

2Awestruck and deeply moved by the humility and compassion of God, Saint Francis chose to make himself lesser among the lesser ones. Following his example, and desiring to be conformed to Christ, we too strive to be truly lesser, never presuming to become greater. Inspired by this spirit, we generously dedicate ourselves to the service of all, especially of those who suffer want and hardship and even of those who persecute us.

Mt 5:10,44; 20:26ff; Mk 10:43; Lk 22:26; Rom 8:29; 1Cor 12:12ff; Phil 2:3; GS 69; AG 20; PC 13; AA 8

ER IX 1-3;

I PCO 1,4; V PCO 28

3Therefore we gladly live our life as brothers among the poor, sharing their distress and lowly state with great love.  
  4While we relieve their material and spiritual needs, may our lives, actions and words be generously spent for the promotion of their human and Christian development.

CIC 222 §2; 287 §1; 528 §1; 602; 672; 768 §2

LR III 10-11; Adm XV,1-2;

1C 41; 2C 108

5By doing this we manifest the spirit of our life as lesser brothers and become a leaven of justice, unity, and peace.  

I PCO II,20; II PCO 9ff; V PCO 1-14

15

1In order that our gospel calling may bear fruit in the Church and in the world, we commit ourselves to live faithfully the apostolic life, which inseparably unites contemplation and action. We do this in imitation of Jesus, who spent His life unceasingly praying and accomplishing the work of salvation.

Mt 4:1; 14:23; Mk 1:12ff; 4,46; Lk 4:1; 6:12; LG 33; PC 8ff; PO 14; AA 3; CIC 577; 675 §1-3; 758

  2Conforming to their Master’s lifestyle and being sent out into the world by the Lord, the apostles were untiring in prayer and in the ministry of the word.

Mt 28:12; Mk 16:15; Heb 6:2-4

ER I 1; XXII 2; 2LtF 13; LtOrd 5-11; 51; 1C 35; LMj VIII 1; XII 1-2; XIII 1; LFl 16

3In order to follow in the footsteps of the Lord and the apostles, Saint Francis chose a form of life that closely united prayer with the proclamation of the message of salvation, wisely alternating times of contemplation and apostolic commitment.
 
Const 1536; RH; VI PCO 17; 4Capuchin tradition, too, from the outset, by proposing the example of both Martha and Mary, teaches us how to unite contemplation and action harmoniously. In this way it prompts us to follow Christ both in His contemplation on the mountain, and in His proclamation of the Kingdom of God.  

ER XXIII; Adm XX 1-2;

1C 40

5May we therefore persevere in praising God and meditating on His word, desiring ever more ardently that our work too may draw people to the joyful love of God.  

ER V 2

6In this way our life of prayer will be entirely imbued with an apostolic spirit, and all our apostolic activity will be shaped by the spirit of prayer. PC 8

CHAPTER II

THE VOCATION TO OUR LIFE

AND

THE FORMATION OF THE BROTHERS

Article I

The Vocation to Our Life

ER XVII 17-18; Adm II 3; VIII 3; XII 1-3; XVII 1; PrG 3; 2C 165; LMj IX 1

16

1In His goodness God calls all the Christian faithful in the Church to the perfection of love through different states of life, so that the salvation of the world may be advanced by means of personal holiness.

LG 40; 42; CIC 210

IV PCO 58-60

2With the greatest freedom each one must respond lovingly to this call, rooted in Baptism, so that the dignity of the human person may be in harmony with the will of God.

GS 17,21; LG 46; CIC 219

ER II 1; Test 14; LtOrd 29

3Let all of us gratefully rejoice that God has given us the exceptional grace of a religious vocation. The Father, in fact, has called us to give ourselves to Him, “keeping nothing of our own for ourselves, and to follow in the footprints of His beloved Son,” so that we may be transformed into His image by the power of the Holy Spirit.

LG 43; PC 1, 5; VC 17-19;

CIC 574 §2;

ER IX 1-3; LtOrd 9; 1C 89

4In responding to our calling as Capuchin lesser brothers, we follow the poor and humble Christ, spread His message to people everywhere, especially to the poor, and offer a public and social witness of the Kingdom of God.

Mt 11:5; 11:29; Lk 4:18; LG 44; CIC 607 §1, §3; 640; 673; 758; MG (?); VC 1; 26

1C 35; 71; LMj VIII 3; L3C 37; 59

5In this way, as a pilgrim brotherhood, penitent in heart and deed, we devote ourselves to the Church’s mission of salvation, serving all people in a spirit of minority and joy.

LG 6; 9; 48ff; DV 7; UR 2; PC 2;

IV PCO 59

17

1Concern for vocations arises above all from the awareness that we ourselves are living and offering to others a way of life rich in human and gospel values, which, while offering genuine service to God and people, fosters personal growth.

2However, if we wish to give clear testimony to this way of life, we must renew ourselves constantly.

OT 2ff; 11; PO 11; PC 24; AA 2; CIC 661; 664; LG 46

CIC 663; 664;

ER II 1-3; LR II 1;

AC 19;

IV PCO 60

3Let us actively work together to foster new vocations, moved by the desire to carry out God's plan according to our charism. Let all of us, therefore, but primarily the ministers and individual fraternities, take the utmost care to discern and cultivate genuine vocations, above all by the example of our life, our prayer and our words, and also by explicitly proposing a vocation.

OT 2; PC 24; VC 64

  4Let us actively promote various forms of the pastoral apostolate for vocations, especially among groups closer to the spirit of our Order, keeping in mind that better results are obtained where a few brothers are specifically assigned to promote and coordinate the apostolate of vocations. However, all the brothers shall contribute to the work as a sign of the vitality of Franciscan life.

CIC 233 §1; 385; 791

  5In this way we work together with God who calls and chooses those he wishes and we contribute to the good of the Church.

Mk 3:13; Lk 6:13; Jn 15:16; Rom 6:16-18; OT 2; AA 2

Article II

Admission to Our Life

2C 70; 192;

AC 106

18

1Saint Francis, being concerned about the purity of our life, foresaw that his brotherhood would grow into a large multitude and, at the same time, was afraid of having a number of unsuitable brothers.

 

LR II 1-3; VI 8

2For this reason, since the brotherhood must constantly grow in virtue, in the perfection of love, and in the spirit of the Gospel rather than in number, those who wish to embrace our life must be thoroughly examined and accompanied with care in the discernment of their vocation.

CIC 219; 597 §1-2

ER II 1-3; II 12; LR II 1-2;

IV PCO 22; 52ff

3The Provincial Ministers are to enquire carefully whether those who are asking to be admitted to our life meet the requirements of universal law as well as our own for their valid and lawful admission. In particular, the following must be observed:

OT 6; CIC 220; 597 §2; 642; 643 §1; 645 §1; 684 §1, §5; 690 §1; 730; 744 §2

  a) candidates must be temperamentally suited for the living of our gospel life in brotherly communion;  
  b) it is to be ascertained that they enjoy the physical and mental health necessary to lead our way of life;  
  c) candidates are to show by their lives that they firmly believe what holy Mother Church believes and holds to be true and that they possess a Catholic instinct;  
  d) it must be evident that they enjoy a good reputation, especially among those who know them well;  
  e) they are to be endowed with the required human maturity, particularly affective and relational, and with a generous will. In addition, it must be ascertained that they enter the Order with the sole purpose of sincerely serving God and for the salvation of people, according to the Rule, the form of life of Saint Francis, and our Constitutions;  
  f) they are to be educated according to the standards of their own region and show promise of being able to carry out their future duties effectively;  
  g) all useful information shall be collected about their previous life, especially in the case of older candidates or those who have already had some experience of religious life;  
  h) for the admission of diocesan clergy, or of those coming from another institute of consecrated life, a society of apostolic life or a seminary, or for the re-admission of our own candidates, the prescriptions of universal law are to be observed.  

ER I 2; II 4; LR II 4; Const 1536

19

1Christ, the teacher of all wisdom, responding to the young man who expressed the desire for eternal salvation, said that whoever wanted to be perfect should first sell all he had, give it to the poor, and then follow Him.

Mt 12:21; 19:21; Mk 10:21; Lk 18:22

LR II 4; Adm IV 3; 1C 24; 2C 80; LMj III 3; L3C 28-29; 39

2Francis, the imitator of Christ, not only fulfilled the Teacher’s counsel in his own life, but taught it to others whom he received and laid it down in the Rule as a norm to be observed.  

ER II 4; LR II 1-5; 8; 2C 15; 81

3Therefore, the ministers and guardians shall make known and explain these words of the holy Gospel to the candidates who are moved by an interior love of Christ to come to our Order, so that, at the proper time before perpetual profession, they renounce their property, preferably in favour of the poor.

PC 13; CIC 668 §1-4

1C 24; 2C 15;

V PCO 95

4The candidates shall prepare themselves interiorly for the future renunciation of goods and dispose themselves for the service of their neighbour, especially of the poor.  

ER II 5-7;

LR 2,6-7

5However, as the Rule directs, the brothers are to avoid becoming involved in these matters in any way.  
  6Moreover, the candidates shall be ready to make their strengths of intellect and will and their other gifts of nature and of grace available to the entire brotherhood in fulfilling the duties that they will receive in the service of the People of God.  

ER II 3; LR II 1

20

1In addition to the General Minister, the Provincial Minister in each province enjoys the right to admit candidates to the postulancy, novitiate, and profession. He can delegate this faculty to the provincial vicar and to the Custos.

CIC 641; 656;

658

  2These ministers, before admitting candidates to the novitiate, are to consult their council, or three or four brothers appointed by the council. However, before they admit a candidate to first profession and to perpetual profession, they must have the consent of their council.  
  3If the case requires it, they are also to consult those who have special competence in the matter.

CIC 642

 

21

1The master of novices is responsible for conducting the Rite of Reception of Novices, unless the Provincial Minister decrees otherwise.

 
  2The Provincial Minister, however, in the name of the Church and the Order, receives the vows of those making profession, but he may delegate this faculty to another perpetually professed brother of the Order.

LG 45; SC 80; PC 5; CIC 654; 656; 658

VII PCO 17

3The liturgical norms for the beginning of the novitiate and for the profession of our life shall be observed and the celebrations kept moderate and simple.

RSP 30

  4Religious profession is ordinarily made during Mass, using the following formula approved by the Holy See for the Franciscan First Order and for the Third Order Regular of Saint Francis:

CIC 654

ER II 1;

LR II 1; XII 1

ER Prol.

LR I 1; Test 14

LR X 8

For the praise and glory of the Most Holy Trinity!

Moved by divine inspiration

to follow more closely the Gospel and the footprints of our Lord Jesus Christ,

in the presence of my brothers,

and into your hands, brother N.,

I, brother N.,

steadfast in faith and will,

vow to God the Father, holy and all-powerful,

to live for (… year/s) (…my entire life)

in obedience, without anything of my own, and in chastity.

At the same time, I profess the life and Rule of the Friars Minor,

confirmed by Pope Honorius,

promising to observe it faithfully

in accordance with the Constitutions of the Order of the Capuchin Friars Minor.

Therefore I entrust myself

with all my heart to this brotherhood,

so that by the working of the Holy Spirit,

after the example of Mary Immaculate,

and through the intercession of our Father Francis,

and of all the saints,

with the help of my brothers,

I may constantly strive for the fullness of love

in the service of God, of the Church, and of all people.”

 

LR I 1

                                                             22  

1The nature and goal of the three gospel counsels, which we promise by vow at profession, is to unite us to Christ, our hearts freed by grace, in a life that is obedient, has nothing of its own, and is chaste for the sake of the Kingdom of heaven, after the example of Saint Francis.

LG 44; 46; CIC 573 §1

LR X 3

2The gospel counsel of obedience, promised in a spirit of faith and love in order to follow Christ Who was obedient even to death, obliges us to submit our will, for God's sake, to legitimate superiors whenever they command according to our Constitutions “in anything that is not contrary to conscience and the Rule.”

Phil 2:8; PC 14; CIC 601

  3The gospel counsel of poverty, in imitation of Christ Who though he was rich became poor, in addition to a life which is poor, in fact and in spirit, entails a dependence upon superiors and a limitation in the use and disposition of goods. It further requires a voluntary renunciation of the capacity of acquiring and possessing, which must be made before perpetual profession in a form which, as far as possible, is also valid in civil law.

2Cor 8:9; PC 13; CIC 600; 668 §4-5

 
4The gospel counsel of chastity for the Kingdom of Heaven, a sign of the world to come and a source of greater fruitfulness in an undivided heart, entails the obligation of perfect continence in celibacy.

Mt 19:12; 1Cor 7:32-35; PC 12; CIC 277 §1; 599

Article III

Formation in General

 

23

1Formation for the consecrated life is a journey of discipleship guided by the Holy Spirit leading one progressively to assimilate the sentiments of Christ, the Son of the Father, and to shape one’s life according to His obedient, poor, and chaste life.

VC 65; 14; 16; 19; Mt 10:37

  2Since formation tends towards the transformation of the whole person in Christ, it must be lifelong, as regards both human values and the evangelical and consecrated life. Therefore, formation must involve both the actions and intentions of the whole person in its various dimensions—human, cultural, spiritual, pastoral, and professional—taking every care to foster the harmonious integration of the various aspects.

VC 109; 65; CIC 279 ,1-3; 661

IV PCO 1,3ff; 13ff; 23-30; 31ff; 35; 57,1; 70ff

3The purpose of formation is to make the life of the brothers and fraternities become ever more conformed to Christ, according to the Capuchin Franciscan spirit, taking into account the diversity of places and times.

OT 8ff; PC 18; ESa II,33-38

  4Formation in our Order is implemented in two phases: initial and ongoing. Initial formation includes initiation into consecration according to our form of life, lasting until perpetual profession, and preparation for work and ministry, which may begin during initiation. Ongoing formation follows initial formation and is life-long.  

LR X 8;

IV PCO 77-79

24

1All formation is first of all the work of the Holy Spirit, Who inwardly gives life both to those forming and those being formed.

 
2As it was for Francis, the Church, in its universal and local dimensions, is for us the living context and essential point of reference for any formation journey, since in it the Spirit is unceasingly at work.  

2C 193;

VI PCO;

VII PCO;

POT 16

3The Father reveals the secrets of the Kingdom of Heaven to little ones and, as Francis taught us, the Spirit rests equally on the simple and the poor. We therefore recognise closeness to the people and sharing in the life of the poor as particularly favourable conditions for our formation, and remain open to learning from them.

Mt 11:25; Lk 10:21

  4Our brotherhood, called to cultivate its own identity in the Church, has the duty and the right to ensure the formation of the brothers in conformity with our charism. Therefore, formation is a priority among the commitments of the Order and all its circumscriptions.

ICF 7.1

CIC 652 1-2; 659 V1-3; 680 §1-2

  5Active formation demands the cooperation of those being formed who are the principal authors of their own growth and the ones primarily responsible for it.

CIC 652 §3

  6Throughout his life, every brother is at the same time in need of formation and imparting formation, because all of us always have something to learn and to teach. This principle shall be laid down as the programme for formation and put into practice in our life.

CIC 662

IV PCO 13-22ff; V PCO 23; VI PCO 3

7To live together as lesser brothers is a primary part of our Franciscan vocation. Therefore, living as brothers is always and everywhere a basic requirement of the formation process.

CIC 659 §1-2

IV PCO 80;

VII PCO 13; FFCh 25

8In order that each of our fraternities, in particular those specifically designated for formation, may fulfil this primary function, they need the support and stimulus of the primary brotherhood, which is the province through which our belonging to the whole Order is established. Candidates shall develop an awareness that the Order constitutes a single family, and that all of us are bound to contribute responsibly to its well-being.

CIC 651 §1-3; CIC 652 §4

IV PCO 77,80ff

9While all the brothers have a formative role, it is necessary that some brothers be invested with greater responsibility. It is a particular task of the General Minister and his council to guarantee the authenticity of the formation of all the brothers of the Order. In each circumscription, this responsibility falls to the ministers and the guardians, who are the ordinary leaders and coordinators of the brothers’ formation process. There are, moreover, qualified formation personnel who undertake this particular duty in the name of the Order and the brotherhood.

OT 5; ESa II,36

IV PCO 57; 77; 81,83

25

1The Order shall have at its disposal the means of formation that meet the requirements of its own specific charism.

OT 4ff; ESa II,36

CIC 659 §2

IV PCO 2; 12; 23; 27; 30; 32; 40; 42; 54; 75; 83

2Since particular attention must be given to the candidates during the period of initial formation, suitable educational structures shall be provided for each circumscription or groups of circumscriptions.

OT 1; CIC 659 §1-3

  3The process of education requires, above all, a team of brothers in charge who follow consistent norms throughout the entire journey of formation.
  4Let the ministers therefore take every care to provide qualified training for a sufficient number of those responsible for formation who assume and exercise their particular ministry in the name of the Order. For this reason, they are to have the support due to them from the whole brotherhood.

VC 66

  5Those responsible for formation shall be aware that the task assigned to them is of the greatest importance for the life of the Order and the Church, and devote themselves to it generously, all other duties taking second place.
  6Formation secretariats are of great importance, both at the general level and in each circumscription, at the level of Conferences, and where areas collaborate. Therefore, care shall be taken that they be well provided for and made effective.
  7The General Secretariat for Formation is the first structure of direct collaboration with the General Minister and his council in everything concerning the initial and ongoing formation of the brothers and the study centres of the Order. It is available to the different circumscriptions, to various areas that collaborate at an interprovincial level, and to the Conferences, offering them assistance and input for the promotion of all that pertains to formation.
  8Likewise, each province or group of provinces shall have a Secretariat or Formation Council.
PostNov 6,1; FFCh 38

9It is appropriate to define in a Ratio formationis or Formation Plan those principles that are valid everywhere in order to safeguard in formation the characteristics proper to our Order.

.

VC 68-69

  10Individual circumscriptions or groups of circumscriptions, depending on the situation in each region, shall have a formation plan of their own that outlines the goals, plans, and specific courses of the entire formation process.  

Article IV

Initiation into Our Life

I PCO 1,7; IV PCO 3ff; 34; 52ff; 57,71; VI PCO 8

26

1Those who are admitted to the Order must be initiated and progressively introduced into the Franciscan gospel life. In order that this journey of initiation may unfold, candidates, guided by the formation personnel, shall be given the necessary experiences and knowledge.

GS 61; OT intr.; PC 6; SC 10; 12; DV 25; CIC 652 §1

  2During the time of initiation the formation of the candidates, harmoniously blending the human element with the spiritual, shall be sound, all-embracing, and adapted to the needs of times and places.  
  3Suitable methods of interactive education are to be used. Above all, candidates shall perform tasks and services that gradually lead them to acquire self-control, as well as psychological and emotional maturity.  

ER XXII 40; Adm I 1

4With consideration for individual personalities and gifts of grace, candidates shall be introduced into a spiritual life that is nourished by the reading of the Word of God, active participation in the liturgy, and reflection and private prayer so that they are drawn more and more to Christ, who is the Way, the Truth and the Life.

Jn 14:6

CIC 652 §2

  5During the time of initiation the brothers shall acquire a thorough knowledge of the Capuchin Franciscan spirit and its practice by studying the life of Saint Francis, his mind concerning the observance of the Rule, the history and sound traditions of our Order, and, most of all, by assimilating internally and practically the life to which they are called  

IV PCO 22

6 In particular, they are to cultivate living as brothers both in community and with others and be solicitous to meet their needs, so that, each day, the brothers learn to live ever more perfectly in active communion with the Church.

PC 2

FFCh 20

7Let them therefore be led to make a generous and total gift of their lives, and to develop in themselves the availability of a missionary.  
 

27

1Candidates to the Order are to spend all the stages of initiation in fraternities suitable for living our life and for taking care of their formation.

 
  2The choice of houses and the designation of formation fraternities are made by the competent ministers with the consent of their councils.  
  3The establishment, transfer, and suppression of a novitiate house pertain to the General Minister with the consent of his council and in a written decree. In particular cases and by way of exception, the same authority may allow a novice to make his novitiate in another house of the Order under the guidance of a capable religious who takes the place of the master of novices.

CIC 647 §1

  4The major superior may permit the group of novices to live for certain periods of time in another house of the Order specified by him.

CIC 647 §3

ER II 1; Test 14; 1C 24; 27; 31; LMj III 3.6; L3C 27; 29; AC 3;

28

1Every brother given by God to the brotherhood brings it joy, and at the same time is an incentive for us to renew ourselves in the spirit of our vocation.

 
2Responsibility for initiation involves the entire brotherhood, since the candidates are part of it.

CIC 652 §4

IV PCO 80

3However the Provincial Minister, with the consent of his council, in the manner and within the limits he determines, shall entrust its direction to brothers who are experienced in the spiritual, fraternal and pastoral life, endowed with learning, prudence, discernment of spirits and familiar with the workings of God in the human heart.

CIC 651 §1-3;

  4The directors of postulants, novices and professed brothers shall be free from all duties that could interfere with the care and direction of the candidates.  
  5The directors shall be assisted by associates, especially in matters concerning the care of the spiritual life and the internal forum. OT 8

IV PCO 61

29

1Initiation into our form of consecrated life unfolds through the stages of postulancy, novitiate, and post-novitiate and is conducted in accordance with universal law and our own particular law.

CIC 651 §2-3;

  2The time of initiation begins on the day when the candidate is admitted to the postulancy by the Provincial Minister and continues until perpetual profession. From the moment of admission, the candidate, as far as formation, life, and work are concerned, is gradually incorporated into the brotherhood.  

IV PCO 62

30

1The postulancy is the first period of initiation when one makes the choice to adopt our life.

CIC 597 §2

IV PCO 63; PVP 10

2During this period, the postulant comes to know our life and makes a further and more careful discernment of his vocation. For its part, the fraternity comes to know the postulant better and ascertains the growth of his human maturity, especially affective maturity, and his ability to discern his life and the signs of the times according to the Gospel.

CIC 597 §2; 642

  3The postulant, therefore, must be helped in particular to deepen his life of faith. To this end, the formation of the postulants is chiefly aimed at completing their catechesis in the faith, introducing them to the liturgical life, to the methods and experience of prayer, the study of our Franciscan heritage, to life in brotherhood, and to an initial experience of apostolic work.

CIC 597 §2

IV PCO 61; 64-66

31

1The novitiate is a period of more intense initiation and more profound experience of the Capuchin Franciscan gospel life in its fundamental demands. It requires a free and mature decision to try out our form of religious life.

CIC 642; 643 §1, §4; 645 §1; 646; 648; 652

ER II 8;

LR II 9.11;

RSP 28-31

2On the opening day of the novitiate, a rite shall be celebrated asking for the help of God so that the aims of this period may be achieved. It is fitting that the novices receive “the clothes of probation” on this occasion. This rite shall be carried out in the religious fraternity. A document is to be drawn up as a record of the beginning of the novitiate, which is the beginning of life in the Order.

CIC 669 §1; 646

3The process of initiation during the novitiate is based on the values of our consecrated life as known and lived in the light of the example of Christ, the gospel insights of Saint Francis, and the sound traditions of the Order.

CIC 652 §2

V PCO 95

4The rhythm of the novitiate shall be in harmony with the primary aspects of our religious life, particularly through a special experience of faith, contemplative prayer, life in brotherhood, contact with the poor, and hard work.

CIC 652 §5

  5The direction of the novices, under the authority of the ministers, is reserved to the novice master alone, who must be a professed brother of the Order in perpetual vows.

CIC 650 §2

  6In order to be valid, the novitiate must comprise twelve months spent in the novitiate community itself. The minister, with the consent of his council, determines when it begins and how it is conducted.

CIC 647 §3; 648 §1; 653 §2

  7An absence from the novitiate house that exceeds three months, either continuous or intermittent, renders the novitiate invalid. An absence that exceeds fifteen days must be made up. All the other requirements of universal law in respect of the novitiate must be diligently observed.

CIC 648 §3; 649 §1

I PCO II,11;

IV PCO 22; 61; 67-69;

32

1The post-novitiate, which begins with temporary profession and concludes with perpetual profession, is the third stage of initiation. During this period the brothers progress further in maturity and prepare themselves to make a definitive choice of the gospel life in our Order.

CIC 659 §1-3; 660 §1

PI 58-60

ER V 9-12; VI 3-4

2Because of its essential reference to religious consecration and to perpetual profession, the journey of formation undertaken in the post-novitiate must be the same for all the brothers. Since the gospel life in brotherhood holds the primary place in our vocation, it must also be given priority during this period.  
  3The brothers are to be led into a living relationship with Christ, to be ever more conformed to Him, and to find their identity in Him. According to each one’s gifts of nature and grace, they are introduced to a more profound study of sacred scripture, spiritual theology, liturgy, and the history and spirituality of the Order. Let them be initiated into the exercise of various forms of the apostolate and of work, including domestic work. As this process of initiation unfolds, their life and growth to maturity as persons shall always be taken into account. MCB 5

Article V

Profession of Our Life

 

33

1Let us often consider how great is the grace of religious profession. By it we embrace, under a new and special title, in praise of the glory of the most holy Trinity, a life which impels us towards the perfection of love. Definitively consecrated to the service of God, we adore Him in spirit and in truth.

LG 43-46; PC 1,5-6; 12; Eph 1:6,1,14; VC 17-22

  2In religious consecration, the Holy Spirit unites us to Christ by a special covenant, makes us sharers in the reality of the mystery of Christ Who is united by an indissoluble bond to the Church, His Spouse, and places us in a state of life that heralds the future resurrection and the glory of the heavenly Kingdom.

Eph 5:3; Rv 19:7; 21:2,9-11; CIC 573 §1; 574 §2; 598 §2; 607 §1; 662; RD 2; 8; VC 93

  3In order to gather more abundant fruit from the grace of Baptism, through this consecration we bind ourselves to live out the gospel counsels in accordance with the Rule and Constitutions.  
  4In this way we aim to free ourselves from the impediments that could draw us away from perfect love, spiritual freedom, and the perfection of divine worship.

LG 46

IV PCO 22

5Finally, by means of profession, while we enjoy a special divine gift within the life of the Church, we work together through our witness in its saving mission.

LG 43ff; 46; PC 1; 5ff

6We therefore exhort the brothers to prepare themselves for profession with great care by means of an intense sacramental life centred above all on the Eucharist, by fervent prayer, and by a spiritual retreat. This shall be done more intensely and in a special way before perpetual profession.  

LR II11-13

34

1When the novitiate has been completed and the suitability of the novice has been ascertained, temporary profession of vows is made for a period determined by the minister with the novice himself, to be renewed freely until perpetual profession. But if his

suitability is still in doubt, the time of probation can be prolonged by the minister, but not beyond six months. If then the novice is judged unsuited, he must be dismissed.

CIC 653 §2

  2The time of this profession shall not be shorter than three years nor longer than six, though it may be extended if it seems appropriate, but in such a way that the entire period during which the brother is bound by temporary vows does not exceed nine years.

CIC 655; 657 §2

  3If a brother is judged suitable and freely requests it, perpetual profession is made at a time determined by the minister after consultation with the one making profession, as long as the full three-year period of temporary profession is observed and never before the completion of at least twenty-one years of age. By means of perpetual profession a brother is definitively incorporated into the brotherhood of the Order with all the rights and obligations set out in the Constitutions. CIC 654; 657 §1, §3; 658; 684 §2; 685 §1; 689 §§11-3
  4When the period for which temporary profession was made is completed, a brother may leave the Order. For a valid reason, the competent minister, after he has consulted his council, may exclude him from renewal of temporary vows or decline to admit him to perpetual profession.

CIC 657 §1

  5All other prescriptions of universal law pertaining to profession must be observed, especially those concerning the disposal of the brother’s goods before temporary and perpetual profession.

CIC 656; 658; 668 §1-5

 

35

1Our religious habit is given during the celebration of first profession, even though the novices may have previously received “the clothes of probation.”

PC 17; ESa I,25,2d; CIC 659 §1

  2Our habit, according to the Rule and custom of the Order, consists of a tunic with a hood, chestnut in colour, a cord and sandals, or, for a good reason, shoes. With regard to the custom of wearing a beard, the principle of pluriformity applies.

PC 17; ESa I,25,2d

3C 2

3Remembering that Saint Francis wore a penitential garment made in the shape of a cross, we, too, wear the habit as a reminder of conversion, a sign of consecration to God, and of belonging to the Order. In this way we also express our condition as lesser brothers, so that even the clothes we wear witness to poverty.

CIC 669 §1

2C 130-132; LMj I 6

4Clothed as we are with the meek and humble Christ, we must not pretend to be lesser ones, but truly be so in heart, word and deed, since our outward signs of humility are of little use for the salvation of others if we ourselves are not inspired by an inner spirit of humility.

Mt 11:29; Gal 3:27; Rom 13:14

ER VI 3.VII 1ff; LR II 14-17;

2C 130; 183

5Therefore, after the example of Saint Francis, let us make every effort to become good and not merely to appear so, to be the same in word and deed. Considering ourselves “lowly and subject to all,” as the Rule admonishes us, let us show esteem and respect to others.

Rom 12:10; Phil 2:3

 

36

1The Provincial Minister, and by special mandate those mentioned in number 20, have the faculty to dismiss a postulant or novice whom they judge unsuitable for our life.

CIC 653 §1

  2For a serious reason allowing of no delay, the master of novices or postulants has the same faculty, but with the consent of the local council. The appropriate minister must be notified immediately of this action.  
  3The General Minister, with the consent of his council, can grant an indult of departure to a brother in temporary vows who requests it for a serious reason. As the law itself provides, this indult includes a dispensation from vows and from all obligations arising from profession.

CIC 702 §1; 688 §2; 692

 
4Regarding transfers to another institute of consecrated life or to a society of apostolic life, departures from the Order, and dismissals of a brother after either temporary or perpetual profession, the prescriptions of the universal law of the Church are to be observed.

CIC 684 §1-3; 691-699 §1; 700; 703

Article VI

Formation for Work and Ministry

 

37

1Called as we are to the gospel life by one and the same religious vocation, all of us, in imitation of Saint Francis and following Capuchin tradition, are bound to express the apostolic nature of our vocation by the witness of our life in all the assignments we undertake in obedience and brotherly communion.

 

Test 21;

AC 62

2Therefore, mindful of the admonition of Saint Francis in his Testament: “Let those who do not know how to work, learn,” may we strive to acquire the necessary preparation for any service that is required of us.  
3Indeed, it is difficult to do any work properly without special and suitable formation.  

ER VII 3-7;

LR V 1;

IV PCO 22;

4It is the duty of the Order to help every brother to develop his own “grace of working,” because it is by working that the brothers support one another in their vocation and strengthen the harmony of their life in brotherhood.

CIC 670

ER II 5;

Test 20;

ScEx 22

5Formation for work and ministry shall be planned in such a way that the brothers, in accordance with their talents and vocation, are sufficiently prepared for the duties and offices they will have to fulfil. Therefore some may learn skills and technical trades, while others engage in pastoral or technical studies, especially those of a sacred character.

OT 8; PO 14; PC 6, 8

LR VIII 8;

FFCh 35;

FrCh 3,3; 3,6;

6The greatest care shall be taken to ensure that preparation for work and the apostolate is conducted in a true spirit of service, compatible with religious consecration, and in harmony with the journey of initiation, ensuring the primacy of life in brotherhood.  

LR X 8

38

1Let all the brothers remember that, while serving the Lord in minority, “they must desire above all else to have the Spirit of the Lord and His holy activity.”

Rom 12:11; CIC 673

LR V 1;

IV PCO 49ff; 57

2Therefore, while acquiring manual skills and a sound education, let them seek to become holy and, at the same time, competent in their particular “grace of working.” OT 9,15
3Let them prepare themselves for the apostolic life in keeping with their gifts and aptitudes in a spirit of self-denial and self-discipline. In this way, through personal formation and the development of their education, they contribute to the good of the Order, the Church, and society.  
4Studies, given light and life by the love of Christ, must be entirely in keeping with our way of life.  

2C 102; 194-195;

LMj XI 1

5While engaged in studies, therefore, let the brothers develop their hearts and minds in such a way that, in keeping with the intention of Saint Francis, they grow in their vocation. In fact, formation for any type of work is an integral part of our religious life.  
 

39

1In our apostolic Order, a pastoral concern shall so permeate the entire formation that all the brothers, according to each one's abilities, are able to proclaim by deed and word the Kingdom of God as disciples and prophets of our Lord Jesus Christ. The pastoral needs of the regions, as well as the missionary and ecumenical responsibility of the Church, shall be kept in mind.

OT 4,8; 16; 19-21; PC 2c; 6; 8; AG 26; PO 14; 19; UR 10; CIC 758; 783

  2The disciplines of philosophy and theology shall be taught side by side with Franciscan teaching so that they converge harmoniously, gradually opening minds and hearts to the mystery of Christ.

OT 14-16

  3This formation shall take place in the study centres of the Order, either provincial or interprovincial. When this is not possible because of the conditions in a region or a province or because of other particular requirements, the brothers may attend other study centres. When possible, collaboration with Franciscan institutes is preferred, and care shall be taken to ensure suitable Capuchin Franciscan formation.

OT 4; 7; ESa II, 36ff

  4The brothers who are called to sacred orders must be trained in accordance with the norms laid down by the Church, taking into account the character of our brotherhood. The consent of the Provincial Minister and his council is required for the reception of sacred orders.

OT intr.; 8ff; 13ff; DV 24; ESa II,33; 35; 37; CIC 250; 659 §3; 1027; 1032 §1-3; 1036; Ratio (?)

 

40

1Those engaged in the work of formation shall be aware that the brothers in training are the principal authors of their own formation, the responsibility for which rests primarily upon them, in trusting collaboration with the formation personnel.

OT 5;11; 15ff; PO 19; CIC 652 §3

  2The brothers charged with teaching shall, before anything else, present the witness of their lives and promote among themselves and with the students a profound communion of thought and action. In their teaching and in conversations with students they shall adopt an interactive method which enables the brothers in formation to acquire a culture that is dynamic and integrated.

OT 15; 17; CIC 252 §1; 254 §1

ER XIX 1-2

3Let them prepare and present their lectures carefully, guided by the Church's magisterium, taking care to keep up-to-date in their own disciplines and to adapt their lectures to new requirements.

OT 16

4Finally, it is recommended that they engage in scholarly research, writing and publication, especially in Franciscan subjects. For this purpose, Franciscan institutes promoted by the Order can offer assistance to these and other brothers.  

Article VII

On-going Formation

1C 103

41

1Mindful of Saint Francis and of his exhortation: “Brothers, let us begin to serve the Lord God, because until now we have done little or nothing”, let all of us be aware of the need for ongoing formation.

 

IV PCO 70ff; GUW 9-11

2Ongoing formation is a process of personal and community renewal and of harmonious adaptation of structures and activities, by which we are enabled to live our gospel vocation in actual everyday situations.

PC 2d-e; 3; 18; OT 22; GS 4; 35; 38; ESa I,7; CIC 661

GUW 14-14

3Ongoing formation involves the whole person in a holistic manner. It has, however, a twofold dimension: in the first place, spiritual conversion achieved through a continual return to the sources of Christian life and to the primitive spirit of the Order, carried out in forms adapted to times and cultures; secondly, cultural and professional renewal, achieved through educational and specialized adaptation to the conditions of the times. All of this promotes greater creative fidelity to our vocation.  

IV PCO 72; 74;

GUW 5-6

42

1Ongoing formation is intended for all the brothers, since it is nothing other than a continuous development of our vocation. Therefore, without a doubt and above all else, it is the duty and the right of each brother to apply himself to his own ongoing formation.

CIC 279 §1-3; 661

2All the ministers and guardians shall regard it as the primary ordinary duty of their pastoral service to promote the ongoing formation of the brothers entrusted to them. CIC 661
3In particular, the same ministers and the others responsible for formation shall take care to develop in those who are admitted to the Order the conviction that they must attend to their own formation for the whole of their lives, because no brother who has finished initial formation can claim to be fully equipped for the rest of his life.  

PGFP

GUW 19ff

43

1The Order shall have at its disposal formation resources that are compatible with our charism, and shall make them available to all the brothers.

 

IV PCO 72; 74ff; VI PCO 8

2Each circumscription shall enact norms for ongoing formation adapted to different places, conditions of persons, and times.  
3Let the programme be systematic, dynamic and integrated, embracing the whole religious life in the light of the Gospel and the spirit of our brotherhood.

CIC 279 §1-3; 661

4Daily living greatly assists ongoing formation. Indeed, the first school of formation is the daily experience of religious life, with its normal rhythm of prayer, reflection, life in brotherhood, and work.  
5Additionally, special means are also recommended, e.g., new or renewed ventures in ongoing formation, with the cooperation and help of either the local or provincial fraternity, within each province, region or Conference of major superiors.

  6The ministers shall take care that suitable brothers receive special training at institutes, schools and universities in the sacred sciences, as well as in the other sciences, the arts, and the professions, as seems appropriate for the service of the Church and the Order.

PC 18; CIC 819

  7Our International College in Rome is recommended for fostering the spirit of brotherhood in the whole Order, for the further pursuit of formation, and for promoting Franciscan culture.

CIC 819

2C 62; 180; 2MP 5; L3C 43

8It is further recommended that libraries and other cultural assets of the Order be protected and valued, recognizing their formative functions as a testimony to our identity, spirituality, and apostolic activity.  

44

1Let each brother enthusiastically commit himself to walk worthily in the Capuchin Franciscan vocation to which God has called him.

1Cor 7:24; LG 47

2All of us, therefore, shall strive to maintain and strengthen for ourselves and for others the gift of a religious vocation and perseverance by faithful cooperation with divine grace, prudent watchfulness, and constant prayer.

CIC 285 §1-2; 598 §2; 664; 672

3Let us also beware, brothers, of apostasy of the heart which occurs when, because of tepidity, someone hides a worldly heart beneath a religious exterior, abandons the spirit and love of his vocation, and yields to a worldly spirit of pride and sensuality. Remembering the apostle's admonition: “Do not be conformed to this world”, let us rather avoid whatever savours of sin and weakens religious life.

Rom 12:2

ER XVII 17-19; XXII 9-10; LR III 10-13; X 8; LtOrd 8-10;

V PCO 64; 82ff

4Therefore, “now that we have left the world, let us strive to desire nothing else, to wish for nothing else, to take pleasure in nothing else, than to follow the Spirit of the Lord and His holy activity” and to please Him always, so that we may truly be brothers, poor, meek, thirsting for holiness, merciful and clean of heart: brothers, in fact, through whom the world may know the peace and goodness of God.

Mt 5:3-9; LG 41


CHAPTER III

OUR LIFE OF PRAYER

III PCO 6ff; IV PCO 36a; 37-40; V PCO 1-14

45

1Prayer to God is the breathing of love stirred into life by the Holy Spirit through whom the inner man begins to listen to the voice of God speaking to his heart.

Hos 2:16; Rom 7:22; 8:26; Eph 3:16; LG 4

II PCO 8; 19

2In fact, God has been the first to love us and speaks to us in many ways: in all creatures, in the signs of the times, in the lives of people, in our hearts and, above all, through His Word in the history of salvation.

Heb 1:1-2; 1Jn 4:10; GS 11,34; 45; DV 3

II PCO 6ff

3As we respond in prayer to God Who speaks to us, we become fully ourselves by leaving self-love behind and, in communion with God and with people, we pass over into Christ who is both God and man.  
4For Christ Himself is our life, our prayer, and our activity.  

II PCO 7

5Therefore, we truly carry on a filial conversation with the Father when we live Christ and pray in His Spirit, Who cries out in our hearts: “Abba, Father!”

Phil 1:21; Rom 8:15; Gal 3:16

II PCO 2; 8; III PCO 38; IV PCO 37-40

6We are consecrated more intensely to the service of God through our profession of the gospel counsels. Therefore we strive in the freedom of the Spirit to grow faithfully and steadfastly in this life of prayer.

LG 44; PC 5; 6; CIC 607 §1

LR X 9; LtAnt 2; LMj IX 1; X 2; 2C 95

7This is why, with the strongest commitment, we cultivate “the Spirit of holy prayer and devotion to which all time-bound things must contribute.” We do this to become true followers of Saint Francis, who seemed not so much to pray as to have become the embodiment of prayer.

CIC 663 §1

LR X 8-9

8”Desiring above all things the Spirit of the Lord and His holy activity, and praying to God always with a pure heart,” we offer people the witness of genuine prayer, so that all may see on our faces and experience in the life of our fraternities the reflection of God’s goodness and kindness present in the world.

2Tm 2:22; Ti 3:4

II PCO 14; 19; 31ff; IV PCO 40; V PCO 7ff, 23

46

1May our prayer, then, be a distinctive manifestation of our calling as lesser brothers.

 

ER XXII 32-34

ER IX 1-3; XVII 17-19; LtOrd 9

2We truly pray as brothers when we gather together in the name of Christ in mutual love, so that the Lord is actually in our midst.

3We pray as lesser ones when we live with the poor and humble Christ, so that we offer the cry of the poor to the Father and effectively share their lot.

Mt 18: 20; PC 15

II PCO 9; 14; ER XXII 41; LtOrd 50

4Let us therefore remain faithful to what we have promised, fulfilling in our lives what the Lord wants and wanting what is pleasing to Him.  

II PCO 9

5In this way, prayer and activity, far from being in opposition, complement each other as they are inspired by one and the same Spirit of the Lord.

CIC 675 §2

ER XVII 17-19; XXIII; PrG 3; PrOF 2; PrG 11; LtOrd 9; 2LtF 62; CtC 1-14; AC 100; II PCO 17ff

6Franciscan prayer is affective, a prayer of the heart, which leads us to an intimate experience of God. When we contemplate “God, who is the supreme Good and all Good, from Whom all good proceeds,” our hearts should burst forth in adoration, thanksgiving, wonder, and praise.  

II PCO 16; 18; V PCO 28; 64; 82ff

7Beholding Christ in all creatures, let us go about in the world proclaiming peace and penance and inviting all to praise God as witnesses of His love.  

II PCO 36ff

47

1Being consecrated to the service of God by means of Baptism and more closely united to Him through religious profession, we hold in the greatest esteem the sacred liturgy, which is the exercise of the priestly office of Christ, the summit of all the Church’s activity and the source of all Christian life. May we nourish our individual and fraternal spiritual life from this same source and open up its treasures to the faithful.

LG 10; PC 6; 15; SC 2; 7; 10; 12; 19; 22; PO 5; 14; OT 16; CD 35,4; ESa I, 22ff; CIC 204 §1; 573 §1; 654;

834 §1; 849; 897

1C 45; 2C 96

2For this reason, we have the greatest veneration for the mystery of the Eucharist and for the Divine Office. This, as Francis wanted, moulds the entire life of the brotherhood.

PC 6

RSP 75; VII PCO 17

3Let us take part in the sacred liturgy with devotion and with dignified outward behaviour.

SC 99

II PCO 38

4We carefully cultivate fidelity to the liturgical norms, according to their genuine spirit, doing so with creativity, spontaneity, and respect for local cultures.  

II PCO 38; GIRM 23; 201; EP 17

5So that the word of God may penetrate our hearts, and renew our lives ever more profoundly through inward participation in the divine mysteries, we give appropriate space to silence in our celebrations as part of the liturgical action. GILH 23

LtOrd 41

6In imitation of Saint Francis, who frequently expressed his feelings in song and music, the liturgy is celebrated with singing as far as possible, particularly on feast days. However, let us pay attention not so much to the vocal melody as to our inward participation, so that our voices may be in harmony with our minds, and our minds with God.

SC 90; 99

II CPO 38 7As far as the rite is concerned, the brothers comply with the prescriptions issued by the competent ecclesiastical authorities of the region where they live.  

LtOrd 29; Adm I 16-22; II PCO 37; 39

48

1We participate fully, consciously, and actively in the Eucharist, the source of the Church’s life: the root, the focal point, and the very heart of our life as brothers. We celebrate the Paschal Mystery of Jesus Christ until He comes, holding back nothing of ourselves, so that “He who offered himself totally to us may receive us totally.”

1Cor 11:26; LG 3; 7; 11; 26; 28; SC 6; 11; 14; 17; 19; 21; 26ff; 30; 41; 48; 57; CD 15; GS 38; PC 6; PO 6; 7; 13; VC 95; UT 15; CIC 897

LtOrd 30-31; 2C 201; LMj IX 2; II PCO 37

2In the breaking of the Eucharistic Bread we are raised to communion with Christ and with one another, manifesting the unity of the sacrifice, the priesthood, and the brotherhood. To make this more evident, we celebrate a Mass daily in all our houses as a fraternity. Should this not be possible, the Eucharist with the participation of all the brothers is to be celebrated frequently. 1Cor 10:26; CIC 608; 663 §2; 897; 899 §1
3Let the Eucharist, in which our Lord Jesus Christ Himself is present to us under the consecrated species, be reserved in our oratories and churches in a most fitting place and manner.

CIC 608; 934 §1; 936; 938 §1

Adm I 16-21; LtOrd 26-33; 2LtCl 3; Test 10; 2C 201; AC 80; LMj IX 2

4After the example of Saint Francis, let us adore with faith, humble reverence, and devotion Jesus Christ present in the Eucharist. With Him, let us offer ourselves and our actions to God the Father through the Spirit, and frequently spend time in fervent prayer before Him, the spiritual centre of our brotherhood.

SC 7; PO 18; CIC 608; 663 §2; VC 95

II PCO 36; V PCO 28

49

1The Liturgy of the Hours, which extends the grace of the Eucharist to the different hours of each day, is the prayer of Christ, who unites the Church to Himself in praise and humble intercession which He forever presents to the Father on behalf of all humanity.

SC 7; 8; 83-85; 89a; 90; 98-101; GILH 12; PO 5; 13; CIC 1173

2Let us celebrate worthily the Liturgy of the Hours to which the Church binds us in virtue of our profession in order to share in the eternal hymn of praise brought into the world by the Incarnate Word, and to blend our voices with that of the Church speaking to Christ, her Bridegroom. This is a foretaste of the praise that unceasingly resounds before the throne of God and of the Lamb.

CIC 1174 §1; 1175; SC 84; GILH 15-16

ER III 3; LR III 1-4; Test 30; LtOrd 40-44; LMj VIII 9; L3C 41;

3The entire fraternity, therefore, gathers together each day in the name of Christ, to give thanks to the Father in the Holy Spirit by recalling the memory of the mysteries of salvation through the Liturgy of the Hours, by which the mystery of Christ permeates and transfigures time. When this cannot be done for all the Hours, at least Morning and Evening Prayer are to be celebrated in common. GILH 12
4We recommend, moreover, that the brothers do the same wherever they may live or may happen to be, and that the Liturgy of the Hours be celebrated with the faithful   according to the circumstances of the place.

CIC 1174 §2

RH 3-6; 2C 64; 11

5Let the local chapter, with the approval of the minister, arrange the schedule and work of the house in such a way that the course of the day and all our activities are sanctified by the praise of God. The circumstances of individuals, times, and cultures are to be taken into account.

SC 88; ESa II,26; CIC 1175

GILH 11

  6Whenever we cannot celebrate the Liturgy of the Hours in common, let us remember that, even when praying the office individually, we are united spiritually with the whole Church and especially with the brothers. Let those brothers who say the Office of the Lord’s Prayer according to the Rule pray it with the same profound intention.

SC 84ff; 98

50

1Let our prayer be inspired by the teaching of the prophets and psalmists and, above all, by the example of the Son of God who, in taking on the human condition, shares even in His prayer, in all that His brothers and sisters experience, and, offering himself, intercedes for them before His Father.

CCC 2602

V PCO 7; Test 1-3; LMj I 6; 1C 17; 2C 9; L3C 11

2Saint Francis, who discovered the divine plan in contemplation, wished to share fully in Christ’s love for humanity by embracing lepers and proclaiming to all the good news of hope and peace through conversion.  

V PCO 6-7; VII PCO 31

3Our first Capuchin brothers, while giving primacy to a life of contemplation and solitude, were also mindful of and concerned for people’s needs, and experienced the presence of God in everyday events and human situations.  
  4Following their example, we strive to discern signs of God’s love in the unfolding of history, in the religious sense of the people, and in the distinct cultures of various regions.

ET 44

  5Therefore, let our prayer be an expression of universal solidarity and compassion. Conforming ourselves closely to the prayer of Christ, we become the voice of every situation, taking on ourselves the joys and hopes, the grief and the anguish of every human person.

CCC 2634; MisPref IV; GS 1

ER III 4.10; LR III 3; 2C 101; 164; AC 103; 3LAg 2886

51

1Conscious that in prayer we work with God for the coming of His Kingdom and the building up of the Body of Christ, and recalling the catholic spirit of Saint Francis, we implore the Lord for holy Mother Church, the pope, those who govern us, all peoples, the salvation of the entire world, and, in particular, for the entire Franciscan family, and our benefactors.

1Tm 2:1-2; LG 44; 49ff; SC 53; GS 18

LR VI 2

2Faith in the risen Christ sustains our hope and keeps alive our communion with brothers and sisters who are resting in the peace of Christ. United with them in an exchange of spiritual gifts, in the celebration of the Eucharist and in our prayers, let us commend all the deceased to the merciful God. With gratitude and charity, let us offer the special suffrages prescribed by the Ordinances of the General Chapters.

LG 49-51

 

52

1Each Sunday, the Church keeps the memory of Christ’s resurrection and, during the liturgical year, with the Paschal Triduum at its very heart, she recalls the mysteries of redemption and dispenses them to all the faithful, so that they may be filled with the grace of salvation.

SC 102; MyP; GNLYC

  2We live Sunday as the weekly Easter, listening to the Word in the unity of the one bread broken to revitalize our life in brotherhood. Let us devote ourselves generously to pastoral service on the Lord’s day. By celebrating the gift of creation with joy and thanksgiving, we nourish in ourselves the ardent expectation of the everlasting Sunday which will usher us into God’s eternal rest.

SC 106; DD 1-2; 19-22.24-30ff

  3We wholeheartedly embrace the wealth of grace that flows to us from the celebration of the liturgical year and from the sacraments. This fountain of spirit and of life, an inexhaustible source of spiritual nourishment, is the sure guide of our formation. MyP 1
  4By celebrating the mysteries of salvation, as children of God we allow the Holy Spirit to lead us in prayer so that we grow more and more in Christ, until we reach the fullness of communion with the Father and with our brothers and sisters.  

ER XXIII 3; Adm I 16; 2LtF 4ff; 1C 84; 2C 199; LMj X 7; II PCO 15

5In the spirit of the holy Gospel and following the course of the liturgical year, in a special way we reflect upon and preach to the faithful the mysteries of the humanity of Christ, in particular His nativity and His passion, in which Saint Francis marvelled at the Lord’s love and humility.

LG 46; 53; 58ff; 61ff; 66ff; OT 8; SC 19; 104-105ff; PC 25; PO 18

2LtF 5; ER IX 5; 1C 21; 2C 83; 85; 198; 200; LMj III 1; VII 1; IX 1; L3C 15

6On the feasts of the Virgin Mary also, and on the memorials of the saints, the Church proclaims the Passover of her Lord. With particular devotion therefore, especially through liturgical worship, the Angelus and the Rosary, we venerate “Mary, the Mother of God and the Virgin conceived without sin, daughter and handmaid of the Father, Mother of the Son, and spouse of the Holy Spirit, the virgin made Church” according to the expression of Saint Francis, and we promote devotion to her among the people. She is, indeed, our mother and advocate, the patroness of our Order, the companion of her Son in His poverty and sufferings and, as experience shows, the way to the spirit of Christ poor and crucified.

SC 103-105; MCult 41; DPPL 195; Lk 1:38; CIC 246 §3; 276 §2; 663 §4

  7At the same time, in accordance with ancient tradition, we devoutly venerate Saint Joseph, the faithful spouse of the Virgin Mary, guardian of the Redeemer and humble worker.  

1C 115; 2C 221; LMj Pr; L3C 73

8Let us encourage and promote, according to local custom, devotion to our holy Father Francis, the model of lesser ones, to Saint Clare, and to the saints, especially our own, taking care that such veneration always conforms to the spirit of the sacred liturgy. LG 45; SC 13; 104; 108; 111; CIC 1186-1187

LR X 8-9; ER XX 27-31ff; LMn 4

53

1In the liturgy God Himself comes to meet us and speaks to us in His word. With hearts receptive and filled with trust, let us respond in prayer using His own words taken from Scripture.

SC 7.10-12.24.35

2It is God’s word that gives birth to and builds up our life of consecration. Following the example of Saint Francis, let us cultivate a profound familiarity with it in order to grow in the experience of God and give clear gospel witness to the Church and the world.

PC 6; DV 21; 26; CIC 276 §2; 652 §2; 663 §3; Syn12 (?); VD 83

3Let us dedicate sufficient time each day to the prayerful reading of Sacred Scripture and nourish true devotion by reading other spiritual books as well.

Syn12 22; 9; 32; 55; VD 71; 82; 86

4Moreover, we cultivate our gospel life in brotherhood by assigning times for sharing the word of God and allowing it to challenge us.

DV 25

Const 1536 I p. 3, 27; II PCO 12

5So that we may always keep before our mind’s eye the way and life that we have professed, let each circumscription issue norms both for the public reading of Sacred Scripture, the Rule, Testament, and Constitutions, and for the renewal of profession in common.

CIC 652 §2 663 §3; 276 §2; PC 6; DV 21; SC 51; Sp 76; Dt 6:6-9

 

54

1We preserve and promote the contemplative spirit that shines in the life of Saint Francis and of our first brothers. Therefore, we give greater importance to it by cultivating mental prayer.

 

Const 1536 III p. 9, 10

II PCO 12

2Mental prayer is the spiritual teacher of the brothers who, if they are true and spiritual lesser brothers, pray interiorly at all times. To pray, in fact, is nothing other than to speak to God with the heart; in truth, whoever speaks to God with his lips alone does not pray at all. For this reason each brother applies himself to mental prayer or contemplation and, according to the teaching of Christ, the best of teachers, endeavours to adore the eternal Father in spirit and truth, striving earnestly to enlighten the mind and enkindle the heart rather than to formulate words.

Is 29:13; Mt 15:8; Mk 7:6; Jn 4:23ff

ER XXII 26-31

3Genuine mental prayer leads us to the spirit of true worship, unites us profoundly with Christ, and continually intensifies the effects of the sacred liturgy in the spiritual life.

SC 12; 90; PO 5; 18; ESa II, 16,1; 21

II PCO 11

4Moreover, so that the spirit of prayer and prayer itself may never grow lukewarm within us, but may burn more intensely from day to day, we must apply ourselves each day to its practice.

CIC 276 §2; 663 §3

II PCO 11; 23ff; 27 5Let the ministers, the guardians, and others who are entrusted with the care of the spiritual life, do their best to ensure that all the brothers make progress in the knowledge and practice of mental prayer.

PC 13ff

ER V 2; II PCO 19

6Let the brothers draw from the genuine sources of Christian and Franciscan spirituality the spirit of prayer, and prayer itself, in order to acquire the surpassing knowledge of Jesus Christ.  

II PCO 10ff; 23; 26; 29; 31ff

55

1The fraternities and the individual brothers, wherever they may be, must make the primacy of the spirit and life of prayer a reality as required by the words and example of Saint Francis and by genuine Capuchin tradition.

CIC 578; 587 §1; 663 §1

2It is of the greatest importance to form one’s conscience about the vital necessity of personal prayer. Each brother, wherever he may be, is to make sufficient time each day for mental prayer, for example, one whole hour.  

StatAbr 2

3Let provincial and local chapters ensure that all brothers have the necessary time for mental prayer, both in common and in private.  

II PCO 6; 20; 23ff; 29; 34

4In local chapters let the fraternity raise the question of the communal and individual prayer of the brothers. The brothers and, first of all, the guardians because of their pastoral role, shall consider themselves mutually responsible for encouraging one another in the life of prayer.  
5As disciples of Christ, though poor and weak, we persevere in prayer, so that those who are sincerely seeking the Lord may feel drawn to pray with us.  
6May we also foster among the People of God the spirit and growth of prayer, above all interior prayer. This has been from the beginning the charism of our Capuchin brotherhood and, as history testifies, the seed of genuine renewal. Therefore, let us enthusiastically commit ourselves to become skilled in the art of prayer and to pass it on to others.  
7Education in prayer and in the experience of God, using a simple method, shall be a feature of our apostolic activity. The effort to make our fraternities genuine schools of prayer will bring great benefits.

NMI 32-34

II PCO 30

56

1For the continuous renewal of our religious life, all the brothers are to make an annual retreat and have other periods of recollection

 
2To this end, let the ministers and guardians arrange that each brother, even those who live outside a religious house, has the necessary time and opportunity to do so.  

I PCO 20

57

1Each fraternity must truly be a praying fraternity. The greatest care should be taken in all circumscriptions to form individual brothers and the fraternities themselves in the spirit and practice of prayer, using suitable means

1Pt 4:10

II PCO 25; V PCO 4,11; RH 1-10

2It would be beneficial to establish fraternities of recollection and of contemplation for one or several circumscriptions. The brothers who, in response to the variety of God’s grace, make up these fraternities shall, while living in communion with the provincial fraternity, keep in mind what Saint Francis wrote to those wishing to live in a religious way in hermitages.  

RH 1

3Let these fraternities of recollection be open to all other brothers who periodically wish to spend time there to devote themselves more intensely to the spirit and life of prayer, as God inspires them.  

RH 3; II PCO 28; 30

58

1Silence, the faithful guardian of the inner life required by charity in community, shall be highly esteemed in all our fraternities for the preservation of a life of prayer, study, and recollection.

 
2The local chapter is responsible for protecting the atmosphere of prayer and recollection in our fraternities, keeping out whatever might impede it.  

ER XXII 26

59

1”In the holy love which is God,” Saint Francis encourages all the brothers, “after they have overcome every obstacle and put aside all care and anxiety,” to resolve “to serve, love, honour, and adore the Lord God with a clean heart and a pure mind.”

 

LtOrd 233; PrOF 2-3.5

2Welcoming this appeal of our Father and Brother in an open and docile spirit, may we fix our eyes and hearts on God, so that, ”inwardly cleansed, interiorly enlightened, and burning with the fire of the Holy Spirit,” we may draw all people to the love of things invisible. In this way, a world athirst for God will be enlightened by the knowledge of the Lord and be filled with His heavenly bliss.

PVI Nc

ER XXII 27

3Guided by the Spirit, “let us make a home and an abiding dwelling place for Him who is the Lord God Almighty, Father, Son and Holy Spirit.”  

CHAPTER IV

OUR LIFE IN POVERTY

Article I

Our Commitment to Poverty

LtOrd 52

60

1God the Most High, perfect Trinity and simple Unity, is a mystery of humility. The pure relationship of love among the divine Persons, which overflows into creation and into salvation history, is the model of all human relationships and the foundation of our life in poverty and humility.

VC 21; CV 54

I PCO III,1ff; IV PCO 36b; 42-46; V PCO 29-40; VI PCO 1; 4

2The greatest manifestation of the humility of God is Jesus Christ the Son, who receives everything from the Father and with the Father shares all things in the Spirit. He was sent to bring the Good News to the poor. Though rich, He made Himself poor for our sakes, being born in human likeness, so that we might be enriched by His poverty.

Is 61:1; Mt 11:27; Lk 4:18; 10:22; Phil 2:7; 2Cor 8:9; LG 8; 39; 42; 46; PC 1; 13; PO 6; 17; GS 72; 88; AG 3; 5; SC 5; CD 13; CIC 600

3From His being placed at birth in the manger until His death on the cross He loved the poor and, as an example for His disciples, bore witness to the love of the Father who goes in search of them.

SC 19-21

4The Church recognises voluntary poverty, especially in religious, as a sign of the following of Christ, and proposes Saint Francis as a prophetic image of gospel poverty.

PC 1; 13; CIC 222 §2; 600; 640; 662

PrG; 1C 22; 94; 1C 84; L3C 25; 29; LMj II,4; VII 2; XIV 3, 4; L3C 19; AP 8; 2C 214; 217; 2C 194; VI PCO 11

5Awestruck by the beauty of God, who is humility, patience, and meekness, Saint Francis was led to choose poverty, which he experienced in the humility of the Incarnation and the charity of the Passion, so that he could follow naked the naked crucified Lord.

Phil 2:6; Ps 44,3; Jer 11:19; 2Cor 10:1; VC 24

6The gospel ideal of poverty led Francis to humility of heart, to radical dispossession of self, to compassion for the poor and the weak, and to sharing their life.  

VI PCO 5

61

1Holding fast to the gospel insights of Saint Francis and to the tradition of the Order, we undertake as our specific responsibility to follow the poverty of our Lord Jesus Christ in simplicity of life and joyful austerity, in hard work, trust in Providence, and in charity towards all.

 

ER IX 1-5; LtOrd 5

2Poverty, chosen in order to follow Christ, qualifies us to share in His relationship to the Father as a son, as a brother, and as a servant in the midst of people. In doing so, poverty leads us to live in solidarity with the little ones of this world. Phil 2:7; Mt 19:12; Jn 1:1

ER VII 13; IX 1-3; LR VI 4; VI PCO 1-6

3Commitment to the gospel ideal of poverty calls us to be available in love and to conform ourselves with Christ poor and crucified Who came into the world to serve.

Mt 20:28; Mk 10:45; Lk 22:27; LG 44; PC 13; CIC 222 §2; 600; 640; 662

ER VII 13; XVII 17-18; XXIII 1-5; LR VI 1; Adm II 3

4We do not claim the gifts of nature and grace as our own as if they were given only for ourselves, but strive to place them entirely at the service of the People of God.  

2C 73; 120; LMj VII 7; L3C 45

5We use temporal things gratefully and share them with those in need and, at the same time, give an example of the right use of things to people who are greedy for them.

CIC 222 §2; 600; 640; 662

ER IX 1-3;

6We will be genuinely proclaiming to the poor that God is with them to the degree that we are available to them and truly share in their condition.  

I PCO 3,2ff; 8; VI PCO 12

62

1For our individual and communal poverty to be authentic, it must be the expression of an interior poverty that needs no explanation.

PC 13; PO 17; ESa II,23; CIC 282 §1-2; 578; 586 §1; 587 §1; 600; 631 §1; 635 §2; 640

VII PCO 26

2Poverty demands a frugal and simple lifestyle. Let us, therefore, strive to reduce our material needs to a minimum in order to live only on what is necessary, decisively rejecting consumerism in our attitude and practice.  

VII PCO 26;

CCFW 24; 6.2; VII PCO 4.

3Austerity makes us more amenable to spiritual values, preserves us from anything that weakens our relationship with God and our brothers and sisters, and opens us to solidarity.  

VI PCO 18; ER 5,12-15

4Minority demands that we do not seek for ourselves any form of prestige, power or dominion, whether in society, in politics, or in the Church. Rather, let us choose to be servants and subjects of every human creature, accepting the precariousness and vulnerability of our condition as lesser brothers.

Rom 15:27; 12:1; Mt 20:25; Mt 25:31-46; Mk 9:33-37; 10:42-45; Lk 22:24-27; 1Pt 5:3

VI PCO 3

5May we, therefore, embrace all the demands of living without anything of our own, conscious that, without minority, poverty is meaningless and becomes pride, just as minority without poverty is a sham.  

I PCO 1,4; V PCO 28-40; 45; 55; 63-102; VI PCO 21-26

63

1We live in conscious solidarity with the countless poor of the world and, through our apostolic activity encourage people, especially Christians, to undertake works of justice and charity to promote the common good.

CIC 222 §1-2; 528 §1; 672; 747 §2; 768 §2

VI PCO 9-10

2Worthy of praise are those brothers who, in particular local situations, live with the poor and share in their conditions and aspirations, thereby encouraging them to work for better social and cultural conditions and to hope for the good things that never end.  

VI PCO 9

3Nevertheless, let it be clear that by preferring to choose the poor we are challenged as a brotherhood and required to make joint decisions leading to concrete action.  

VI PCO 4

64

1We practise common life and gladly share with one another whatever is given to individuals.

CIC 602; 607 §2; 619

2In virtue of our religious profession we are bound to hand over to the fraternity all assets that come to us in any way, including salaries, pensions, grants, insurance policies, etc.

CIC 619; 668 §3, §5; 670

VI PCO 44;

VII PCO 9

3The fraternity provides each brother with food, clothing and whatever is necessary for the exercise of his office. Out of respect for the same dignity enjoyed by all the brothers, we avoid all forms of privilege and seek equity rather than equality. In addition, may we always be mindful that our lifestyle must be a witness of gospel poverty, minority, and brotherhood in the diverse social and cultural contexts.  

2C 185

4Let the ministers and guardians give to the brothers an example of minority in safeguarding poverty and promoting its observance.

CIC 619

I PCO 3,2ff; 8; VI PCO 12; LR IV 2

65

1Since commitment to gospel poverty is essential to our form of life, in our general, provincial, and local chapters we make decisions about how to observe it ever more faithfully in ways that are adapted to the changing times and the diversity of places. For this reason, these ways are always in need of reform.

PC 13; PO 17; ESa II,23; CIC 282 §1-2; 578; 586 §1; 587 §1; 600; 631 §1; 635 §2; 640

  2With mutual charity and docility to the Spirit of the Lord, may we frequently evaluate our way of observing poverty; our personal and communal style of shall always be simple and austere, the witness of our fraternities prophetic and credible, and our mission to the poor generous and authentic.  

Article II

Poverty in Property and Money

LR VI 1; 2C56; LMj VII 2; AC 13; I PCO III,9

66

1Let us observe the poverty we have promised, remembering the intentions and words of Saint Francis: “The brothers shall appropriate nothing to themselves, neither house, nor place, nor anything at all.”

 

1C 76; 2C 83; LMj VIII 5

2May we use temporal resources for the necessities of life, the apostolate, and works of charity, especially toward the poor.

LG 8; PO 17; CIC 1254 §1; 1285

ER VI 2; Test 24; LMj VII 9; 2C 165; 217

3Therefore “as pilgrims and strangers in this world, while on our way to the land of the living, let us serve the Lord in poverty and humility.”

1Pt 2:11

ER XXII 9; XXIII 8-11, 25-26; 1C 29; 2C 16-17; LMj III 7, 10; L3C 36; 50-51

67

1As children of the eternal Father, putting aside anxious care, may we rely on divine providence and entrust ourselves to God’s infinite goodness.

Mt 6:25-34; PC 13

2C 45; LMj VII 9; AC 32

2Therefore, we do not store up material things excessively, even those necessary for sustenance. CIC 634 §2

ER VII 3-6; LR V; Test 20; 2C 161; LMj V 6; VI PCO 14-16

3We acquire the means and resources for the necessities of life and the apostolate chiefly through our own work.  

ER VII 16; VIII 3; IX 1-9; Test 22; 2C 70-71; LMj VII 8; VI PCO 20

4Should these be lacking, “we may have recourse to the table of the Lord” with confidence, according to the laws of the universal and particular Church. While we seek alms from the people, we give them a witness of brotherhood, minority, poverty, and Franciscan joy.

CIC 1265 §1

ER VII 7; VIII 3-12; LR VI; VI PCO 3; 6

68

1Saint Francis, true to his own charism of poverty and minority in the Church, commanded his sons not to accept money in any way, since it was a sign of wealth, a temptation to greed, and an instrument of domination in the world.

Mt 10:9; Lk 9:3; CIC 586-587; 631 §1

VI PCO 29;

2However, because times have changed and the use of money has become necessary, the brothers, wanting to fulfil the will of our Seraphic Father, use money only as an ordinary means of exchange and social life, necessary even for the poor, and do so according to the prescriptions of our particular law.  

ER VIII 3,7,10; VI PCO 29

69

1The ministers and guardians, whose duty it is, in virtue of their office, to care for the needs of the brothers, may use money for the necessities of life and for works of the apostolate and charity.

CIC 619; 670

2All the brothers, in accordance with the norms of each circumscription, have an obligation to account for the money entrusted to them for the necessities of life.

CIC 600

3But for everyone, be they ministers or guardians or the other brothers, the use of money must always be such that it does not exceed what is truly compatible with being poor.  
4To remain faithful to poverty, the brothers shall not ask their friends or relatives for money or other things, nor receive gifts for their exclusive use without the permission of the guardian or minister.  

VI PCO 37

70

1The ministers, with the consent of their council, may make use of insurance policies and other forms of social security where these are prescribed by ecclesiastical or civil authority, either for everyone or for members of certain categories, or are commonly used by the poor of the area.

PO 21; CIC 668 §3; 1284 §1

2But let them diligently avoid all those forms of security which have the appearance of luxury or profit-making in the area in which they live.

CIC 634 §2; 640

3It is appropriate, however, that the ministers and guardians, like people of modest means, deposit whatever money is really necessary in banks or similar institutions, observing the precepts of our proper law.

CIC 1284 §2; 1294 §2

4But they may not accept foundations, perpetual legacies, or inheritances to which perpetual rights and obligations are attached.

CIC 1304, 1305

1C 39; LMj IV 7; L3C 45; I PCO III, 6ff; VI PCO 7

71

1Let the brothers show people by their life that voluntary poverty liberates them from greed, the root of all evil, and from anxious concern for the future.

Mt 6:19ff; 1Tm 6:10; PC 13; CIC 600

  2Therefore, the ministers and guardians shall carefully avoid any financial speculation or accumulation, except for a modest margin of financial security.

Mt 6:19ff; CIC 286; 634 §2; 672

VI PCO 12-13

3For every use of resources, including money, the circumscriptions, fraternities, and brothers shall apply a precise and practical principle: the minimum necessary, not the maximum allowed. It shall be applied in accordance with the different social conditions in which they live.  

I PCO II,2; III, 1ff; 10; V PCO 38; VI PCO 21-24

4So that the brothers do not become degenerate sons of Saint Francis by keeping things unjustly, let them hand over resources not needed for the fraternity to the ministers, for the needs of the circumscription and of the Order, or for distribution to the poor, or for social development, according to the norms established by the provincial chapter. Let the brothers frequently reflect on all of this in the local chapter.

PC 13; GS 69ff; ESa II,23; CIC 222 §2; 640

CCFW 6,2; VI PCO 31; VII PCO 26

5In the local chapter let the brothers, according to the spirit of the Constitutions, talk about the correct use of resources regarding food, clothing, gifts made to individuals and to the community, the use of the media and technology, travel and similar matters.

CIC 600; 634 §2; 635 §2

VI PCO 11-12

6Let us also reflect on what means we use to carry out our tasks and ministries, always choosing those that are suited to our state as lesser brothers.  

ER IX 10-11; LR VI 7-8;

VI PCO 22; CCFW (2.2

72

1Following the teaching of Saint Francis, in a spirit of minority, let us trustingly make known to one another our every need, recognizing our mutual dependence as an essential component of brotherly communion and a source of mutual support.

 

VI PCO 21; SRS 38;

SMD 3.1

2We practise solidarity, a preeminent expression of brotherly love, and resolutely commit ourselves to the good of each and every person, because we are all responsible for one another.

CV 38-39;

I PCO II,2

3In case of need, individual fraternities of the same area and even circumscriptions of the Order shall promptly and in a spirit of sacrifice share even their necessary resources.

PC 13

VI PCO 21-28; 36; 27

4We express our solidarity with all the brothers and sisters of the Franciscan Family, and, in collaboration with them, share with all people of good will the commitment to promote justice and a fair distribution of resources.  
  5We promote a culture of sharing, raising people’s awareness that resources are meant for everyone and must be used with a sense of responsibility for future generations. In this way we endorse genuine economic and social development based on ethical and religious principles, founded on a heightened sense of God, of the dignity of the human person, and of justice and peace among peoples.  

Article III

Poverty in Our Buildings

ER VII 13; LR VI 2; Test 24; 2C 56-57; LMj VII 2; VI PCO 38-40

73

1We must live in humble and poor houses, always residing there “as pilgrims and strangers.”

 

ER VII 13; 2C 61; AC 32; LMj VII 9; V PCO 28; VI PCO 12-13; VII PCO 27b; 49

2When choosing the site of a new house, let us not lose sight of our life of poverty, the living conditions of the poor of the region, the spiritual good of the brothers, and the requirements of the various ministries that are to be exercised. The houses should be constructed in such a way that they are accessible to all, especially to ordinary people.

PO 17; CIC 610 §1; 640

I PCO II 12 3Houses should be suited to the real needs of the fraternity and its ministries, and be conducive to prayer, work, and fraternal life.

CIC 610 §1; 640

VI PCO 38;

I PCO 53;

VI PCO 38; 40

4In our chapters, let us frequently assess how far our houses correspond to a life that is truly poor and lowly. Let us also discuss the social use of resources entrusted to the fraternities, whether money, houses, or lands. We shall gladly use these in the service of people, taking care not to accumulate either money or real estate.

FLC 50, 67; VC 63

Test 4-5; 11; 1LtCus; 2LtCus;

LtOrd 14-17

74

1Churches shall be simple, dignified and clean. Great care is to be taken to see that they foster a life of prayer and brotherhood, are appropriate for liturgical celebrations, and for the active participation of the faithful.

PO 5; SC 124; CIC 1216

  2Sacristies, too, shall be suitable and sufficiently equipped for the liturgical functions. Everything used for divine worship is to be dignified and in conformity with liturgical norms without offending poverty and simplicity.  

Article IV

The Administration of Resources

VI PCO 7

75

1In order to safeguard the observance of poverty and minority, which is our choice as the family of Saint Francis, let us also administer the resources entrusted to our care in a responsible, correct, and prudent manner.

 

VI PCO 30

2Transparency distinguishes our individual and fraternal life, and makes trust, sincerity, and communion grow among us. It should also characterise our administration of resources at every level, and commit us to account for everything we receive and use.  

V PCO 29; 45; GrW 7.3

3Since we share responsibility for the life of the brotherhood, we foster the active participation of all the brothers, so that decision-making, even in the area of administration, may be the fruit of joint reflection and shared as widely as possible, while respecting the roles and competence proper to each.  

VI PCO 29; 37

4Let us always remember that the living witness of our life must prevail over efficiency and productivity.  

VI PCO 8;

VII PCO 6; 40; 51;

CCFW 6,1

5During formation, beginning with the time of initiation, due care shall be taken to ensure that the brothers acquire a correct understanding of the spirit, the principles and the practices of a fraternal economy as our life in poverty and minority requires.  

76

1In the general and provincial curias there shall be bursars appointed by the respective minister with the consent of his council for the administration of money and other resources.

CIC 636 §1

2Each house shall also have a local bursar, appointed by the minister with the consent of his council.  

VI PCO 41

3Bursars shall be well qualified and discharge their office in a manner consistent with our way of life under the direction and supervision of their respective superior, following the norms of universal and proper law.  

VII PCO 51

4Because of the importance and risks involved in the duties entrusted to them, administrators and bursars shall not ordinarily remain in the same office for too many years.  

I PCO II 16, 25, 34, 37

5When it is appropriate, we may use the services of competent lay people in the administration of resources and their work shall be supervised. In the case of social or charitable works, we may entrust the administration to lay people, defining their responsibilities, and ensuring that the nature and aims of the work are respected, while leaving the pastoral management in our hands.  

VI PCO 25, 37

6We must scrupulously observe the norms of canon and civil law governing the administration of resources, as well as in contracts, and the alienation of property, following strict ethical principles in conformity with the social teaching of the Church.

CIC 635 §1; 638 §3; 639 §5; 1292 §3; 1295; CV 45

  7The Order shall periodically review the principles and practical guidelines it follows for sound and just administration and in the management of financial resources. Where appropriate, it may issue relevant directives in the form of special statutes. The same shall be done in each circumscription.  

LBL 3; 1C 15; 2C 12; 14; 61; 64; LMj II 3; VII 1; L3C 19

77

1Called to the gospel way of poverty, let us accustom ourselves to endure privations, after the example of Christ and mindful of Saint Francis, who wished to be so poor that, stripped of everything and free of sentimental attachments, he could entrust himself to the Father who cares for us.

Mt 6:23; Lk 12: 30; Phil 4:12; LG 42

2Neither do we wish to be numbered among those who are not truly poor, those who love to be poor as long as they lack nothing.  
3Let us remember that gospel poverty and its perfection consist principally in being totally available for God and for people.  

ER XVII 17; PrG 5

4Therefore, we are not to be inordinately attached to earthly goods, but to use this world as though not using it. With praise and thanksgiving let us give back all that is good to the Lord our God, Most High and All-Powerful, Who is “all our wealth and sufficiency.”

1Cor 7:31


CHAPTER V

OUR MANNER OF WORKING

IV PCO 49-51; VI PCO 14

78

1God the Father, who has made all things with wisdom and love, calls everyone through work to share in the enterprise of creation. Through work, men and women conform to the original plan of God, grow in personal maturity, help their neighbour, and cooperate in the betterment of society.

MisPref IV; LG 41; 46; GS 9; 32; 34-35; 37ff; 43; 67; Gn 1:28; LE 25

2Jesus Christ, the Word of God, by assuming the human condition, also experienced the toil involved in work. He endowed work with a new dignity, raising it to be an instrument of salvation for all, both by working with His own hands and alleviating human misery, and by proclaiming the Kingdom of God.

Jn 1:14; Heb 2:17; Phil 2:7; LE 26

3The Holy Spirit, who is creator and sanctifier, inspires the Church to proclaim the Gospel of work, casting the light of revelation on the efforts of those who strive to affirm the genuine value of work and protect the dignity of the human person.

GS 26; 33; LE 6; 7; 25; 26

ER VII 3-7; 10ff; LR V; Test 20-21; 1C 39; 2C 161; LMj V 6

4Saint Francis, by following Jesus Christ, worked with his own hands. He declared his own wish to work, considering work in a unique way a grace to be welcomed and lived with gratitude. Therefore he strongly encouraged his brothers “to flee idleness, the enemy of the soul, and work faithfully and devotedly.”

CIC 578; 586 §1; 587 §1; 631 §1

LR V; LR V 1; CtExh 10-12; Test 20 5As his faithful followers and in keeping with Capuchin tradition, we value “the grace of working.” Each day we accept its toil responsibly and gladly as a way of praising God and serving His people. We commit ourselves to work diligently, as true lesser ones, sharing the lot of those who must work for their living.

LG 31; 34; GS 30; PC 13; ET 20

  6Let us live a genuine spirituality of work and promote it among the people. Work receives its clearest light from the Paschal Mystery of Christ and is a means to grow in holiness. By enduring the toil of each day, we play our part with the Son of God in the redemption of humanity and the fulfilment of God’s Kingdom.

LE 27; GS 39; 67; CSDC 263-266;

7We give witness to the human meaning of work done in freedom of spirit and restored to its true nature as a means of support and service. By living this essential dimension of evangelical poverty, we counter the challenges of individualism and the tendency to reduce work to a tool of mere economic profit.

VC 89; 82; 90; ET 20

VII PCO 33

8Schooled in the social doctrine of the Church, we work to safeguard the dignity of workers and of work itself, showing particular concern for those unable to find employment.  

ER VII 4-6,10; VIII 3; VI PCO 14

79

1Work is the fundamental means by which we support ourselves and exercise charity.

CIC 600

IV PCO 18-21; V PCO 23; VI PCO 15

2Therefore, let each of us make his God-given talents bear fruit. According to our age and state of health, let us expend our energies fully and joyfully for the good of the brotherhood and in the interest of solidarity with the poor, with whom we willingly share the fruits of our work.

Mt 18:24; 25:15, 16, 20, 22, 28

VI PCO 14; 21-22.24; 15

3May the work of each brother be an expression of the entire brotherhood and manifest communion in pursuit of its goals. Therefore, let the brothers take on and carry out their activities after suitable communal discernment and with the blessing of obedience, so that the work is always done as a mandate from the fraternity.  

VI PCO 15

4Let the brothers not be possessive of their work. Rather, let them be committed and open to the needs of the local fraternity, the circumscription, and the Order, and always ready to move on.  

LR V 2;

VI PCO 17; LtAnt 2

80

1Let us take care not to make work itself our final goal, nor to become inordinately attached to it, so as “not to extinguish in ourselves the spirit of holy prayer and devotion, to which all time-bound things must contribute.”

CIC 661; 663 §1; 673; 675 §1

Adm XXVII 4; IV PCO 70;

VI PCO 17

2Therefore, we avoid excessive activity, which compromises union with God, leads to loss of our sense of purpose, and is an obstacle to fraternal life.  

Ts 21; ER VII 5; 2C 75; VI PCO 17

3Similarly, like Saint Francis, we pay careful attention to the apostle’s warning: “Whoever does not work, let him not eat.” Let us, therefore, avoid laziness, which lives off the work of others, leads to mediocrity in the spiritual life, and makes us idle in God’s field.  

Const 1536 III, pp 7-8;

4Let us, therefore, lovingly direct all our intentions and all our energies to God and, in the celebration of the Eucharist, as we unite ourselves to the sacrifice of Christ, offer to the Father the toil and the fruits of our daily work. LG 31; 34

VI PCO 14-15

81

1There is a variety of kinds of work which suit people differently, according to each one’s capacity and the special gifts of God.

CIC 677 §1

IV PCO 18-21

2We undertake various forms of ministry and service in so far as they are compatible with our fraternal life and as the needs of the Church and society require.  

ER VII 1-2; Test 20-21

3Works that more clearly manifest poverty, humility, and brotherhood are especially fitting for us; but in fact, we do not consider any type of work of lesser dignity or value than another.  

LR V 2;

VI PCO 15

4So that “the grace of working” may be more fruitful for ourselves and others, let us take care to maintain a community character in the various things we do, and be ready to help one another by working together. In this way, we also grow in conversion of heart.  
  5Furthermore, may we always keep in mind our apostolic calling, so that in everything we do, we give witness to Christ before the people.

CIC 607 §3; 673; 758

VI PCO 15

82

1Whatever their responsibility or office, let the brothers strive throughout their lives to further their spiritual, doctrinal, and professional education, and to develop their own talents, so that our Order may be continually equipped to respond to its calling in the Church. Therefore, let intellectual endeavour be respected in the same way as any other kind of work.

CIC 661

VI PCO 15-16

2According to the Order’s tradition, let the brothers appreciate manual work. With due regard for the tasks entrusted to each, let them willingly apply themselves to it, both for their own growth and for the common good, especially when fraternal charity or obedience requires it.

CIC 578

  3Let the ministers and guardians, discerning the gifts and talents of each brother and the needs of the brotherhood and of the Church, offer them as far as possible the opportunity of acquiring expertise in particular fields, and willingly provide time and assistance for this purpose.

CIC 661

VI PCO 19; LR VI 2; Test 24

4In addition, when assigning offices and duties, the ministers and guardians, for the good of the Church, of the Order, and of the brothers themselves, shall carefully take into account their individual aptitudes and skills and not easily remove them from activities in which they are experts, so long as fraternal life is safeguarded and obedience is respected by all.  

VII PCO 6; 9; VI PCO 16

83

1Our life of poverty and minority calls for everyone to take part, as far as possible, in domestic chores in a spirit of brotherly communion. Such participation fosters mutual dependence and support, distinguishes our brotherhood, and confers credibility upon our life.

 
2No brother’s work dispenses him from caring for the house and the daily services of the brotherhood. We accept them as an integral part of our ordinary life.  
3Let the ministers and fraternities pay particular attention to this dimension of domestic simplicity and everyday service.  

VI PCO 16

4Only when it is really necessary, do we have recourse to outsider helpers for domestic work. The fraternity, as far as possible, takes part in their selection, guided by prudent principles. Let them be treated with respect, courtesy, fairness, and in accordance with the law.  

I PCO I,4; VI PCO 18

84

1Depending on the differing situations in the circumscriptions, and in conformity with the norms issued by the minister with the consent of the council, or by the Conference of major superiors, and by the local ordinary, brothers may also work for people outside the order, when apostolic zeal and the urgency to alleviate our own needs or others’ call for it.

LG 31; PO 8

ER VII 1-2

2But let the brothers remember the exhortation of Saint Francis to accept only those occupations which better exemplify our vocation to serve and our condition as men “who are simple and subject to all,” avoiding the pursuit of prestige and power.  
3In addition, let it always be the case that the brothers engaged in outside employment live in communion with the brotherhood.  

ER VII 1-2; VI PCO 25

4They are to give gospel witness to everyone, make the charity of Christ visible, and give aid to those in need while never involving themselves imprudently in matters unbecoming our state.

CIC 285; 287; 289; 1392

VI PCO 15

85

1What the brothers receive as payment for their work must always be handed over in full to the fraternity. Let the work of the brothers, however, not be valued merely on the basis of the payment received for it.

CIC 668 §3, §5

Test 21

2Let us not engage in activities that arouse a craving for profit or vainglory contrary to the spirit of poverty and humility.  

ER VII 7; Test 22

3Let us guard against transforming work into a means of accumulating goods and money. Indeed, let us always be ready to work without payment whenever charity requires it.

VC 89-90

2C 125-129; 178; 211

86

1We recognise the importance of rest. It too helps us to live “the grace of work.” Each day let the brothers enjoy appropriate recreation in common to foster life as brothers and renew their energies. Let everyone have a period of time for himself.

LE 25; 61; 67; PO 8; ESa II,26

2According to regional customs and possibilities, time for vacation should be provided and spent in a way consistent with our state as lesser brothers.  

87

1The Apostle Paul warns: “While we have the time, let us do good to all.”

Gal 6:10

2Conscious of the precious gift of time, of the uniqueness of each moment, and of the auspicious opportunities, let us, therefore, live each day of our lives to the full.  
3To avoid wasting these opportunities, let us frequently ascertain whether our work and occupations meet the needs of the present moment, and be open to the future through wise foresight and planning.

GS 5; PC 2d; CIC 677 §1; VC 11

4Let us scrutinise the signs of the times in the light of the Gospel, since the Lord comes to meet us in time and makes us grow towards the fullness of salvation. Let us respond to God’s gifts each day with vigilance and patience.

Mt 16:2-3; Lk 12:35, 56-57; GS 4; 11; 44,2; CIC 600


CHAPTER VI

OUR LIFE IN BROTHERHOOD

V PCO 15-28

88

1Life in brotherhood has its foundation in the mystery of love of the perfect Trinity and the holy unity of Father, Son, and Spirit.

VC 41

2In the fullness of time, the Father sent His Son, the firstborn among many brothers, so that through His death and resurrection, and by the gift of the Holy Spirit, He might form humanity into a brotherhood.

Rom 8:29; Col 1:18; LG 9; 28; GS 24; 32; PC 1; 15

3The Church, flowing from the side of Christ as the sacrament of unity, is essentially a mystery of communion, whose richness and depth are reflected in our living as brothers, a human space in which the Trinity dwells.

VC 41-42

4That same life of brotherhood, the leaven of ecclesial communion, foreshadows the definitive unity of the People of God and provides testimony essential for the Church’s apostolic mission.

FLC 10 2b, 3d

5For this reason, the Church encourages institutes whose members, rooted in and built on love, live a life as brothers in community, assisting one another to be faithful to their vocation, and in this way promoting the human dignity of the children of God in freedom.

CIC 574-575; 602; 607 §2; ESa II, V, 25; LG 43; 46; PC 15

ER I 1; VI 3; LR I 1; II 1,7; VI 7-9; XII 1; Test 14; I PCO II, 11; IV PCO 14; 31; 6Saint Francis, “by divine inspiration,” initiated a form of gospel life which he called a brotherhood, and chose to model it on the life of Christ and His disciples.  
7Therefore, we who profess this form of life truly constitute an Order of brothers.  
8For this reason, united by faith in God our Father and nourished at the table of the divine word and the Eucharist, we love one another, so that the world may know that we are disciples of Christ.

Jn 3:13-23; 4:11; 13:34-35; Rom 13:8; 2Jn 5; PC 15; PO 8; GS 24

Article I

Our Commitment to Life in Brotherhood

 

89

1As brothers given to each other by the Lord and endowed with different gifts, let us accept one another with a grateful heart.

Mt 18:20; Jn 13:34

Const 1536 XII; ER XVIII 1; Test 14; 2LtF 43; LMin 17; 1C 24; 27-28;

IV PCO 15ff; 22; 33;

V PCO 23,25ff

2For this reason, wherever we are gathered together in the name of Jesus, let us be of one heart and one mind, always striving to advance to greater perfection. To be true disciples of Christ, let us love one another from the heart, bearing one another’s burdens and faults, applying ourselves without interruption to the love of God and charity toward our brothers, striving to give an example of virtue to one another and to everyone, and mastering our own passions and evil inclinations.

Rom 12:6,10; 13:8; Gal 6:2; Eph 4:2; Heb 4:32; 1Pt 1:22; 1Jn 3:13,23; 2Jn 5; Mt 18:20; Act 4:32; 2Cor 13:11; PC 15; ESa II,25; FLC 9

SalV 12; ER 4,4; 6,2; 10,1; 11,6.9; 14,6; Adm XII; XIV; LMin 17; 1C 30; 39; 2C 180 ;

3In order to learn how to be brothers, we walk in humility always imbued with a spirit of mutual understanding and sincere esteem. Let us cultivate dialogue among ourselves, trustfully sharing experiences, and manifesting our needs to one another.

PVI Nm; FLC 11ff

LMj III 7; ER IX 10; RSC 8, 15; Adm III 5-6

4We are to be particularly committed to the local chapter as a primary means of expressing the nature of our fraternal communion and promoting its growth. In it, the loving obedience, a distinctive characteristic of our brotherhood, is well expressed. Through it, the brothers are at the service of one another, the creativity of everyone is fostered, and the personal gifts of each one contribute to the good of all.  

ER VI 3; XXII 33; Test 14ff; I PCO II,1; V PCO 20; 99

90

1By reason of the same vocation, the brothers are equal. Therefore, according to the Rule, the Testament and the earliest custom of the Capuchins, all of us are called brothers without distinction.

CIC 208; 578

ER IV; VI 3-4

2The precedence necessary for the service of the brotherhood flows from the responsibilities and offices actually held.  

LR VII 2; V PCO 99

3Moreover, within the Order, the province and the local fraternity, all offices and responsibilities must be open to all brothers, bearing in mind, however, that certain acts require sacred orders.

CIC 129 §1; 274 §1

I PCO II,2; V PCO 23; VI PCO 16

4Let all the brothers help one another according to the gifts each one has received, even with daily household chores.

1Pt 4:10

I PCO II,6

91

1Let us take care that age differences in our fraternities contribute to a spirit of harmony and complementarily.

 
2Let us show loving care and gratitude to the brothers of advanced age.  
3Let the younger brothers show the respect due to brothers of greater age and willingly profit from their experience. For their part, let the elder brothers welcome new and sound forms of life and activity. May bothyoung and old—in this way enrich one another through their mutual sharing.  

ER VIII; X; LR VI 9; Adm XXIV; 2C 175; MPer 42; 90; VI PCO 29

92

1When a brother falls sick, let the guardian, following the example and teaching of Saint Francis, immediately provide for all his bodily and spiritual needs with fraternal charity. Let him entrust the sick brother to the care of a competent brother, and to a doctor or to other competent persons, if the case requires it.

ER IX 11; LR VI 8

2Let each brother, reflecting that the person of the suffering Christ is present in the sick, consider what he would wish to be done for him in case of sickness. Let him recall what Saint Francis wrote in the Rule: “no mother is as tender and caring toward her son, as each one of us should be toward our spiritual brother.”

Mt 7:12, 25:45; Lk 6:31

ER X 1ff; LR VI 8-9

3Therefore, let each one commit himself to take care of a sick brother, to visit him willingly, and to comfort him as a brother.  
4Let the minister and guardian frequently and fraternally visit the sick brothers and not neglect to provide for their spiritual care, either personally or through another. If they see that the brother is seriously ill, let them prudently inform him of his condition and prepare him to receive the sacraments.

CIC 619; 1004 §1

ER X; 2C 185; AC 43. ER 10,3-4

93

1Let the sick brothers remember our state as lesser brothers.

LG 11; 41; AG 38; AA 16

ER 10,3-4

2They shall leave their care to their doctor and to those who take care of them so that they do not violate holy poverty with injury to their souls but give thanks to the Creator for everything.

Eph 5:20; 1Thes 5:18

ER 10,3; 23,7; Adm V 8; MP 42; 91; 2C 213

3. Let them remember that, by freely accepting the burdens of sickness and infirmity, they are invited to conform themselves more closely to the suffering Christ, as their vocation demands. With the heart of a son let them seek to experience in themselves some small part of what He suffered. Let them imitate Francis, who praised the Lord for those who patiently endure trials and infirmity according to His most holy will. Let them also remember that, by completing in their own body what is lacking in the suffering of Christ the Redeemer, they can contribute to the salvation of the People of God, to the evangelisation of the world and to the strengthening of our life as brothers.

Rom 8:29; Phil 3:10; Col 1:24

 

94

1When forming fraternities, the personalities of the brothers and the needs of life and the apostolate shall be taken into account.

 

EBr 2,3

2Let the ministers and guardians, who are the first to inspire and safeguard our form of life, constantly nurture life together as brothers.

FLC 50; PC 15; PO 17; CIC 607 §2; 619

PGFP IV, 17.2.2

3As members of the same family, let all the brothers take an active part in the shared activities of the fraternity, above all in community prayer. Let them willingly give time to their brothers, arrange duties by common agreement and promote working together.

ET 32-34; FLC 18-22; PI 27

GBCW 20

4In this way, by supporting one another on our common journey toward holiness, we shall turn our fraternities into homes and schools of communion.

FLC 25; VC 41-42; 45; EA 43-47; SAFC 2-29

 

95

1In order to cultivate the silence required for prayer and study and to preserve the privacy of our brotherly life together, the entrance of outsiders shall be regulated with prudence and discretion.

CIC 667 §1

RH 2

2To safeguard religious life, an enclosure or area reserved for the brothers alone, shall be maintained in our houses.  
3Those who come to our houses shall ordinarily be received in visiting rooms prepared in keeping with norms of simplicity, prudence, and hospitality.  
4In accordance with the norms enacted by the provincial chapter, laymen who wish to share more closely in our life, whether for prayer, fraternal life or the apostolate, may be admitted to the fraternity.

VC 54-56

ER VII 13ff

I PCO II,15

5Let our fraternities not confine their charity within their own four walls, but, with gospel concern, be open to peoples’ needs, depending upon the purpose of the particular house.

CIC 222 §2

96

1The media contribute to personal growth and to the spread of the Kingdom of God. Let the brothers select and employ them with mature discernment and moderation, avoiding anything that is against faith, morality, and the consecrated life.

IM 9; 14; 16; CIC 666

2The entire fraternity, under the guidance of the guardian, shall engage in careful discernment about the media, so that poverty, prayer and silence, fraternal communion and work are safeguarded and, at the same time, media’s contribution to the well-being and the work of all is ensured.  
3The brothers, especially the ministers and guardians, shall take care to communicate by appropriate means the more important events in the fraternities, circumscriptions, and the entire Order.  

97

1Before leaving the house, the brothers are to ask permission of the guardian according to the custom of the circumscription.

CIC 665 §1

2With regard to travel, let each brother, before asking permission, conscientiously weigh the reasons for his request in light of our state of poverty, of spiritual and fraternal life, and of the witness we are called to give to people.  
3Ministers and guardians shall be prudent when giving permission to travel.  

ER XV 2; LR III 10-14

4The brothers shall be mindful of our state of poverty and humility in the means of transportation.  

98

1All the brothers who visit us are to be received with brotherly charity and a warm welcome.

 
  2Wherever possible, brothers who are travelling shall be willing to stay in houses of the Order, at least to spend the night, and share in the life of the fraternity, complying with local customs.  
  3Brothers who are sent to another province for formation or other reasons shall be received by the ministers and guardians and by the local fraternities as their members. They shall take full part in the life of the fraternity, keeping in mind the prescriptions of n. 121, 5 of the Constitutions.  

I PCO II,7ff; II PCO 35

99

1Brothers who, with the blessing of obedience, have to live outside the house because of special circumstances, shall enjoy the benefits of that fraternity to which they have been assigned, since they are members of it.

CIC 103; 665 §1

2Let them always feel part of the brotherhood and, in turn, not neglect to contribute to the spiritual growth and economic support of the Order.  
3As true brothers in Saint Francis, let them visit our houses and love to stay there for a while, especially for reasons of spiritual recollection.  

LR VI 7

4Let them be received with charity and offered whatever spiritual and material help they need.  

ER IV 2;LR X 1

5Let the ministers and guardians care for them with fraternal concern, and visit and encourage them as often as possible.  

VII PCO 13

100

1As members of an Order of brothers, we nourish in ourselves a sense of belonging to the entire Capuchin family.

 

I PCO 63

2We gladly engage in and develop collaboration among our circumscriptions, supporting the vitality of our charism and the good of the Order over the survival of structures.  

VII PCO 13

3In a spirit of brotherhood, mutual dependence, and minority, individual circumscriptions shall respond to the needs of the others and serve one another.  
4Inspired by the mobility and itinerancy which are features of our tradition, let the brothers, in the obedience of love, be ready to go outside their circumscription.  

GBCW 4.2, 7.3

5Conscious that Baptism and profession establish bonds among us that are stronger than natural ties, we welcome the manifold riches of diverse cultures, even among ourselves, and promote their coming together in dialogue.  
  6When the good of the Order and the Church or the needs of circumscriptions require, forming fraternities of brothers from different circumscriptions, countries, and nations shall be encouraged. Such fraternities provide favourable opportunities for mutual enrichment, the exchange of spiritual wealth, and effective witness to universal communion.

FLC 32

IV PCO 17; 33

101

1By God’s design, a rich diversity of religious institutes has developed for the good of the Church; this same variety also flourishes in one and the same Franciscan spiritual family. In this family so many brothers and sisters, through the interchange of a life-giving communion, make the charism of our common Seraphic Father present in the life and mission of the Church.

LG 43; PC 1

2Let us, therefore, live the communion of a shared spirit with all the brothers of the Franciscan First Order, gladly working together to promote studies and joint ventures of Franciscan life and activity.

Eph 4:3; CIC 580; 614; 677 §2; 680

FV 1-2; TestSC 29

3Remembering the promise of Saint Francis to Clare and to the Poor Sisters of San Damiano, we must always show loving care and special concern for our sisters of the Second Order. In the contemplative life, they offer each day the sacrifice of praise, seek union with God in solitude and silence, and spread the Church far and wide with a hidden apostolic fruitfulness.  
4In the same way, we are united in brotherly affection with those religious institutes which are spiritually linked with our Order.  

IV PCO 17; 33; V PCO 28; 59

102

1The Secular Franciscan Fraternity or Order occupies a special place within the Franciscan family, whose authentic spirit it both shares in and promotes. It is necessary for the fullness of the Franciscan charism.

CIC 303; 311; 677 §2

ROFS 2

2In this Order, the brothers and sisters, urged on by the Holy Spirit to reach the perfection of love in their secular state, commit themselves by profession to live the Gospel after the manner of Saint Francis and by means of their own Rule.  

COFS 86,1

3In virtue of our shared charism and communion of life in the Franciscan family, the Church commits the Secular Franciscan Order to the spiritual and pastoral care of the Franciscan First Order and of the Third Order Regular of Saint Francis.  

COFS 86,1; StatSA 5,2; ROFS 26

4Our ministers have the faculty to establish fraternities of the Secular Franciscan Order in all our houses and also elsewhere. In addition, it is their duty to conduct the pastoral visitation and to ensure that the fraternities of the Secular Franciscan Order at the different levels receive continual and zealous spiritual and pastoral assistance, especially through the appointment of suitable, trained brothers. They must carry out their office in accordance with the norms of universal law and of proper law, both of our Order and of the Secular Franciscan Order. They shall be vigilant to ensure that a true, life giving interchange is promoted between the fraternities of our Order and those of the Franciscan Secular Order.

CIC 312 §2

COFS 99,1; 98-103; 51-75; 85-91; 92-95; 98-103; ROFS 26

5All the brothers shall take to heart the need to show a truly brotherly attitude toward the members of the Secular Order. By their own example let them nourish fidelity to the gospel life and effectively promote the Order itself among the secular clergy and the laity. The brothers shall willingly provide spiritual assistance to this Order. Always mindful of its secular status, let them respect its lawful autonomy and not interfere in its government, except in cases mentioned in the law.  

ER I 1; 2LtF 13; LBL 3; LtOrd 51

6Likewise, all associations cultivating the spirit of Saint Francis, especially those of young people, shall be promoted and assisted spiritually. Let our houses become fraternal centres for meetings and spiritual renewal open to all clergy and laity who wish to follow the footsteps of Christ under the guidance of Saint Francis.

1Pt 2:21

2C 91,3; 180,2

103

1Following the example of Saint Francis who called the mother of any brother his mother and the mother of all the brothers, let us fulfil our religious and familial responsibilities towards our parents, relatives, benefactors, those who work with us, and others who belong to our spiritual family. Let us also commend them to God in prayer, including our community prayers.

 
2Any spiritual or material needs of a brother’s family of origin shall be discussed with the fraternity, charitably and discreetly.  
3Let us have fraternal respect also for brothers who leave religious life. Let the ministers treat them with equity and gospel charity.  

ER IX 5

104

1Christ, himself a pilgrim on earth, will say to those on His right hand at the Last Judgment: “I was a stranger and you welcomed me.”

Mt 25:35; PO 8

  2Saint Francis desired that anyone coming to our houses be received with kindness. Therefore, let us welcome everyone with the greatest charity, especially the afflicted and those suffering hardship, and help them in their needs.  
  3Let those whom we are able to receive into our own houses according to circumstances, especially priests and religious, be treated by the fraternity with every courtesy.  

Article II

The Life of the Brothers in the World

CtC 1-9; 2C 265; LMj I; V 9; V PCO 28; 48ff; 63; 65; 74; 81; 85ff; 97ff; 100; 102; VI PCO 3-4

105

1Greatly rejoicing in the created and redeemed world, Saint Francis felt united not only with people, but also with all creatures by a covenant of brotherhood, as he himself proclaims magnificently in the Canticle of Brother Sun.

GS 2; 45; 57; 62; PO 17

ExhP 5; 6; PrG 5; 7; CtC 1-9; VI PCO 26

2Contemplating them in this light, we admire the works of creation of which Christ is the beginning and the end. Let us protect them in their integrity and use the resources of Mother Earth with respect and moderation.

Rv 1:8; 22:13; Gen 2:15

3Thanks to scientific research, we see the works of creation becoming ever more magnificent, amazing and mysterious. They lead us to worship the Father in His wisdom and power. Therefore we should highly esteem everything that human genius has drawn from created things, especially in works of culture and art in which God’s gifts are revealed to us.  

ER XXII 1-7; 2LtF 1-15

4Let us also view the human world in the mystery of Christ, the world which God so loved that He gave His only-begotten Son.

Jn 3:16

5Though wounded by many sins yet endowed with great potential, the world, in fact, provides the living stones that are built up together to form the dwelling place of God, which is the Church.

Eph 2:22; 1Pt 2:5

ER IX 1; XVI 7-9; LR II 1; FV 1; LtOrd 9; 1C 89; 103; LMj Pr 2; IV PCO 8

106

1By “divine inspiration” Saint Francis recognised that he had been sent to refashion humanity in newness of life.

Rom 6 :4

ER XXII 41-55; 1LtF 14-19; 2LtF 56-60

2Consequently, inaugurating a new form of gospel life, he himself, though no longer of the world, remained in the world and wanted his brotherhood also to live and work among people, to witness in deed and word to the good news of gospel conversion.

Jn 17:14; LG 31; GS 72; AA 4

Adm XIII-XVI; XVIII

3Therefore, we too, since we share in his mission, live in the midst of the world as a gospel leaven so that people, seeing our fraternal life lived in the spirit of the Beatitudes, may realize that the Kingdom of God has already begun in their midst.

Lk 17:21; LG 31; CIC 602; 607 §1

LR XII 4; 1C 41; V PCO 64; 82ff

4In this way we will be present in the world to serve the living God and in Franciscan love, humility, and joy spreading peace and goodness for the benefit of the world and of the Church.

Is 52:7; Rom 8:14; Heb 9:14

ER XIV 2; LR III 13; Test 23; LtRPrp 1; BlL 2; 1C 26; 29; 36; I PCO I,9; 17; V PCO 28; 45; 55; 63-102

107

1In accordance with the spirit of Saint Francis, we proclaim peace and salvation, not only in words but also by deeds inspired by the love of brothers.

GS 82; PC 2c

  2Moved by this spirit, let us strive, in the manner taught by the Gospel, to bring into peaceful and lasting harmony those who are divided by hatred, envy, conflicting ideologies, or differences of class, race, religion, and nationality.

CIC 222 §2; 287 §1; 672; 768 §2

  3Let us promote respect for human rights and dignity, above all those of the poor and the marginalized.  

VI PCO 26; V PCO 49

4Let us therefore be eager to co-operate with initiatives and institutions, both national and international, that work appropriately for the unity of the human race, for universal justice, and for peace.  

ER VII 15ff; XIV; XVI 6; LR III 10-14; TPJ; I PCO I,9,17

108

1Trusting above all in the providence of the Father, let us walk in the world with such hope and Franciscan joy that we strengthen the confidence of our contemporaries.

LG 36; GS 1; 27; 32; 93

ER VII 10-12; XXII15ff; ER VIII 1-2; LR X 7

2Freed from the empty cares of the present age, and cooperating with divine providence, let us regard it as our duty to relieve the needs of the poor by our action and, especially in times of public disaster, to make available the goods and services of the brotherhood to all who are in need.

Mt 13:22; Lk 8:14; CIC 222 §2; 600; 640

V PCO 29;

VI PCO 9

3After the example of Saint Francis, who had great compassion for the poor, and the founders of our Capuchin brotherhood, who helped those suffering from the plague, let us live alongside our brothers and sisters in need, especially the sick, eager to offer them wholehearted service as brothers.  
  4Knowing that divine providence is revealed not only through events and actions, but also through new ideas and life experiences, may we appraise all things in a spirit of openness and confidence, holding on to what is good.

1Thes 5:21; GS 4; 11

ER XVII 6,11, 17-18; XXIII 1; LtOrd 1,15; FV 1; PrG 11;PrCr 1

5In this way we will be better able to cooperate with God present and active in the history of the world. Likewise, living the truth in charity, we will be witnesses of hope in the Lord God and help people of good will to recognise the highest Good Who is God the almighty Father.

Eph 4:15


CHAPTER VII

OUR LIFE OF PENANCE

IV PCO 36b; 41ff

109

1Jesus Christ, while proclaiming the Good News of the Kingdom, called people to repentance, that is, to a total transformation of themselves, through which they begin to think, judge, and conform their lives to the holiness and love of God manifested in the Son

Mt 4:17; Mk 1:14-15; VC 10; 15; 16; 17; 18ff; 65b

ER I 3

2This conversion into a new creature, begun with faith and Baptism, calls for a constant effort to deny ourselves daily.

Mt 16:24; Mk 8:34; Lk 9:23

3In this way, living for the Lord alone, through penance we forge new relationships with people, especially with the poor, and are gradually strengthened to build gospel brotherhood.  

Test 1-3; 2C 9; LMj I 6; L3C 11

4Saint Francis, by the Lord’s grace, began a life of penance and conversion by showing mercy to lepers, and making his exodus from the world.

Rom 6:4; Gal 6:15; 2Cor 5:17

ER XII 3-4; XIII 2; XXI 3; XXIII 7; Adm XIII-XXVIII; 1LtCus 6; 1C 23-35

5With great fervour of spirit and joy of heart, he based his life on the beatitudes, preached penance unceasingly, inspiring everyone by deed and word to carry Christ’s cross, and wished that his brothers to be men of penance.

LG 31; GS 72; AA 4

LMj V;

PVI   1968

6A spirit of penance in an austere life is a particular characteristic of our Order; for, following the example of Christ and Saint Francis, we have chosen in fact the narrow way of the Gospel.

Mt 7:14; CIC 578; 586 §1; 631 §1;

LMj Pr 2; XIII 2ff; 1C 103 7Moved by the same spirit and recognizing sin in ourselves and in human society, let us work unceasingly at our own conversion and that of others, so that we may be moulded into the likeness of the crucified and risen Christ.

Rom 8:29; Gal 2:19; LG 8s.; 35; CD 33; AG 3; UR 6

8By working in this way, completing in ourselves what is lacking in the sufferings of Christ, we take part in the work of the Church, which is holy and, at the same time, always in need of purification, and we promote the coming of God’s Kingdom by gathering into one the human family in the perfection of love.

Col 1:24; LG 8; Paen;

1LtF 1; Adm XVI

110

1Penance, being an exodus and a conversion, is a propensity of the heart that demands in everyday life exterior manifestations matched by a true interior transformation.

 

VI PCO 5

2Franciscan penitents should always be noted for their gentle, affectionate love and joy, like our saints: strict with themselves but full of goodness and respect toward others.

CIC 1249

  3So that the Paschal Mystery of Christ may ever more be at work within us, let us devote ourselves to works of penance at all times, moved by the spirit of conversion and renewal, according to the Rule and Constitutions and as God inspires us.  
  4In the first place, let us remember that our life of consecration to God is in itself an excellent form of penance.

LG 10; 34; 41; PC 5; PO 12ff; SC 48; AA 16; CIC 607 §§1-2; 662; 673

  5Therefore, we offer for our own salvation and for that of others: our poverty and humility, the hardships of life, the faithful performance of our daily work, our availability to serve God and neighbour and our efforts to cultivate fraternal life, the burden of sickness and old age, and even persecution for the Kingdom of God. In this way, suffering with those who suffer, may we always rejoice in our conformity to Christ.  
  6Let us follow the same path of conversion as Saint Francis, by reaching out especially to those who, in our own times, are abandoned and destitute.  
 

111

1Christ the Lord, having been sent by His Father and led by the Holy Spirit, fasted in the desert for forty days and forty nights.

Mt 4:1-11; Mk 1:12-13; Lk 4:1-13

  2His disciple, Saint Francis, burning with the desire to imitate the Lord, also spent His life in fasting and prayer.  
  3We, too, therefore, practise fasting, prayer and works of mercy, which lead us to inner freedom and open us to love for God and neighbour.

VC 38

ER III 11ff; LR III 4ff

4The season of Advent and, above all, the Lent before Easter, as well as every Friday, are for us times of more intense private and communal penance.

SC 109ff

LR III 6

5In addition, the “Lent of Benediction”, as it is called, which begins at the Epiphany, and the vigils of the solemnities of Saint Francis and of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary are recommended.  

Test 22

6On these days, let us apply ourselves more eagerly to those works which foster conversion: prayer, recollection, listening to the word of God, bodily mortification and communal fasting. In a brotherly spirit, let us share with other poor people that which comes to us from the table of the Lord because of our greater frugality. Let us also perform works of mercy more fervently in keeping with our traditional custom.

SC 110; AA 8; CIC 1249

7As regards the laws of abstinence and fast, the brothers are to observe the prescriptions of the Church, both universal and local.

CIC 1250-1253

LMj V 7; 2C 160; AC 32

112

1Our life conforms to the gospel command to do penance and is, therefore, simple and frugal in all things, as befits poor people.

PC 12; P6 2/74 Ic; CIC 600; 607 §3; 634 §2; 640; 664; 666; 673; 1249

2C 60-61

2Mindful of the passion of Christ, after the example of Saint Francis and of our saints, let us practise mortification, even voluntarily, willingly restricting ourselves in food, drink and entertainments, so that everything testifies to our condition as pilgrims and strangers.  

ER X; LR VI 9; 2C 175

3However, the ministers and guardians, since they have to provide what is necessary, especially for the sick, shall keep in mind the commandment of love and the example of Saint Francis.

CIC 619

113

1With sorrow in our hearts for our own sins and for those of others, and desiring to walk in newness of life, let us practise works of penance, adapted, of course, to the differing sensitivities of time and place.

Rom 6:4; LG 7; PO 12ff; SC 12; ESa II,22; CIC 664; 839 §1

2We seek to practise fraternal correction charitably and honestly, as Jesus taught us.

Mt 18:15; Lk 17:3; ES 85

3In the light of the Gospel, let us question ourselves, both individually and as a brotherhood, particularly in the local chapter, about our way of life and our options; let them always be the expression of a communal journey of conversion.  

ER XX 5

114

1By means of the sacrament of penance or reconciliation through the working of the Holy Spiritwho is the remission of sinswe experience the benefits of Christ’s death and resurrection, and share more deeply in the Eucharist and in the mystery of the Church.

LG 7; 11; PO 18; PC 14; SC 5; RomM PoG Pent Sat

2In this sacrament the brothers not only individually but also communally, are purified, healed, restored to union with the Saviour and, at the same time, reconciled with the Church.  
3Being purified and renewed by the Sacraments of the Church, we are also strengthened in our commitment to be faithful to our form of life.  
4Therefore, holding the Sacrament of Reconciliation in high esteem, let us frequently take advantage of it. Having been reconciled with God, let us be committed to spreading His love among us through mutual forgiveness and to promoting fraternal reconciliation.

CIC 246 §4; 276 §2; 630 §1-5; 664; 985; VC 95; Lk 6:36; Mt 5:48; FLC 26

5Let us also highly esteem spiritual direction and daily examination of conscience, so that we may respond generously to the promptings of the Spirit and be resolute in our aim for holiness.

VC 95; PC 14; EE 11; PI 63

6Conscious of the social dimensions of conversion, let us try to hold communal celebrations of penance, both in our fraternities and with the People of God.  
7Let the ministers and guardians take every care to ensure that the brothers are faithful to the sacramental life and that they benefit from spiritual direction.  
 

115

1The faculty to hear the sacramental confessions of the brothers is granted by the proper ordinary as well as by the local ordinary. The guardian may do the same in individual cases and in that particular instance.

CIC 967 §§2-3; 968-969

  2Any priest of the order who has received faculties from his own ordinary may hear the confessions of the brothers anywhere in the world.  
  3The brothers are free to confess their sins to any priest who has received faculties from any ordinary.

PC 14; CIC 991

ER V 7; LR VII 3; Adm IX 3; 2LtF 44

4Let confessors keep in mind the encouragement of Saint Francis that “they do not become angry or disturbed by the sin of another” but treat the penitent with all kindness in the Lord.

CIC 978 §1

2C 133-134; I PCO II,9ff

116

1Loving one another with the same love with which Christ loved us, let us not avoid a brother who finds himself in difficulty, but rather be eager to help him. If he falls, let us remember that each one of us would fall into a worse situation if God in His goodness did not preserve us. Therefore, let us not be his judges, but as true brothers, love him even more.

Jn 13:34; CIC 220

  2Let the ministers and guardians, with fatherly compassion, be close to brothers who sin or who are in danger, and offer them appropriate and effective help as God Himself would do.

CIC 619; 665 §2

  3Let the ministers and guardians act with the same solicitude, as far as it lies within their power and competence, when dealing with persons and communities who may have been harmed by the sins of the brothers.  
  4They shall not impose penalties, particularly canonical ones, unless compelled by manifest necessity, and then with all prudence and charity, maintaining nonetheless the prescriptions of universal law. However, in the same spirit, ministers may also take other necessary initiatives for the good of the community and of society, as well as for the good of the brother.

CIC 1321 §1

LMin 9-11

5Let them always remember the words of Saint Francis in his Letter to a Minister: “I would like you to prove that you love the Lord and me, His servant and yours, in the following way: there should be no brother in the world who has sinnedhowever greatly he may have sinnedwho, after he has looked into your eyes, would ever depart without your mercy, if he is looking for mercy. If he is not looking for mercy, you should ask him if he wants it. And if he sins a thousand times before your eyes, you should love him more than you love me, so that you may draw him to the Lord.”  


CHAPTER VIII

THE GOVERNANCE OF THE ORDER

2C 191ff

117

1Our Brotherhood, led by the Holy Spirit, is an integral part of the Mystical Body of Christ. It is a communion of consecrated persons who, following the Master, seek to accomplish together the Father’s will, and contribute to building up the Church in love through various offices and ministries.

1Cor 12:1-31; 14:12; Eph 4:12; LG 30,44; PC 1; CIC 602; 618-619; 631 §1; 662; FLC 1

Rel06

2Let us, therefore, see it as our specific duty to foster the good of the Church and the Brotherhood according to the grace we have received and our Capuchin vocation.

1Pt 4:10; LG 44; PC 2b; CIC 602; 618-619; 631 §1; 662

  3Chapters and superiors, as expressions of the spiritual and visible unity of the Order, nourish the bond of communion among the brothers. In a spirit of service and with pastoral solicitude they exercise authority received from God through the ministry of the Church in accordance with universal law and these Constitutions.

CIC 602; 618-619; 631 §1; 662; PC 14; FLC 9, 11

Article I

The Structure of the Order

 

118

1Our Order or Brotherhood is made up of brothers, each of whom is incorporated into a circumscription and assigned to a local brotherhood. Every circumscription and every local fraternity, taken individually, is a true brotherhood.

CIC 581; 585; 609 §1; 621; 634 §1

  2The circumscriptions are ordinarily provinces and custodies, united together in a life-giving relationship under the authority of the General Minister.  
  3Every circumscriptions is made up of a group of brothers gathered in local fraternities or houses and has its own exclusive territory, which must be determined in the decree of establishment.

CIC 621; 608

  4In particular circumstances, the General Minister, with the consent of his council and after consultation with the interested parties, may make provision for other forms of circumscriptions or groupings of houses, in accordance with these Constitutions and with the Ordinances of the General Chapters.  
  5Every circumscription that is canonically established by a formal decree of the General Minister acquires juridical personality.  
  6A province is the primary and immediate unit of the order, governed by the Provincial Minister. It has its own consistent structures, enabling it to express and develop the vitality of our charism, so that it can give effective apostolic witness and benefit the life of the order.

CIC 621

III PCO 45ff

7A custody is a part of the order in which the brothers, placed at the service of the churches and of their pastors in the work of evangelisation, gradually develop the presence of the consecrated life through their efforts to implant the order. It is governed by the Custos, who has ordinary vicarious power.  
8A local fraternity is a group made up of at least three professed brothers who live in a legitimately established house governed by a local superior or guardian.  
9The General Minister, with the consent of his council, can decide that a particular local brotherhood is directly dependent on himself. If the situation warrants it, it may have its own statutes. Similarly, he may decide that a local brotherhood will depend directly on a Conference of major superiors and have its own statutes.  
10Whatever is said of a province in these Constitutions also applies to custodies, unless the contrary is evident from the nature of the case or from the text or context.  

I PCO IV, 1ff

119

1It is the responsibility of the General Minister with the consent of his council, after consulting the Conference of major superiors and the ministers and respective councils concerned, to decide on the establishment, union, division, alteration, or suppression of circumscriptions, observing the requirements of law.

CD 22ff; CIC 581; 585

2Once it has been decided to establish a new circumscription the General Minister, with the consent of his council, after consulting the perpetually-professed brothers concerned, appoints its minister and councillors and determines the composition of the first chapter. This chapter, which is not elective, must be held within one year of the establishment of the new circumscription.  
3The General Minister with his council shall be particularly attentive to those circumscriptions that are numerically in steep decline, making use of the means available in our legislation to preserve a fraternal presence in a given territory.  

120

1It is the responsibility of the Provincial Minister, with the consent of his council, after obtaining the favourable vote of the chapter, to establish houses canonically, observing the prescriptions of law. However, if the case is urgent and the vote of the chapter is lacking, the consent of the General Minister and his council is required.

CIC 609-612; 616

2However, it pertains to the General Minister, with the consent of his council, to suppress houses, either at the request of the interested party, or for some other cause, observing the norms of law.  

121

1Each brother, incorporated into the order by profession, becomes a member of the circumscription to which the minister admitted him to profession.

CIC 654

2The date of temporary profession also determines seniority in the brotherhood.  

III PCO 41

3It pertains to the General Minister, with the consent of his council and having consulted the respective major superiors and their councils, to assign brothers to another circumscription, taking into account the good of the whole order and the needs of the circumscriptions or individual brothers.  
4Let the Provincial Ministers, in a spirit of fraternal collaboration, be willing to meet such needs by sending brothers temporarily to another province.  
5When sending brothers to serve in another circumscription, the prescriptions of the Ordinances of the General Chapters are to be observed.  
6 Each brother exercises the right to vote in only one circumscription of the order, unless he is also able to vote elsewhere because of his office or for other reasons. Those who are invited to another circumscription to offer their services have the right to vote in that circumscription according to the norms in the Ordinances of the General Chapters, not in their own. On the other hand, brothers who live in another circumscription for other reasons exercise this right only in their own circumscription.  

Article II

Superiors and Offices in General

ER Pr 3; LR I 2

122

1Under the supreme authority of the Roman Pontiff, these are the superiors of the Order with ordinary power in their own right: the General Minister in the whole Order, the Provincial Minister in his province, and the local superior or guardian in his fraternity.

CIC 131 §1; 590 §2; 596 §1-3

2 Superiors with ordinary vicarious power are: the General Vicar, the Provincial Vicar, the Custos and the local vicar.  
3All the above, with the exception of the guardian and his vicar, are major superiors.

CIC 620

  4Whatever is said in these Constitutions and in the Ordinances of the General Chapters concerning the Provincial Ministers applies equally to the Custodes, unless the contrary is evident from the delegations received, from the nature of the case or from the text and context.  
  5Ordinary vicarious power does not extend to those matters which proper law recognises as belonging exclusively to the superior who holds that office, unless an explicit delegation has been given for those matters. If the Provincial Minister is prevented from exercising his office, or if it is vacant, a Custos shall have recourse to the provincial vicar.  
 

123

1Offices in the order are conferred either by election or by appointment.

CIC 119 §1; 625 §1,3

  2In conferring offices the brothers are to proceed with a right intention, simply and according to the norms of law. CIC 626
  3For the good of the order, consultation may be made beforehand concerning those to be elected, but consultation is obligatory when persons are to be appointed.  
  4If an election requires confirmation, it must be requested within eight days of canonical time.

CIC 177 §1

ER VII 4; Adm IV; XIX 3

5 The brothers, as true lesser ones, are not be ambitious for office; but if they are called to it by the confidence of the brothers, they should not obstinately refuse to serve as a superior or in some other office.  

ER I 1; IV; VI 3ff; LR I 1; VII 2

I PCO II, 1,3; IV PCO 22; V PCO 99

6Since we are an Order of brothers, according to the will of Saint Francis and the genuine Capuchin tradition, any brother in perpetual vows may assume any office or position excepting those that flow from sacred orders. But the office of superior may be validly conferred only on brothers who have been perpetually professed for at least three years.

PC 15; ESa II,27; CIC 129 §1; 623

  7When offices are conferred by election, postulation is admissible in our order. Acceptance of the postulation and dispensation from the impediment are within the competence of the authority having the faculty to confirm the election, namely, the General Minister or the Provincial Minister. Authority to accept the postulation of the General Minister rests with the Holy See.

CIC 180-183

  8It pertains to the General Minister to accept the act of resignation from the offices of Provincial Minister, provincial vicar, provincial councillor, general Custos and their respective councillors. It pertains to the Provincial Minister to accept the resignation of the Custos and the respective councillors. CIC 184   §1
  9For removal from offices which brothers exercise within or outside the order, the law of the Church and the Ordinances of the General Chapters are to be observed. Removal from office, even when it has no penal character, does not entail the granting of a new office. CIC 192-195

Article III

The General Governance of the Order

2C 191ff; LFl 18

124

1The General Chapter, which is an outstanding sign and instrument of the union and solidarity of the entire brotherhood gathered together in its representatives, enjoys supreme authority in the order.

PC 1; CIC 631 §1

2C 184-186

2The ordinary chapter is announced and convoked by the General Minister, and is to be held every six years in the manner indicated in the Ordinances of the General Chapters and the Procedures for Conducting a General Chapter.

CIC 631 §1

3In addition to the Ordinary chapter, the General Minister, with the consent of his Council, may convoke an extraordinary chapter when particular needs require it.  

4 In a general chapter, whether ordinary or extraordinary, the following have active voice: the General Minister, the General Vicar, the general councillors, the last General Minister immediately following the expiry of his term of office, until the next ordinary General Chapter inclusive, Provincial Ministers, the Custodes, the general secretary, the general procurator, the delegates of the provinces and other perpetually professed brothers in accordance with the norms of the Ordinances of the General Chapters.

CIC 631 §2

5If the Provincial Minister is prevented by a serious reason known to the General Minister, or if his office is vacant, the Provincial Vicar goes to the chapter If, however, the Custos is prevented or his office is vacant, the first councillor attends the chapter.  

125

1The General Chapter, whether ordinary or extraordinary, shall deal with all matters relating to fidelity to our sound traditions, to the renewal of our form of life, the development of apostolic activity, and other matters of great importance for the Order, about which the brothers are to be consulted in advance.

ESa II,2; 19; CIC 631§1

2As prescribed by the Procedures for Conducting a General Chapter, in an ordinary General Chapter the first to be elected is the General Minister, who acquires full authority over the entire Order and all the brothers.

CIC 622; 624-625; 631

  3The outgoing General Minister may be re-elected immediately only once, for the six years immediately following, without prejudice to the provisions of n. 123,7 of the Constitutions.  
  4In the election of the general councillors, the outgoing General Minister has only active voice.  
  5Next, as decreed in the Procedures for Conducting a General Chapter, the general councillors are elected, according to the number determined in the Ordinances of the General Chapters. Of these, no more than half can be from those elected in the previous chapter.

CIC 119 §1; 627 §1

  6The General Vicar is elected from among the councillors. In virtue of his election he becomes the first councillor.  
  7As prescribed in the Constitutions and according to the Statutes of the General Curia approved by the General Chapter, the responsibility of the councillors is to assist the General Minister in the governance of the whole Order.

PC 14

  8The General Minister and his councillors are to reside in Rome. CIC 629
  9During their term of office, the general councillors do not have passive voice in the election of the ministers of the circumscriptions.  
 

126

1The General Vicar is the first collaborator of the General Minister, and if the minister is absent, takes his place. However, if the General Minister can be contacted in any way, the General Vicar is to consult him before making any important decisions and is to abide by his instructions.

 
  2However, the confirmation of Provincial Ministers, the appointment of general visitators and other matters that he may have reserved to himself are reserved to the General Minister.  
  3Should the General Minister be impeded from exercising his office, the General Vicar takes his place in all matters relating to the governance of the Order. At an appropriate time he should report important matters to the General Minister, and refrain from acting against the intention and will of the General Minister. If the impediment is serious and lasts for more than two months, the general vicar must have recourse to the Holy See for appropriate instructions and to be able to deal with matters reserved to the General Minister.  
  4If the General Vicar is also impeded, the councillor who is senior by profession among those elected at the General Chapter takes the place of the General Minister. By that very fact, that councillor is delegated for all acts of governance, and for the faculties proper to the General Minister. However, within a maximum time limit of two months, he is bound to have recourse to the Apostolic See.  
 

127

1If the office of the General Minister becomes vacant, the General Vicar succeeds him and notifies the Apostolic See of the vacancy as soon as possible.

 
  2If the office of the General Minister becomes vacant within three years of the normal date of the next general chapter, the general vicar assumes full governance of the order until the end of the sexennium and, at the time appointed, announces the celebration of the General Chapter.  
  3If the office of the General Minister becomes vacant between three and two years before the normal date of the next General Chapter, the General Vicar and the councillors elect a new councillor chosen from the General Vicar’s Conference, as established in n. 127,6 of the Constitutions.  
  4If the office of the General Minister becomes vacant more than three years before the normal date of the next General Chapter, the General Vicar convokes the electoral assembly within three months to elect a General Minister, who will assume the administration of the order until the natural end of the sexennium. At the same time, the assembly elects a new councillor and the General Vicar. The composition of the electoral assembly is determined by n. 8/14 of the Ordinances of the General Chapters.  
  5Should the office of the General Vicar become vacant more than a year before the chapter, the General Minister and his council, collegially, are to elect by secret ballot a new General Vicar from among the councillors. They then elect another councillor. But if the office becomes vacant less than one year before the General Chapter, the new General Vicar is elected in the prescribed manner, but without the election of a new councillor.  
  6Should the office of a general councillor become vacant more than a year before the chapter, the General Minister and his council, acting collegially, elect another, after consulting the Conference of major superiors of the capitular group to which the councillor belonged.  
 

128

1The General Minister and his council receive particular assistance from the General Curia to enable them to give proper and efficient service to the Order. All the brothers who are part of it, coming from the various circumscriptions, form a local fraternity which is directly dependent on the General Minister and is of fundamental importance to express and promote the unity of the order.

 
  2For this purpose suitable brothers are to be selected, who also possess the necessary competence in the service they render. They are appointed by the General Minister with the consent of his council, and fulfil their office in accordance with the Statute of the General Curia and any instructions given by the General Minister.  
  3The Statute of the General Curia, approved by the General Chapter, outlines the specific nature of this local fraternity and stipulates the job descriptions of the different offices and sections.  

Article IV

The Governance of the Provinces

 

129

1The first authority in a province is the Provincial Chapter.

PC 14; CIC 632

  2The ordinary Provincial Chapter is announced and convoked by the Provincial Minister, having received the consent of the General Minister, who has consulted his council. It is held with the frequency indicated in the Ordinances of the General Chapter.  
  3For particular needs, in addition to the ordinary chapter, the Provincial Minister, with the consent of his council and having informed the General Minister, may convoke an extraordinary chapter, which may not conduct elections.  
  4In a Provincial Chapter, whether ordinary or extraordinary, matters relating to the life and activity of the province and of the custody are discussed, concerning which all the brothers are to be consulted beforehand.  
 

130

1The following have active voice in ordinary and extraordinary chapters: the General Minister, if he presides, the Provincial Minister and the provincial councillors, the Custodes, the perpetually professed brothers of the province and delegates of the custodies, according to the criteria laid down in the Ordinances of the General Chapters and in the Procedures for Conducting a Provincial Chapter.

CIC 632

  2A Provincial Chapter may be held with direct suffrage, that is, with all the perpetually professed brothers taking part, or with delegates, in accordance with the Ordinances of the General Chapters. In a chapter of delegates the members, gathered in fraternal communion, represent the whole province.  
  3All the brothers in perpetual vows who have the right to vote are bound to attend the chapter. Anyone prevented from attending must report the impediment to the Provincial Minister whose responsibility it is to judge the matter. Only the brothers who are actually present in the chapter have the right to vote.  
  4Should the superior of a custody be unable to attend the chapter for a serious reason known to the Provincial Minister, or if his office is vacant, the first or second councillor participates in the chapter, depending on what is possible.  
 

131

1After the announcement of a Provincial Chapter with delegates, all the brothers of the province and those of other provinces as indicated in n. 121,6 who have been perpetually professed by that date, except those belonging to the custodies and those deprived of active and passive voice, shall elect delegates and alternates.

CIC 632

  2The brothers of the custodies shall elect their own delegates and their alternates.  
  3The Provincial Chapter determines which brothers participate by right, the number of delegates of the province and of the custody and the manner of electing them.  
 

132

1In an ordinary chapter, the Provincial Minister is elected according to the Procedures for Conducting a Provincial Chapter approved by the Provincial Chapter itself.

 
  2The Provincial Minister may be elected only for only two consecutive terms, save for the prescription of n. 123, 7, and the Ordinances of the General Chapter.

CIC 624 §1

  3According to the Procedures mentioned previously, four provincial councillors are elected, unless the General Minister with the consent of his council decides that a larger number is more suitable; half of these may be from those elected in the previous chapter.

CIC 627 §1

  4Then the Provincial Vicar is elected from among the councillors, and becomes the first councillor by virtue of his election.  
  5The elected Provincial Minister exercises his office as a delegate of the General Minister until his election is confirmed. If the General Minister does not confirm the election another election is to be held. In this election the one who was not confirmed does not have passive voice.

CIC 625 §3

  6After the election or appointment of the Provincial Minister and councillors the brothers continue to exercise their respective offices until other provisions are made. This norm, with the necessary modifications, also applies to custodies.  
 

133

1The General Minister, with the consent of the council, may, for serious reasons, appoint a Provincial Minister and councillors after obtaining in writing the consultative vote of all the perpetually professed brothers of the province in perpetual vows, but this cannot be done on two consecutive occasions.

CIC 625 §3

  2After this appointment, a chapter is to be held at an appropriate time to deal with provincial affairs.  
 

134

1It is the responsibility of the Provincial Vicar to help the Provincial Minister in whatever has been entrusted to him and, when the Provincial Minister is absent or impeded, to manage the affairs of the province, excepting those which the Provincial Minister has reserved to himself.

CIC 625 §3

  2If the office of Provincial Minister becomes vacant, the Provincial Vicar is bound to have immediate recourse to the General Minister and governs the province until he receives further instructions.  
  3Should the vacancy occur more than eighteen months before the natural expiry of the term of office, the General Minister, with the consent of his council, after a consultative vote of all the brothers in perpetual vows, shall appoint a new minister who governs the province until the chapter is held.  
  4If the Provincial Vicar is impeded, the next councillor in order of election exercises his office temporarily as a delegate of the Provincial Minister.  
  5When the office of a provincial councillor becomes vacant more than a year before the provincial chapter, the General Minister, with the consent of his council, after hearing the Provincial Minister and his council, shall appoint another councillor, who then becomes the last councillor. But if the office of the Provincial Vicar becomes vacant, the number of councillors is first restored, after which the Provincial Minister and his council elect collegially by secret ballot another Provincial Vicar from the members of the council. The General Minister is informed of this matter.  
 

135

1The Provincial Minister, with the consent of his council, shall appoint a provincial secretary from among the brothers in perpetual vows, as well as other officials needed to transact the business of the provincial curia and, if necessary, to take charge of other special offices.

 
  2The provincial secretary is accountable only to the Provincial Minister. It is the responsibility of the provincial chapter, however, to decide whether other officials shall be accountable to the Provincial Minister alone.  
  3It is recommended that commissions be established in each province by the Provincial Minister, with the consent of the council, to deal with special matters.

CIC 633 §1

Article V

The Governance of the Custodies

III PCO 45ff

136

1A custody, among whose principal purposes is the implantation of the Order in a particular Church, is a circumscription of the Order entrusted to a province or, because of special circumstances, directly dependent upon the General Minister. Custodies that depend upon the General Minister have their own statutes approved by the same minister with the consent of his council. The same norms governing custodies dependent on a province are applied to them by analogy.

 
  2Each custody is governed by a Custos with his council. It is for the Provincial Minister, having consulted the members of the custody and with the consent of his council, to determine the number of councillors, which can vary according to need, but cannot be fewer than two. The General Minister must be informed of any change in the number of councillors.

CIC 627 §1

  3It pertains to the Custos, having first obtained the consent of the Provincial Minister, to announce and convoke the chapter of the custody, in which all the perpetually professed brothers, as well as the Provincial Minister if he presides, have active voice. With regard to brothers who are unable to attend the chapter, the same arrangements apply as for the provincial chapter.

CIC 632

  4The Custos and the councillors are elected by the chapter with universal suffrage, in accordance with the procedures determined by the chapter of the custody, and they may be re-elected. However, the Custos may be immediately re-elected only for a second term, save for what is laid down in art. 123,7. The length of the term is determined in the Ordinances of the General Chapters.

CIC 624 §1

  5 The elected Custos must be confirmed by the Provincial Minister. Until this confirmation, he exercises his office as the delegate of the Provincial Minister, who is responsible for informing the General Minister of the election. If the Provincial Minister does not confirm the election, another election is to be held. In this election the one who was not confirmed has no passive voice.

CIC 131-132; 625 §3

  6From the moment his election is confirmed, the Custos acquires ordinary vicarious power to exercise his office. The Provincial Minister must grant to the Custos, in writing, the faculties that are delegated to him, and indicate those which he reserves to himself.  
  7 With the previous consent of the Provincial Minister, the Custos may convoke an extraordinary chapter. It is appropriate that the Provincial Minister should also preside at this chapter, in which he has active voice.  
  8The chapter of the custody shall prepare its own procedures and the statute of the custody, both of which must be approved by the Provincial Minister with the consent of his council. The subjects to be dealt with in the chapter of the custody are to be agreed by the Provincial Minister and the Custos, after consultation with their respective councils.  
  9Should the Custos be absent or impeded, the first councillor, or after him the next councillor in order of election, takes his place. The Provincial Minister must confer the appropriate delegations on the councillor who temporarily assumes the office of Custos, or, if he can, the Custos does so if he has the faculty to sub-delegate.

CIC 632

  10If the office of councillor is vacant for whatever reason, the matter is be referred to the Provincial Minister, who shall proceed by analogy with what is prescribed in n. 134,5.  
  11With permission from the General Minister, the Provincial Minister with the consent of his council may, for serious reasons, appoint a Custos and his councillors, after having obtained a written consultative vote of the brothers of the custody. However, this cannot be done on two consecutive occasions.  
 

137

1The Custos is to convene his councillors several times a year. He needs their advice or consent in the same cases where, according to the Constitutions, the Provincial Minister needs the advice or consent of his council.

 
  2He shall present to the Provincial Minister any initiatives that involve considerable burdens for the custody or for the province.  
  3To open new houses, change the use of existing houses or to transfer formation houses, he shall request authorisation from the Provincial Minister with the consent of his council.  
 

138

1All those brothers belong to the custody who were incorporated into it, or who were sent there for a specified time by the competent authority, and the brothers who made profession in it, even if they live elsewhere for the purpose of formation or some other reason.

CIC 127 §1.3; 627 §2

  2In exercising the apostolate the custody should pay careful attention to vocations. For this purpose, together with the testimony of a coherent lifestyle, it should develop pastoral activities that are attentive to the real requirements of the people and the various local needs.  
  3The province, according to its possibilities, should send to a custody assigned to it as many religious as the needs of the custody require. It should also foster expressions of effective mutual collaboration and service among the brothers of different circumscriptions.  
  4In selecting the religious to be sent or recalled, the Provincial Minister, after consulting the Custos and his council, should take into account the specific qualifications of the brothers in relation to local conditions, the formation of the young and the apostolate to be exercised in the custody. Similarly, the Custos should also act in harmony with the Provincial Minister.  
  5The Custos, taking the needs of the custody into account, having consulted his council and with the consent of the Provincial Minister, may enter into appropriate agreements with other circumscriptions or Conferences of major superiors. These agreements are to be confirmed by the Provincial Minister and, if the case requires it, by the General Minister.  

Article VI

The Governance of the Local Fraternity

 

139

1After the provincial chapter, at an appropriate time, the Provincial Minister with the consent of the council, having consulted the brothers as far as possible, shall form the local fraternities and appoint a guardian and vicar in each. The brothers whom he intends to appoint to these offices are to be consulted in advance.

CIC 608; 617-625 §3; 626

  2The fraternities and the corresponding guardians and vicars in the custodies are to be established in the same way, keeping in mind their special circumstances.  
  3The guardian is appointed for one term. He may be appointed for a second or, in case of manifest necessity, a third consecutive term, even in the same house if there are good reasons.  
  4A brother who has been guardian for the maximum time allowed shall remain free of that office for at least one year.  
  5In order that they might be true leaders of their fraternities, guardians shall not accept work that entails long or frequent absences from the house.  
 

140

1The vicar has the task of helping the guardian with advice in governing the community, and of governing the fraternity when the guardian is absent or prevented, or if his office becomes vacant.

 
  2In every house with at least six brothers, in addition to the vicar, who is the first councillor by law, the local chapter is to elect a councillor from among the perpetually professed brothers. In houses with more than ten brothers, the chapter itself decides how many councillors to elect. The task of the councillors is to assist the guardian with their advice in spiritual and material matters.  
  3 In matters of greater importance, according to the Constitutions and the proper statutes of each circumscription, the consent of the council is required.  
  4The provincial chapter determines who is to preside over the brotherhood when the guardian and vicar are absent or impeded.  
  5If the office of guardian becomes vacant more than six months before the normal end of the term of office, the Provincial Minister, with the consent of his council, shall appoint another guardian. Should the office become vacant less than six months before the normal end of the term of office, the vicar governs the fraternity.

CIC 625 §3

I PCO II,24ff.; IV PCO 80; V PCO 23

141

1The local chapter consists of all the professed brothers.

PC 14; ESa II,2; CIC 632; 633 §1

ER IV4.VI; LR X 6; Adm III 5ff.; VI PCO 31

2It is the task of the local chapter, under the guidance of the guardian, to strengthen the spirit of brotherhood, to promote an awareness of the common good among all the brothers and conduct a dialogue about every aspect of fraternal life, especially with regard to fostering prayer, observing poverty, promoting formation and supporting apostolic activity, in a common search for the will of God.  
  3The local chapter is to be held frequently in the course of the year and the ministers shall effectively promote it, occasionally facilitating it themselves.  
  4Voting in a local chapter is consultative unless universal or particular law determines otherwise.  
  5 In accordance with the Constitutions, only perpetually professed brothers have the right to participate in elections and to vote on the admittance of brothers to profession.  
 

142

1In the general curia, in that of each circumscription and in all our houses, there shall be an archive, accessible only with the permission of the competent superior. All documents produced and received concerning the brothers, our life and our apostolate are to be preserved in it in an orderly fashion and under secrecy.

 
  2Access to the archives of the order is regulated by the decisions of the ministers, attentively observing ecclesiastical and civil norms.  
  3Everything that is worth preserving shall be accurately recorded by the brother to whom this responsibility has been entrusted.  

Article VII

Collaboration in the Order,

The Plenary Council,

and the Conferences of Major Superiors

 

143

1The purpose of the Plenary Council of the Order is to express the vital link between the entire brotherhood and its central government, to promote an awareness of the co-responsibility and cooperation of all the brothers, and to foster the order’s unity and communion in diversity.

CIC 632-633

  2The Plenary Council is a forum for reflection and consultation, which examines questions of particular importance and offers its own collaboration in the governance of the order, in the formation of the brothers, and in their apostolic mission for the growth of the Order and its renewal in accordance with the times.  
  3The General Minister with the consent of his council may convoke a Plenary Council, which shall be conducted according to the procedures approved by the General Minister with the consent of his councillors.  
  4The members of the Plenary Council are: the General Minister, the general councillors and delegates of the Conferences of major superiors, with a certain proportional representation established by the General Minister with the consent of his council.  
  5Each Conference determines the manner of choosing the delegates from among its own circumscriptions. Delegates need not necessarily be chosen from among the ministers of the Conference itself.  
  6 The General Minister with the consent of his council may confirm the conclusions of the Plenary Council, communicate them to all the brothers at an opportune time, and draw from them practical guidelines for the order.  
 

144

1The Conferences of major superiors are established to promote animation and collaboration between the General Minister and the individual ministers of the circumscriptions. They operate in accordance with the General Statute for Conferences and the statutes proper to each of them, which are approved by the General Minister with the consent of his council. They meet at least once a year.

 
  2Conferences, consisting of the Provincial Ministers and Custodes of a particular territory, are established by the General Minister with the consent of his council.

PC 23; ESa II,42ff; CIC 632-633

  3The purpose of the Conferences is to foster the responsibility of each minister for the Order, to promote collaboration by the circumscriptions among themselves and with other ecclesiastical bodies, especially those analogous to religious, and to ensure as far as possible unity of action and of apostolate in their territory.  
  4Each Conference, according to the General Statutes and its own statutes, elects a president, a vice-president, and a secretary. Conferences may also elect a council if necessary.  
  5In order to carry out the duties entrusted to them by the Constitutions, by the statutes and by the General Minister, and to provide for the good of the order, the Conferences may propose special norms for the brothers and circumscriptions in their territory. These norms, in order to be valid, must be unanimously approved by all the ministers of the Conference, after obtaining the consent of their respective councils, and approved by the General Minister with the consent of his council.  
  6 Let the ministers and their councils co-operate willingly and actively with the Conference to improve co-ordination in the forms of Franciscan witness and formation, to renew our life of faith, and to promote peace, justice, and respect for creation.  
 

                                                             145

1Brothers, let us recognise that the Order’s structures of governance and its institutions are also expressions of our life and vocation, and accompany our Brotherhood on its journey through history.

 
  2Although subject to the limitations of every time-bound institution, they help us to develop a sense of belonging to our family, and enhance its life and mission.  
  3Therefore, let us welcome them in a spirit of faith and with simplicity, as a concrete opportunity for personal growth and mutual help, seeking in all things to promote the common good, and to serve the Church and the Kingdom of God.  

CHAPTER IX

OUR APOSTOLIC LIFE

V PCO 41-52

146

1The Son of God was sent into the world by the Father so that, assuming our human condition and consecrated by the anointing of the Holy Spirit, He might bring the good news to the poor, heal the contrite of heart, proclaim liberty to captives, restore sight to the blind, and proclaim the Lord’s favour.

Is 61:1ff; Lk 4:18; Gal 4:4; Phil 2:7; LG 4ff; CIC 574 §2; 577; 758; 783

2Christ established that this mission would continue in the Church by the power of the Holy Spirit. The Church welcomes it as a grace, as its own vocation, and as the profound expression of its identity.

Lk 24:47-49; Jn 20:21; Heb 1:8

LMj II 1, 8; 2C 22

3This same Spirit raised up Saint Francis and his apostolic brotherhood so that, following the example of Jesus and His first disciples, they might go about the world preaching penance and peace, thus participating in the Church’s mission to proclaim the Gospel.  

LR X 8; 1C 29; LMj XII 1; XIII1

4Consequently, our brotherhood, obedient to “the Spirit of the Lord and His holy activity,” fulfils in the Church its duty to serve all peoples by bringing them the Gospel in deed and word.  

PC 20; I PCO I,10; III PCO 11ff; 18; V PCO 21ff; 43ff; 88

147

1In our apostolic activity let us express the characteristics of our charism in forms best suited to the conditions of time and place.

GS 92; PO 3; OT 19; CIC 578; 673; 675 §1; 677 §1

ER VII 15ff; XIV; LR III 10-13; LtOrd 9

2The first apostolate of a lesser brother is to live the gospel life in the world in truth, simplicity, and joy.  
3Since the life of brotherhood is a particular sharing in Christ’s mission, we strive to improve its apostolic effectiveness by our close and ardent dedication to the Lord Jesus, making our fraternal relationships ever more authentic, and being generously involved in the mission of the Order.

VC 72

4We treat everyone with esteem and respect and always show our readiness for dialogue with them.  

ER IX1-3; XXIII 7; LtOrd 9; LtAnt; 1C 36; LMj IV 5; AC 67; III PCO 13

5Following the example of Christ and Saint Francis, while we prefer to evangelise the poor, let us not be afraid to proclaim conversion, truth, justice, and peace of the Gospel to those who hold power or direct the fate of nations.  
6Let us willingly take on any ministry or apostolic activity as long as it is in keeping with our form of life and meets the needs of the Church.

PC 2b; 20; ESa I,36

1C 38

7Moved by the love of the Father who sees in secret, we consciously choose the way of minority and generously undertake even tasks and services that are regarded as lowly or difficult, without taking any pride.

Mt 6:4.6.18

ER XVI 10-21; Adm III 1ff; IX 6; 1C 56

8Indeed, as disciples of Christ and sons of Saint Francis, let us keep in mind that the apostolic life calls for a spirit of readiness to suffer the cross and persecution, even to the point of martyrdom, for the faith and the love of God and of our neighbour.

LG 42

148

1Let us willingly engage in any kind of apostolate, even if it is a personal initiative, as the Lord inspires. The various apostolic activities shall be promoted and coordinated as an expression of the entire brotherhood, and conducted under obedience to the competent authority.

CIC 681-682

ER Pr 3; LR I 2; IX 1; XII 4; V PCO 50

2Saving the right of the supreme pontiff to use the services of the Order for the good of the universal Church, the exercise of any apostolate is subject to the authority of the diocesan bishop, from whom the brothers receive the necessary faculties once they have been approved by their ministers. Let the ministers, as far as they are able and in accordance with our charism, gladly accept the invitations of bishops inviting us to serve the people of God and to work together for the salvation of all people.

LG 46; PC 2c; CD 33-35; ESa I,19,1; 25,1ff; 36,1; CIC 681-682

V PCO 43ff; 52

3It is the responsibility of the provincial chapter to adapt apostolic work to the needs of the times, while preserving our Capuchin Franciscan identity. But it is for the Provincial Minister, with the consent of the council, to coordinate the apostolic resources of the province.  
4After consulting the local chapter in matters of greater importance, the guardian shall allocate work, while taking into account the situations of the individual brothers, and keeping in mind the needs of the local Church and the pastoral directives of the Church’s hierarchy.  
5For the good of the Church and according to need, the circumscriptions shall willingly cooperate among themselves in apostolic works and initiatives, to be carried out on the basis of prudent planning. Sustained by a sense of ecclesial communion, let us fraternally cooperate also with other institutes, especially those that are Franciscan.

VC 52; CIC 680; 708

1C 34ff; LMj IV 2; III PCO 16ff; 34; 40; V PCO 42-45; 53-56; 60-102

149

1To ensure that our apostolic initiatives respond to the demands of evangelisation and to peoples’ needs, let us accustom ourselves to reading the signs of the times with the eyes of faith, for through them we discover the divine plan.

PC 20; GS PR; 4; 21; 27; 79; PO 4-6; 13; OT 19; CD 13; AG 20; CIC 677 §1; 783; 801; 986 §1

VI PCO 5

2Let us promote the customary works of the apostolate such as popular missions, retreats, the sacramental confession of the faithful, the spiritual care of religious women, especially Franciscans, care of the sick and of prisoners, works of education and of social development.  
  3When taking on new forms of the apostolate we should show special concern for people who are far from the faith and from religious practice, and for those who are deprived of ordinary pastoral care because of the conditions of their life: the young during moments of crisis in their Christian life, migrants, unskilled workers, those burdened with financial pressures, or those who suffer discrimination and persecution for any reason.  

VII PCO 54

4We proclaim by example a culture of life and do our best to ensure that human life, from its conception until death, is always defended and promoted. We work in favour of children and commit ourselves to the education and training of young people, even by our presence in schools and other centres of education. With care and concern we support the family founded upon marriage, as the domestic church and the living cell of society, showing our closeness and solidarity especially to families most in need.

VC 96-99; EV 77; FC 74; LG 11

  5Sharing the Church's concern to achieve the unity willed by Christ, let us particularly be committed to ecumenical dialogue in charity, truth, and prayer with all Christians.

UR 1; CIC 383 §3

ER XVI; LR XII 1ff; 1C 57; LMj IX 9.

6Similarly, let us make the effort to engage in a dialogue of salvation with people of other faiths and with unbelievers, among whom we live or to whom we are sent.

NA; GS 21; CIC 383 §4; 787 §1

VI PCO 9

7All ministries undertaken for the people must be founded upon a life shaped by the Gospel. Remembering that the world listens more readily to witnesses than to teachers, let us live close to the people, conducting ourselves as true lesser brothers in our lifestyle and manner of speaking.

CIC 600; 662; 673; EN 41

 

150

1Jesus devoted His life to proclaiming the Kingdom of God and sent His apostles to preach the Gospel to all nations.

Mt 9:35; Lk 8:1; LG 28; PO 3ff; 13; DV 21; 24ff; SC 2; 9; 35; 52; UR 21; DH 14

LR IX 4; 1C 98; V PCO 47ff

2Saint Francis, the herald of Christ, confirmed by the authority of the Church, sowed the seeds of the Gospel everywhere as he went from place to place announcing the mystery of Christ in few and simple words.  
3Therefore, docile to the command of the Divine Master and following Saint Francis’ example and the tradition of our Order, let us preach the word of God in clear language, adhering faithfully to the Sacred Scriptures.  

ER XXII 9-18; 2C 163; Const 1536 ff

4Let us do all we can to imprint on our hearts the Word of God, who is Christ, and give ourselves totally to Him, so that He may move us to speak out of an abundance of love. In this way we will preach Christ Himself by our life, our actions, and our speech.  

AC 71

5In order that this may happen, let us strive to grow constantly in the wisdom of Christ, which is acquired above all by living it, notably through persistent reading, meditation, and careful study of the Sacred Scriptures.

CIC 276 §2; 279 §1; 652 §2; 663 §3

  6Let us ensure that the word of God gives life to all our pastoral ministry paying attention to catechesis of the faith using methods appropriate to the needs of different groups of people thereby strengthening the growth of a culture permeated by gospel values.

VC 98

 

151

1In the celebration of the sacraments, Christ becomes present to the faithful with His saving power, sanctifies them, and builds up His Body, while the People of God render worthy worship to the Lord their God.

Eph 4:12; PO 2; 5; 13; SC 7; 33; 59

  2Therefore, let the brothers be ready to assist the faithful by administering the sacraments either in virtue of their office or when invited to do so by the clergy, so that, through the celebration of the mysteries, the faithful are helped to nourish, strengthen, and express their faith. CD 30; OT 19; CIC 213; 528 §2

2C 146

3We are to prepare ourselves diligently to dispense the mysteries of God, desiring to imitate what we celebrate and to conform our lives to the mystery of the Lord’s cross. Let us nourish among the faithful a Christian life centred on the Eucharist. We ourselves draw from this same source the pastoral love that drives us to give ourselves for the good of our neighbour.

ROrd

ER XX 1-4; XXII 32; Adm VI 1; 1LtCus 6; 2LtF 22

152

1In the spirit of Christ the good Shepherd, the brothers who are priests shall proclaim the mercy of God. Let them be faithful dispensers of the forgiveness of sins that God offers in the sacrament of reconciliation and willingly make themselves available to hear the confessions of the faithful. This ministry is particularly appropriate to us as lesser brothers and frequently brings us close to those who most experience the misery of sin.

CIC 978

  2May zeal for God’s holiness and mercy, respect for the dignity of the human person, charity, patience, and prudence shine brightly in these confessors.  
  3Let confessors be eager to grow continually in pastoral wisdom and in the proper exercise of their ministry.

CIC 279 §1-3; 661; 970

ER VIII 3, 7, 10; IX 2; X; XXIII 7; 1C 17; 2C 175

153

1After the example of Saint Francis and the enduring tradition of the order, we willingly undertake the spiritual, and even bodily, care of the sick and infirm.

LG 8; GS 1; 88; AG 12; PO 6; CIC 578

ER IX 2; XXIII 7

2Following Christ Who went through towns and villages healing every kind of sickness and infirmity as a sign of the arrival of the Kingdom of God, we fulfil the mission of the Church. Through her children, she is at one with people of every condition, especially the poor and afflicted, and willingly spends herself for them.

Mt 9:35; 2Cor 12:15

  3Let the ministers and guardians favour this ministry since it is an exemplary work of love and of the apostolate.  
 

154

1In keeping with the character and tradition of our Order, let the brothers be ready to offer pastoral assistance in parishes to the clergy of the local Church.

CD 31; 34; ESa I, 33, 1ff; CIC 578

  2Bearing in mind the urgent needs of the faithful, the ministers, with the consent of the council, we may also prudently accept the care of a parish in a spirit of service to the local Church.

CIC 520 §1; 538 §2; 671; 678 §2-3; 681 §1; 682 §1

  3In order to stay faithful to our vocation when assuming this ministry, we ordinarily prefer parishes where we can more easily give witness to minority and live and work in brotherhood. In this way the People of God can appropriately share in our charism.  

I PCO III, 13

4Shrines entrusted to our Order should be centres of evangelisation and sound devotion. We work in them in accordance with the Church’s guidelines and give witness to the fundamental values of our life. Let suitable forms of collaboration be put in place among the circumscriptions for the service of the larger shrines entrusted to us.

CIC 1230

155

1Let us recognise and promote the role and mission that belongs to the laity in the Church’s life and activity. Let us gladly work with them, especially in evangelisation. Let us likewise support associations of the faithful whose members strive to live and proclaim the Word of God and to change the world from within.

PO 9; AA 18ff; CIC 215-216; 225 §1; 275 §2; 781; 784; 822 §3;

V PCO 28,59

2Among these associations, the Secular Franciscan Order should be especially dear to us. Let us work with Secular Franciscans so that their fraternities may grow as communities of faith particularly equipped for effective evangelisation. Let us also work with them in the formation of their members, so that they may spread the Kingdom of God not only by the example of their lives but also by various kinds of apostolic activity.

CIC 303; 311; 329; 677 §2

LMj IX 1

GC07 24-25

156

1Saint Francis, who saw in things of beauty Him who is most beautiful, invited all creatures to praise and glorify the Lord. We, too, must learn to recognise all the good and beautiful things the Lord has sown in the human heart and in the harmony of creation. Let us commit ourselves, therefore, to make God’s beauty known, through the spoken and written word, and also through Christian art.

 
  2Let us spread the message of Christ by every means, including the media, which offer great opportunities for evangelisation. Therefore the ministers shall see to it that suitable brothers receive special training in this field. All the brothers are to be suitably instructed in the responsible use of the media.

IM 3-5; 9ff; 15ff; PO 19; PC 2d; 8; 19; ESa I,7; CIC 747 §1; 779; 822 §1.3

  3We gladly share in the apostolate of the printed word, especially in the publication of Franciscan works.

CIC 761

  4In our publications, when using the means of social communication and when we appear in the media, let us express full adherence to gospel values and to the teaching of the Church.  
  5Publications and communications that officially represent the Order, both at the local and universal level, must be duly assessed and authorized by the competent superior. Particular care should be taken to ensure that they express the genuine thinking of the Order.  
  6Regarding instruments of social communication, the prescriptions of universal law are to be observed. When writings about religion or morals are concerned, it should be remembered that permission is also required from the minister.

CIC 823-824; 831-832

  7When it is appropriate, suitable offices may be established at the various levels in the Order so that the apostolate of the communications media may be coordinated, supported, and properly esteemed.  

I PCO I,4; 10; II,20; II PCO 9ff; V PCO 1-14

157

1In all our apostolates, let us always make sure that our life and work are in harmony as we practise love for God and for people, for love is the soul of every apostolate.

LG 33; 42; 47; PC 2e; 4; 8ff; PO 14; AA 3ff

  2Let us also remember that we cannot pursue our mission unless we are continually renewed in fidelity to our own vocation. CIC 663 §§1-5

ER IX 1; XVII 15; LR V 4; VI 2; XII 4; Adm IV; LMj VI 1; 2C 155; VI PCO 15

3Let us therefore be poor and humble in performing works of the apostolate, without making any ministry our own, so that all may clearly see that we seek Jesus Christ alone. Let us preserve that unity in brotherhood, which Christ wished to be so perfect that the world would know the Son had been sent by the Father.

Jn 17:21-23

  4In our life together as brothers, let us cultivate a life of prayer and study, so that we may be closely united with the Saviour and, moved by the power of the Holy Spirit, may offer ourselves with a ready and generous heart to witness to the good news in the world.  

CHAPTER X

OUR LIFE IN OBEDIENCE

ER V 13-15

158

1Jesus Christ, by assuming the condition of a servant, became obedient to the point of death on a cross. In this way, freeing us from slavery to sin, He revealed to us that human freedom is a journey of obedience to the Father’s will and that obedience is a journey in which true freedom is gradually attained.

Phil 2:7-8; Gal 5:1; VC 91

2Listening devotedly to the Word made flesh, the Church, docile to the action of the Spirit, through the obedience of faith responds to the loving plan of the Father, who has revealed Himself in the Son and made known to us the mystery of His will.

DV 2; 5; Rom 1:5; 16,26; 2Cor 10:5; SAFC 5-7

3Consequently, by following Jesus, whose food was to do the Father’s will, the Christian is called to grow each day in the freedom of the children of God through trustful obedience. This is the foundation of all human growth and the means by which it is attained. In this way the human person, setting out from self and purified of false gods, opens up to the horizons of the divine life, accepting a plan of salvation which does not humiliate but grounds his dignity and makes it grow.

Jn 4:34; 8:28-29; 1:12; Rom 5:19 Mt 26:39.42; Lk 22:42; Phil 2:8; SAFC 8

LtRPrp 3; LtOrd 7-10; Adm V 2; III 1-6; SalBVM 14-18; Adm II; LtOrd 4,34; 6,46; 2, 27-28; LMj IV; LFl 11; ER V 16-17; LR X 2; CStg 3

4Saint Francis taught us that the life of the lesser brothers is to obey Jesus Christ present in the Gospel and in the sacraments. “He gave himself to Christ totally, keeping nothing of himself for himself.” He recognised obedience as the fullest expression of living “with nothing of his own” and saw in it the foundation of communion with God, with the Church, with his brothers, with all men and women, and with every creature.

Mt 7:24; Jn 14:21; Lk 22:27; Jn 14:1; SAFC 8; SC 7

ER V13-15; VI 3; XVI 6; 2LtF 47

5Therefore, in virtue of our commitment to live in obedience, we serve one another through the love of the Spirit, and, without distinction of office, seek the lowest place in the community of the Lord’s disciples, and are subject to every human creature for the love of God.

Lk 14:10; 1Pt 2:13; PC 14ff; GS 29

  6In the school of the Holy Spirit by living together as brothers, we search for and fulfil God’s will in every event and action.  
  7The result will be that the ministers and guardians, who give themselves in the service of the brothers entrusted to them, and the other brothers, who in faith are subject to them, will always do what is pleasing to God.

Jn 8:29; 1Jn 3:22; PC 14; CIC 618

Article I

The Pastoral Service

of the Ministers and Guardians

ER IV 6; VI 4; Adm IV 1; I PCO II,14

159

1Christ did not come to be served but to serve. To show this He washed the feet of the apostles and recommended that they do the same.

Jn 20:28; Mk 10:45; Lk 22:27; Jn 13:2-17; PC 14; CIC 618

ER V 9-11

2His servant, Francis, faithful to the words of the Gospel, wanted his brothers to exercise no power or dominion, especially among themselves.  

ER V 9-12; VI; XI 6; XVII 6; LR X 5; Adm VII 4; LtOrd 9; 1LtF 2,21; 2LtF 3; Test 13; LMin 1-5

3Therefore, the ministers, who are servants of the brothers entrusted to them and for whom they will have to account to God, shall serve them humbly, remembering that they themselves must obey God and the brothers. Let them welcome the service of the brothers as a grace, living it in true obedience, especially in times of difficulty and misunderstanding.

Mt 20:26; Mk 10:43; Lk 22:26; SAO 28

Test 13

4Let them not exercise authority as masters, but preside over their fraternities in love and with a generous spirit. Let them gladly become models for the brothers, ministering spirit and life to them by their example and their words.

1Pt 5:2-33; Mk 10:42-43.45; SAO 12

160

1The ministers and guardians shall exercise the office entrusted to them with diligence, be concerned for the brothers, and take care of all things, especially the spiritual.

 
2Together with the brothers, through intense prayer and prudent discernment, let them persistently seek the will of God and faithfully put it into practice.  
3In a gospel spirit may they willingly initiate dialogue with the brothers, both communally and individually. Let them remember that final decisions are not reached alone, but rather by ensuring, as far as possible, that all the brothers freely contribute. Therefore, let them listen to them attentively, and consider their advice with an open mind. Let all remember, however, that it is the responsibility of the superiors, in virtue of their office, to make the final decision.

PC 14; CIC 618; SAO 20a, c

4For the good of the entire brotherhood, they will make sure that the brothers are suitably informed, and actively involved in the life and initiatives of the brotherhood. Let them promote the responsible collaboration of all, especially of those who have specific responsibilities.

FLC 50b; SAO 2b

5Since the bond of brotherhood is all the stronger when what is shared is at the heart of our life, let the ministers and guardians promote the sharing of personal gifts and skills, above all of spiritual riches, such as listening to the Word of God and the life of faith.

SAO 20c

 

161

1The ministers and guardians shall do their best to ensure that our fraternities are places where God is sought and loved in all things and above all things. Being the first to cultivate the spiritual life themselves, let them sustain the brothers on their journey towards holiness by providing the brothers and fraternities with quality time for prayer and ensuring their daily fidelity to it.

CIC 619; RomM, Coll. XX Ord. Sunday; SAO 4; 13a-b

  2Therefore, let them remember that they have a duty to minister the Word of God to the brothers and to take care to provide them with appropriate instruction and religious formation.

PC 2,18; CD 28; CIC 618; 661

  3They shall endeavour to promote knowledge of our charism and encourage the brothers to observe the Rule and these Constitutions faithfully, and to keep alive their sense of faith and ecclesial communion, and to promote the good of the People of God everywhere.  
  4The most appropriate initiatives shall be undertaken for this purpose, according to the circumstances of time and place, such as the study of the documents of the Church and the Order, the circular letters of the ministers, or participation in Conferences on religious and Franciscan topics. The ministers and guardians shall not neglect spiritual conversations, whether with individuals or in the local chapter, or homilies to the brothers during the celebration of the Eucharist or of the Word of God.  
 

162

1The ministers and guardians, wishing every single brother to respond to the plan of the Father Who calls him out of love, shall encourage him to seek and fulfil the divine will actively and responsibly.

PC 14; CIC 618

  2Let them guide the brothers entrusted to them as sons of God, respecting their human personality so that they may give their obedience of their own free will.  

2C 153

3They shall not impose commands in virtue of the vow of obedience unless charity and necessity demand it, and do so with great prudence, in writing, or in the presence of two witnesses.

CIC 49; 1319 §1

LMin 9-17

163

1The ministers and guardians, remembering the instructions of Saint Francis, shall be signs and instruments of the love of God Who welcomes and forgives. Let them do their best to ensure that their fraternities are moulded by the gospel teaching on mercy.

SAO 25d

LR 10,1-6; LMin 1-12

2In accordance with the responsibility, which the Rule imposes on them, the ministers shall firmly, yet kindly and charitably, admonish, encourage and, when necessary, correct the brothers.

PC 14

2C 177

3They shall seek to correct the failings of individual brothers privately through fraternal discussion, taking into account the person and the circumstances. On their part, let the brothers willingly accept correction for their own good.  

Adm XXIII 1-3

4Ministers and guardians shall talk about the shortcomings or omissions of the fraternity with the brothers themselves, particularly in a local chapter, and together seek and apply effective remedies.  

ER IV 2; LR X 1

164

1The pastoral visitation prescribed by the Rule and universal law contributes much to the inspiration and renewal of our life, and to the unity of the brothers.

CIC 628 §1.3

2Therefore, the ministers shall apply themselves to it with particular dedication, either personally or through others, as prescribed by the Church and by our own law.  
3During the visitation, the ministers or other brothers delegated to conduct it shall have a sincere conversation with the brothers, both individually and communally, about everything, whether spiritual or temporal, that protects and fosters their life. Let them not neglect the visitation of the houses.

CIC 628 §1.3

4Let them act with great understanding and prudence, adapting themselves to the times and conditions of different regions, so that the brothers may express their opinions trustfully, freely and sincerely, and together seek whatever leads to the continuing renewal of our life and the enrichment of all that we do.

CIC 628 §3

Article II

The Loving Obedience of the Brothers

ER I 1; LR I 1; 2LtF 10-15; LMj VI 4

165

1Following in the footprints of the Lord Jesus, Who throughout His life “placed His will in the will of the Father,” the brothers offer their wills by the profession of obedience as a sacrifice of themselves to God, conform themselves continually to the saving will of God, Whom they love above all else, and bind themselves to the service of the Church.

Jn 4:34; 5:30; 6:38; Rom 12:1; Eph 5:2; 1Pt 2:21; LG 43ff; PC 14; CIC 207 §2; 574 §2; 590 §1; 601

LMj VI 5; L3C 42

2Moreover, by living in obedience, together with the brotherhood they discover the will of God with greater confidence, manifest the communion of the three Divine Persons, and strengthen brotherly union itself.

VC 21

LR X 2-4; Adm III 4; AC 106

3In the same spirit of generosity with which they promised to observe the gospel counsels, let them obey the superiors out of faith and love for God's will, in an active and responsible way.  
  4May they be fully aware that the freely made offering of their own will to God contributes enormously to their personal perfection and becomes for others a witness of the Kingdom of God.  
Adm III 3, 5-9; SalV 14-15; 2LtF 40 5Clinging to Christ, who although He was Son learned obedience through his sufferings, let them accept the limitations of the human instruments through whom the will of God is mediated. Remembering that the cross is the proof of the greatest love calling for the gift of self, let them persevere in brotherly communion, and in this way live in perfect obedience and share in the work of redemption.

1Pt 2:4; Heb 10:22; 5:8; 12:10; 12:8; SAO 9-10; ET 29; SAO 26; RD 13

ER V 3

166

1Let the brothers treat their ministers and guardians with love and respect. Ready to obey them in a spirit of faith, the brothers shall present their own opinions and initiatives to them for the common good. It is the responsibility of the superiors, after willingly considering everything with the brothers, to decide and direct what must be done.

1Thes 5:13; PC 14; CIC 618

ER IV; Adm III 4-6

2Whatever good a brother may do with a right intention and on his own initiative is also true obedience when he knows that this is not contrary to the will of the superior or detrimental to brotherly unity.  
3If, after fraternal dialogue, a brother sees something better and more useful than what the minister commands, let him willingly sacrifice his ideas to God and do his best to carry out what the minister has decided. “This, in fact, is the true and loving obedience, that satisfies God and neighbour.”  

ER V; VI 1ff; VII 15; VIII; XVI 5; LR X 4; 2C 118

167

1Those who, because of personal reasons or external circumstances, cannot observe the Rule spiritually, may and shall have recourse to the minister, confidently asking advice, encouragement, and resolution.

 

ER IV 4ff; V 7; VI 1ff; LR X 5ff

2The minister shall welcome them and assist them with brotherly love and concern.

CIC 619

ER V 14; XXII 31, 52; LR VI 8; X 5; 1C 46; SalV 15-18

168

1All of us, ministers and the other brothers alike, walking in truth and sincerity of heart, shall nurture among ourselves a strong sense of belonging to the same family and serve and obey one another willingly through the love of the Spirit.

1Pt 1:22;

SAO 20g

Adm XXV

2Let us foster mutual respect in such a way that, when a brother is absent, we would never say anything that, in love, we would not dare to say in his presence.

CIC 220

3By acting in this way, in a world which must be consecrated to God, we will be a sign of that perfect love which shines brilliantly in the Kingdom of Heaven.

LG 31; 44

L3C 40

4Should we sometimes suffer want, persecution, and tribulation because of our witness to the gospel life, let us place all our hope in God, Whom we love above all else.

LG 8

LR X 8; 1C 55; V PCO 64; 82ff

5Moved and sustained by “the Spirit of the Lord and His holy activity,” as poor men and men of peace, let us courageously continue the sublime journey on which we have embarked; and, if we persevere until the end, may we enjoy God's reward.

Mt 10:22; 24:13; Phil 2:8; 1Cor 9:25; 2Tm 4:8


CHAPTER XI

OUR LIFE IN CONSECRATED CHASTITY

 

169

1Among the gospel counsels, chastity for the sake of Christ and His Kingdom is an extraordinary gift of God, worthy of the highest esteem.

Mt 19:11-12; 1Cor 7:7; LG 42ff.; PC 12; PO 16; CIC 247 §1; 599

  2It is a reflection of the infinite love binding the three divine Persons: love exemplified by the incarnate Word to the extent of laying down His life; love poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit, impelling a response of total love for God and for one’s brothers and sisters.

VC 21

  3Since God Himself is infinite in splendour, a life in chastity consecrated to Him is a reflection of the divine beauty in those who let themselves be transfigured by the power of the Holy Spirit.

VC 19

  4The same Spirit, by arousing love for the divine Beauty, moulds us into the likeness of the virginal life of Christ and makes us sharers in the mystery of the Church, whose life is fully and exclusively devoted to Christ her Spouse in preparation for the final encounter with Him.

VC 19; 26; 34; 2Cor 11:2;

  5The evangelical counsel of chastity, which we have voluntarily chosen and promised by vow, draws its sole motivation from the preferential love of God and, in Him, of every person. In a unique way, it confers a greater freedom of heart, through which we are able to cling to God with an undivided love and to become all things to all people.

1Cor 7:32-39; 9:22

LMj X 1; IV PCO 52

6The charism of celibacy, which not everyone is capable of grasping, prophetically foretells the glory of the heavenly kingdom already at work in our midst and transforms the entire human person. It is to be faithfully guarded and assiduously cultivated. With this gift, our brotherhood presents a distinctive announcement of the life to come, in which those who have risen are brothers and sisters in the presence of God, who will be all in all for them.

Mt 19:11-12; 1Cor 15:28; 2Cor 11:2; Eph 5:22ff; LG 44; PC 12; VC 26; Mt 22:30

 

170

1Since chastity flows from love for Christ, may we bind our hearts inseparably to Him Who chose us first and loved us to the ultimate gift of Himself, making it our concern to belong totally to Him.

1Jn 4:19; Eph 5:2

  2Let us cultivate an intense relationship with the Blessed Virgin Mary, she who is all beautiful from the moment of her immaculate conception, the sublime example of complete consecration to God and of love for that divine Beauty which alone can totally satisfy the human heart.

VC 18d; 28 22; 34; 94a; LG 46; 56; PC 25; Sg 4,7

 

171

1While we are on the way to the fullness of God’s Kingdom, a life of chastity always involves a certain privation, which must be recognised and accepted with a cheerful heart, since one who belongs to Christ Jesus has crucified his flesh with its passions and desires in order to share even now in the possession of the Lord’s glory.

PC 12; PO 16; OT 10; CIC 599; Gal 5:24; RD 8; 11

  2Chastity consecrated to God is a gift given to human beings. It is nourished, sustained, and nurtured by participation in a sacramental life, especially the Eucharistic Banquet and the Sacrament of Reconciliation, by perseverance in prayer, and by intimate union with Christ and His Virgin Mother.

CIC 663 §1.4; 664

  3Persistent recourse to supernatural and natural means makes it possible to maintain a healthy balance and to stave off the dangers that threaten our celibate lives, such as boredom, loneliness of heart, a love of comforts, inappropriate compensations, unhealthy expressions of affectivity, and immoderate and improper use of the media.

PC 12; PO 16; OT 10; CIC 666

2C 113

4Therefore, let us strive to respond generously to this gift, not relying on our own strength but on God’s help.  

IV PCO 52-56; 85

172

1Affective and sexual maturity travels a path of conversion from a self-centred and possessive love to one that is self-sacrificing and capable of giving itself to others.

PC 12; PO 3; 16; OT 11

  2On this journey, the commitment to grow in the virtue of temperance takes on particular importance, because our capacity to live chastely depends strictly upon it.

VC 88

  3We need to appreciate, among other things, the spiritual value of the emotions, a proper esteem for one’s own body, calm acceptance of one’s sexual identity, and the differences between men and women.

MD 6-8; Mt 19:11-12

  4In the face of hedonism, which reduces sexuality to a game and to a commodity, we give witness to a love that is gratuitous and universal, aided by the strength that comes from the mastery and discipline of self that are necessary to avoid becoming enslaved to one’s senses and instincts. In this way, consecrated chastity becomes an experience of joy and freedom. VC 88; 87

2C 22

5All of us, especially the ministers and guardians, shall remember that reciprocal love and brotherly service are particularly valuable supports for chastity.  
6Genuine brotherhood, serene and open to others, facilitates the natural development of each one’s affectivity. Commitment to our brothers demands a continual renunciation of self-love and requires a dedication to others. It fosters authentic and profound friendships, which greatly contribute to emotional fulfillment.  

VII PCO 22

7Conscious of human frailty, we avoid occasions and conduct that is dangerous or ambiguous to chastity and that may give rise to suspicion. In the areas of affectivity and sexuality, lack of respect for others offends chastity, betrays trust, is an abuse of power, and can seriously harm the dignity of another person. In such cases, ministers and guardians, always after verification, are to intervene with prudence and determination.  

1C 42; LMj V 6

8In addition to disciplining our senses and hearts, we joyfully devote ourselves to hard work, living in humility and penance, and use other means that foster health of mind and body.

PC 12

LMj VIII 1; IV PCO 52-56; V PCO 22

173

1Francis, captivated by love for God and for all people, indeed for all creation, is a universal brother and friend of all. He was noted for the richness of his affections and his capacity to express them.

 

LMj IX 2; LFl 34

2Thoroughly courteous and refined and amazed at the beauty and goodness of creation, he wished his brothers to sing the praises of God in a hymn of universal, even cosmic brotherhood, repentant, and full of peace and joy.  
  3May we also develop a capacity for universal love drawn from the well-spring of the Triune God. Let us love all people in Christ and seek to lead them to share in the Kingdom of God through brotherhood and friendship.  

FV 2; 1C 18; 2C 204

4Following the example of the noble affection Brother Francis had for Sister Clare, may our conduct toward women be conspicuous by its courtesy, respect, and sense of justice as we promote their dignity and mission in society and in the Church.

PO 17

3C 37; IV PCO 55

5Friendship is a great gift that fosters human and spiritual growth. In virtue of our consecration and out of respect for the calling of those with whom we relate, let us avoid binding others to ourselves; rather let us give ourselves to them. In this way a friendship is established that is liberating and not destructive of brotherhood. Sir 6: 5-17

VI PCO 23

6Maintaining good relationships with one’s family of origin fosters harmonious growth. However, let us not forget that preferential love for Christ requires the full acceptance of the fact that discipleship is demanding and the brotherhood is our new family.  
  7In communion with other vocations, we joyfully witness to our consecration in celibacy as a constant reminder of the absolute claims of the Kingdom, where marriage and the family, too, find their meaning and value.

FC 16

ERXXII 26; XXIII 8;

LR X 8

174

1Let us frequently meditate on the words of Saint Francis in which he encourages his brothers “to put away all care and anxiety, and to serve, love, and adore the Lord God above all creatures with a clean heart, a chaste body and holy activity.”

 

ER XXIII 9-10

2”Let nothing hinder us, nothing separate us, and nothing prevent” the Spirit of the Lord from acting and being manifested in us and in our brotherhood.  

CHAPTER XII

THE PROCLAMATION OF THE GOSPEL

AND THE LIFE OF FAITH

Article I

Our Commitment to Evangelisation

III PCO 4; 7ff; 10-15

175

1Christ Jesus, God’s Good News, the first and greatest herald of the Gospel, sent His apostles to preach the good news to all nations and established His Church as the universal sacrament of salvation. By its very nature, then, it is missionary.

Mt 28:19; Mk 16:15; LG 8; 17; 34; 48; GS 45; PC 1; AG 1; 2; 5ff; 11; 40; CIC 204 §1; 205; 747 §1; 781; 783; LG 48

2In the Church, a community of faith and love drawing life from the Holy Spirit on its pilgrim journey in time, all the baptized and, in particular, religious by virtue of their special consecration, are called to live out the grace of evangelisation and thereby fulfil the Lord’s mandate.

MD 34; VC 30; 72-74; 76-79; EN 14

ER XVI; LR XII 1ff

3“By divine inspiration,” Saint Francis renewed the missionary spirit in his day through the example of his life and the force of his Rule.

CIC 786

1C 55; 57

4His brotherhood, living in minority and itinerancy, gave a new impetus to the missionary activity of the Church by which it proclaims the Gospel and the coming of the Kingdom, thereby transforming even humanity itself and creating a new world in justice and in peace.  

MHO 1.4; 1.7; 2.1-2

5Therefore our Order welcomes as its own the commitment to evangelise, which belongs to the whole Church. It values missionary work and undertakes it as one of its principal apostolic tasks, as a contribution to the renewal and building up of the Body of Christ.

CIC 578

MHO 2.5; III PCO 5ff

176

1In our apostolic brotherhood, we are all called to bring the joyful message of salvation to those who do not believe in Christ, in whatever continent or region they may find themselves. For this reason, all of us consider ourselves to be missionaries.

CIC 784; 786; 787

2In addition to the missionary work undertaken in Christian communities strong enough to shine the light of gospel witness in society, we recognise the special situation of those brothers commonly called missionaries. They leave their own country of origin and are sent to engage in ministry in different societies and cultures in which the Gospel is unknown or where young Churches require assistance.

RM 34

  3In the same way we recognise the particular missionary circumstances of brothers sent to environments where the Gospel needs to be proclaimed anew, where the lives of entire groups of people are no longer inspired by the Gospel, and where many baptised people have lost a sense of faith, either partially or totally.

RM 33; TMA 57

  4Therefore, aware that every person has the right to hear God’s good news and live his vocation to the full, let us be sure not to turn a deaf ear to the Lord’s missionary command.  

ER XVI 5ff; FV 1; III PCO 9; 11ff; 16ff; 20; V PCO 57

177

1According to the teaching of Saint Francis, let missionary brothers sent to various parts of the world “live among people spiritually: being subject to every human creature for the love of God,” let them give witness with great confidence to the Gospel life by their love; and, “when they see that it pleases God, let them openly proclaim the word of salvation.”

1Pt 2:12-13; AG 12; 15; 22; 24; 26; PC 8; UR 10ff

MHO 1.7; L3C 66

2On fire with love for Christ and sustained by the example of our holy missionaries, let the brothers embark on their mission driven by the desire to serve the local Churches in the work of spreading the Gospel.  

III PCO 18

3May they make this attitude evident by willingly listening to and engaging in dialogue with the other ecclesial bodies, aware that missionary activity culminates in the building up of the local Church, in which clergy, religious, and laity have responsibility, each according to his respective competence.

CIC 786; LG 26; VC 51; 54; 74; 85; RM 17-20

4Let the brothers work together with lay missionaries, especially with catechists, offering help and advice, providing intensive spiritual leadership with them, as well as promoting the social and economic welfare of the people.

CIC 785 §1; CV 15; EN 29; 31; SRS 41

VI PCO 11; ER IX 2; XVI 5

5In keeping with Capuchin tradition, let them be one in mind and heart with people of every state of life, and their work of evangelisation not tied to the security of economic resources or social prestige. Instead, let their trust be in God and in the credibility of the gospel life.  

III PCO 20ff

6In a spirit of love, let them evaluate historical, religious, social, and cultural conditions in the light of the Gospel. Urged on by a prophetic spirit let them act with the freedom of the children of God. Rom 8:21; Gal 4:31; GS (?); NA (?); UR (?); CIC 769

V PCO 48; VII PCO 47

7In dialogue with other Christian churches and with different religions, let the brothers seek respectfully the signs of God’s presence and the seeds of the Word in different cultures. Let them discern their authentic values, be open to them for the deeper understanding they bring of the very mystery of God, and, contribute to their refinement through the witness of our charism.

VC 79

  8Let them also promote those changes that foster the coming of a new world and pay attention to ideas that influence how people think and act.  

LR XII 1-2; III PCO 10ff; 35ff

178

1Brothers who, “by divine inspiration,” feel called to missionary work in regions where the first proclamation of the Gospel is needed, where young Churches require support, or where new evangelisation is urgent, are to make known their intentions to their own minister.

AG 23; 25ff; 34; 38; 40

2The minister, after suitable discernment, shall provide them with theoretical and practical training in missiology, ecumenism, and interreligious dialogue in keeping with their abilities. He shall give them letters of obedience, observing the provisions of our proper law. The minister may also ask other suitable brothers to undertake mission work.  

AC 82

3The ministers shall not refuse to send those who are suitable on account of the scarcity of brothers in the province, but cast all their cares and worries on Him Who continually takes care of us.

Ps 54:23; Wis 12:13; Mt 6:25ff; Lk 12:22ff; 1Pt 5:7

4The different circumscriptions of the order shall generously assist one another as appropriate and, through the General Minister, offer missionaries and support to those in greater need.  

III PCO 7ff; 35ff; 41

5Brothers may be invited to share in missionary work, even temporarily, especially to provide particular services.

AG 24; 27; 38; ESa III,6

6Let ministers foster among the brothers a love for missionary activity and a spirit of working together in it. Let this be done in such a way that everyone, according to his own state and ability, may fulfil his missionary duty in fraternal communion with missionaries, by praying for the newly established churches in union with them, and by awakening concern among the Christian people.

CIC 211; 781; 783

III PCO 38ff; 42

179

1Since the state of those who profess the gospel counsels belongs to the life and holiness of the Church, let the missionary brothers promote it zealously, fostering our specific spirit and charism in the local churches.

LG 44; AG 18; CD 35; ESa III, 18,2; CIC 207 §2; 574 §1;

  2Let us promote the development of all expressions of the Franciscan family. Let us also value the special missionary dimension of the contemplative life of our sisters of the Second Order, helping them as far as possible with the foundation of their monasteries and accompanying them spiritually.  
  3Let the ministers see to it that among the missionaries there are brothers qualified to form candidates for the order.

CIC 651 §3

  4Let the form of our life and the spiritual heritage of our Order, which is universal and embraces all the rites of the Catholic Church, be handed on and expressed in ways that conform to regional conditions, to the unique culture of each nation, and to the character of the particular church. Customs specific to one region are not be transplanted to another. It is the responsibility of the General Minister with the consent of the council to decide the rite of individual circumscriptions, while observing the prescriptions of law. CIC 578
 

180

1The General Minister, with the consent of his council, and in union with ecclesiastical authority, has the responsibility of promoting and coordinating the missionary activity of the order in the local churches.

 
  2It belongs to the Provincial Minister, with the consent of his council, to accept a missionary commitment proposed by the General Minister and to sign agreements with the respective ecclesiastical superior, after receiving the approval of the General Minister, with the consent of his council.  

III PCO 41ff; VI PCO 24

3The General Minister and the Provincial Ministers, with the consent of their respective councils, shall establish a secretariat for evangelisation, missionary enthusiasm and cooperation, and determine its responsibilities.

AG 32ff; ESa III,17; 21

4Let the brothers work together steadfastly with religious institutes that devote themselves to evangelisation or engage in missionary work in a local church in the same territory or in missionary promotion at home.

CIC 708; 791

ER XIV; XVI; XVII 5-8, 14-19; LR III 10-14; LtOrd 5-11; 1C 19

181

1Let us remember Saint Francis, who wished to send his companions into the world after the example of Christ’s disciples, in poverty and with full trust in God the Father, to proclaim peace everywhere by their life and word.

Mt 10:9ff; Lk 10:1-12

1C 38; MHO 3.2

2Therefore, let us journey throughout the world, ready to confront even the most difficult situations; living with simplicity the radical call of the Beatitudes, thirsting for the Absolute, who is God, and offering the silent testimony of brotherhood and minority.

EN 69; VC 87-91

  3We entrust this great undertaking to the intercession of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of the Good Shepherd, who gave birth to Christ, the light and salvation of all nations, and who, on the morning of Pentecost, overshadowed by the Holy Spirit, presided in prayer at the dawn of evangelisation.

Lk 2:30-32

Article II

Our Life of Faith

LR II 2; XII 4; ER XIX 2; XXIII 7; Test 4; Adm XVI 1; PrG 6; LMj XII 7

182

1As true disciples of Christ and sons of Saint Francis, with the help of divine grace, let us hold fast to the end of our lives on the faith we have received from God through the Church. With all our strength and good judgement let us delve into its depths ever more profoundly in such a way that the faith may increasingly mould our lives and govern all that we do.

2Tm 4:7; LG 10ff; DV 5; AG 14; OT 14; GS 32; UR 2

ER XXIII 7; PrCr 1

2Through unceasing prayer let us ask God for an increase of this priceless gift and live in close communion with the entire People of God.  
3Since a shared faith grows stronger, guided by the Holy Spirit, may we never tire of bearing witness to Christ everywhere; and, to those who ask the reason for our hope in eternal life, let us have a ready answer.

1Pt 3:15

2C 24

183

1Saint Francis had the heartfelt desire to stand by the teaching authority of the Church with the utmost fidelity, for it protects the Word of God, passed on in Scripture and Tradition, and safeguards the gospel life.

LG 25; PC 6; DV 10; CD 35,1; CIC 212 §1; 590 §2; 750; 752-753

LMj XIV 5

2In order to preserve this spiritual heritage intact, let us cultivate particular loyalty to holy Mother Church.  

ER XIX 1ff; 2LtF 32; 1C 62

3Let us, therefore, be in complete harmony with the Church: in thought, word and action, carefully avoiding false or dangerous doctrines.  

ER Pr 3; LR I 1; IX 1; XII 4; 1C 34; AP 36

4Prompted by a sense of active and conscious responsibility, we offer religious submission of intellect and will to the Roman Pontiff, the primary teacher of the universal Church, and to the bishops who, as witnesses to the faith, teach the People of God in union with the supreme pontiff.  
5At the beginning of their term of office, the ministers and other brothers as decreed in law shall make a profession of faith.

CIC 833

184

1As we respond to the divine call through which God each day requires us to take part in fulfilling His plan of salvation, let us remember how much, by virtue of our profession, how closely we are bound to Christ in the sight of the People of God.

LG 46; PC 1; CIC 607 §3; 654

2Let us strive, therefore, to walk worthily and to excel all the more in the vocation to which we are called, remembering that God never takes back His gifts, still less a vocation once given. His grace will not fail us in overcoming difficulties on this narrow path that leads to life.

Mt 7:14; Rom 11:29; Eph 4:1; 1Cor 10:13; CIC 607 §1; 662; 664

  3Let us persevere with a joyful heart in the commitment of our life intent on our renewal. Conscious of our human frailty, let us move forward on the way of conversion with the entire Church, which is always being renewed by the Holy Spirit.

LG 7; 9

~~~     ~~~     ~~~

 

185

1Our Order is governed by the universal law of the Church, by the Rule of Saint Francis confirmed by Pope Honorius III, and by the Constitutions approved by the Holy See.

CIC 576; 598 §1

ER XIX; LR II 2; XII 4; Test 31,34; 2LtF 32; LtOrd 44

2By virtue of our profession, we are bound to observe the Rule with simplicity and with Catholic faith, in accordance with these Constitutions, which are the only ones having force of law in the whole order.  
3The authentic interpretation of the Rule is reserved to the Holy See, which has abrogated earlier pontifical declarations on the Rule as regards their prescriptive force, excepting those contained in existing universal law and in these Constitutions.  
4The Holy See grants to the General Chapter the right to adapt the Rule to new circumstances when appropriate as long as such adaptations obtain force of law through its approval.  

186

1The authentic interpretation of the Constitutions is reserved to the Holy See. The general chapter, with the consent of two-thirds of the vocals, may add to, change, or derogate from the Constitutions, according to the needs of the times, so that a certain continuity of appropriate renewal may be fostered. However, the approval of the Holy See is always required.

CIC 16 §1; 576; 583; 587 §1

2Outside the chapter, the General Minister with the consent of his council has the right to settle doubts or to fill in the lacunae that may occur in our own law. These solutions remain in force until the following chapter.  
3In particular cases ministers and guardians may temporarily dispense their own subjects and guests from disciplinary regulations of the Constitutions whenever they judge that it contributes to their spiritual good.

CIC 85

4To apply the Constitutions adequately to various conditions of life, provincial chapters or Conferences of major superiors may enact particular statutes which must be approved by the General Minister with the consent of his council.  
5All questions of contentious law, whether between religious, houses or circumscriptions within the order are to be resolved with charity according to law and our manner of juridical procedures.  

187

1Since laws and statutes cannot be made for every particular case, in all our actions let us keep before our eyes the holy Gospel, the Rule we have promised to God, sound traditions, and the example of the saints.

PC 2b; 4; CIC 578; 662

  2Let ministers and guardians outshine the brothers in the life of our brotherhood and in the observance of the Rule and Constitutions, and encourage the brothers, with the audacity of love, to put them into practice.

CIC 618-619

~~~   ~~~     ~~~

ER Pr 1; I 1-5; LR I 1; XII 4; FV 1; 1C 108; 2C 216; LMj XIV 5

188

1Saint Francis, when he was close to death, imparted the blessing of the Most Holy Trinity, together with his own, to those who had kept the Rule wholeheartedly. Therefore, setting aside all negligence and burning with love, let us commit ourselves to acquire the gospel perfection placed before us in the Rule itself and in our order.

CIC 598 §2; 662

2C 191

2Let us remember, dearest brothers, the text on which our Seraphic Father preached to a chapter of the brothers: “Great things have we promised to God, but greater things has He promised to us.” Therefore, let us strive to observe these Constitutions and all that we have promised. With the help of Mary, the Mother of God and our mother, let us yearn with ardent desire for the things that have been promised to us.

2Pt 1:4

LMj X 1

3While pursuing all these things, let us cast our eyes upon our Redeemer so that, knowing His good pleasure, we may strive to please Him with pure love. Observance of the Constitutions will help us not only to observe the Rule we have promised but also to fulfil the divine law and follow the gospel counsels. As our labours for Christ Jesus abound, so will our consolation. We will be able to do all things in Him who strengthens us, for He who is the wisdom of God and gives abundantly to all will grant us understanding in everything.

1Cor 1:24; 2Cor 1:5; Phil 4:15; Jas 1:5

LMj X 3

189

1The fact is that

Christ,

Who is the Light and Expectation of the nations,

the End of the Law,

the Salvation of God,

the Father of the world to come,

the Word and the Power that upholds all things

and, finally,

our hope,

in Whom all things are possible, delightful and easy,

and to Whom our frailty is known,

will not only give us

strength to follow His commands and counsels,

but will also pour out His heavenly gifts

in such abundance that, having overcome all obstacles,

we may be able to follow and imitate Him,

with the greatest eagerness in our hearts,

using visible things as pilgrims

and yearning for things eternal.

Is 9:5; Mt 11:30; Lk 2:32; 3:6; Rom 10:4; Heb 28:28

LMj IX 2

2In Christ,

therefore,

Who is God and Man,

the True Light, the Splendour of Glory

and the Brilliance of Eternal Light;

in Christ,

the Mirror without blemish,

the Image of God’s Goodness;

in Christ

appointed by the Father

as Judge, Law-giver and Saviour of all peoples;

in Christ,

to Whom the Father and the Holy Spirit

have borne witness

and in Whom are our merits, our models of life,

our help, and our reward;

in Christ

Whom God had made our Wisdom and Justice,

may all our thought, meditation, and imitation

be anchored.

Wis 7:26; Jn 1:9; 5:37; 15:26; 1Cor 1:30; Heb 1:3; 10:42

 

3Lastly,

to Christ,

Who lives and reigns with the Father and the Holy Spirit,

one God, co-eternal, consubstantial, and co-equal,

be everlasting praise, honour and glory

for ever and ever.

Amen.

Rv 5:13


ORDINANCES

OF THE GENERAL CHAPTERS

OF THE CAPUCHIN FRIARS MINOR


PREFACE

In 1536, the General Chapter, held at Santa Eufemia in Rome, drew up the first Constitutions of the Capuchin Friars Minor. Subsequently, the need for other special laws soon became apparent, to adapt the Order to changing conditions. These laws, issued by the competent legislative authority, namely, the General Chapter, were consistently known as Ordinances of the General Chapters. At first the Ordinances, and also the Decrees of the General Definitory, were inserted into the body of the constitutional text. Later—particularly after 1643, when Pope Urban VIII solemnly confirmed the Constitutions of our Order in the Letter Sacrosanctum Apostolatus officium (June 19, 1643)—the Ordinances of the General Chapters and the Decrees of the General Definitory were no longer incorporated into the Constitutions, to avoid weakening the Constitutions through frequent changes. Instead, a new collection of laws and decrees, complementary to the Constitutions, gradually came into being.
 

Therefore, in accordance with the constant tradition of the order, as well as the Rule of the Lesser Brothers, approved by Pope Honorius III on 29 November 1223, and the Constitutions approved by the Holy See, the Ordinances of the General Chapters are to be considered as proper laws of the Capuchin Order for all intents and purposes. They stand as a true complement applying the Constitutions, and are therefore sources of the order’s proper law. As such, the Ordinances of the General Chapters are an obligatory code for the entire Order everywhere. They contain a set of norms which, while not necessarily “constitutional”, are nonetheless valid and useful for the entire brotherhood and therefore universally binding, while being open to a variety of forms and ensuring a healthy balance between unity and pluriformity. They are not approved by the Holy See but by the General Chapter, and for that reason may be adapted, with any additions or subtractions that the changing times and the good of the Order may require.

The Special General Chapter, held in 1968 at the St Lawrence of Brindisi College in Rome, abrogated the Ordinances of the General Chapters that were not contained in the new Constitutions drafted in conformity with the documents of the Second Vatican Council.

However, the need for a new collection of general chapter resolutions subsequently became apparent. So it was that the General Chapter of 1988 decided that a collection of Ordinances of the General Chapters should be resumed, starting from the Special General Chapter 1968, which had in fact abrogated all previous Ordinances not contained in the new Constitutions.

In this way the Capuchin Order came into line with the prescription of the Code of Canon Law (can 598,2), according to which norms that are not considered fundamental are to be placed in other additional codes, rather than in the Constitutions.

Subsequently, there were increasingly insistent calls from the Order at large to identify more exactly those norms that necessarily had to be kept in the Constitutions, and to transfer the others to the Ordinances of the General Chapters. These calls were heeded by the General Chapter in 2000 and again by the General Chapter in 2006, which ratified and refined the decision of the previous chapter.

Consequently the Order has proceeded to revise both the Con­stitutions and the Ordinances. Its aim in doing so has been two-fold: to respond to the requests described above, and to adapt the Constitutions to the most recent teachings of the Magisterium of the Church, at the same time enriching them in the light of the Order’s own mature reflections, especially by means of the Sixth and Seventh Plenary Councils.  

Then the General Chapter, held in Rome from August 20 to September 22, 2012, carefully examined and ratified the newly revised Constitutions.

The same General Chapter, by its own legislative authority, also approved the new collection of Ordinances of the General Chapters, and decreed that the same Ordinances, after their promulgation by the General Minister, should be made known and duly observed.  

Finally, the General Minister, in a decree dated December 8, 2013 (Prot. N. 00935/13), promulgated the Ordinances of the General Chapters, the text of which here follows, and determined that they come into force on December 8, 2013. Therefore the present text of the Ordinances, drafted in the Italian language, is to be considered authentic, and all translations into modern languages must conform to it.

~~~~~

Chapter II

THE VOCATION TO OUR LIFE

AND THE FORMATION OF THE BROTHERS

2/1

To foster vocations, it is very useful to offer young men an opportunity to participate in some way in our fraternal life. This is best done in suitable houses where help with personal reflection may be offered at the same time.

  1. In order that vocations to religious life may be properly cultivated and more suitably prepared, the Provincial Ministers, with the consent of their council, and with the advice of the provincial chapter, if this seems appropriate, may establish special institutes, according to the needs of regions and times.
  2. These institutes shall be organised in accordance with sound, personalized educational principles in such a way that, in addition to the sciences and the humanities, the students may lead a Christian life appropriate to their age, spirit and stage of development, while maintaining contact with society and their families. In this way a vocation to the religious life may be discerned and fostered.
  3. The studies undertaken by the students shall be so arranged that they can be easily continued elsewhere.

2/2

The Provincial Minister, with the consent of his council, shall determine the manner of probation for a religious who transfers to our Order from another religious institute. Once the three years have passed[1], the time of such probation shall not be prolonged for more than a year.

2/3

  1. For the promotion of research in spirituality and the Franciscan heritage, both from the historical and systematic points of view, and for the training of formators and teachers in spirituality, our Order promotes the Franciscan Institute of Spirituality as a valued resource.
  2. Because of its international and inter-Franciscan character, the Institute should serve as a fixed reference point for cross-cultural exchange within the Order, and as a place of study and research into the ever-changing situations that challenge our life and vocation.

3. It is recommended that the Institute, collaborating closely with the General Formation Secretariat, fulfil a coordinating function between similar academic institutions, which the Order promotes at various levels.

2/4

Before educational structures are established for groups of circumscriptions, the General Minister is to be consulted.

2/5

Forms of interprovincial collaboration shall be regulated by special agreements and statutes, approved by the General Minister, with the consent of his council.

2/6

The General Secretariat for Formation carries out its task in accordance with the decisions of the general chapter and the instructions given by the General Minister and his council.

2/7

1. The Order is to have its own Ratio Formationis or General Formation Plan, approved by the General Minister and his council, after having consulted the General Secretariat and the General Formation Council.

2. The formation plan of individual circumscriptions or groups of circumscriptions must conform to the Constitutions and to the General Formation Plan of the Order.

2/8

For the formation of candidates from several circumscriptions, the choice of houses and composition of the formation fraternities are jointly agreed upon by the ministers concerned, after consultation with their respective councils. The interested parties are to draw up regulations for the running of these fraternities.

2/9

The Ratio Formationis will provide the ways and means for the gradual incorporation of the candidate into the fraternity.

2/10

A document attesting to admission to postulancy must be drawn up.

2/11

The length of postulancy, ordinarily at least one year, and other possible ways of living this first period may be determined by the respective minister, with the consent of his council.

2/12

Normally, a brother coming into the Order keeps his baptismal name. To determine personal identity, the place of birth is not used, but rather the family name.

2/13

The Formation Plan of the Order gives the general outlines of post-novitiate formation. To apply these, individual provinces or groups of circumscriptions shall draw up a structured program for the accompaniment and initiation of the brothers.

2/14

Where it is impossible to wear our habit, simple clothing shall be worn. In such cases, the various circumscriptions of the Order shall make appropriate regulations.

2/15

  1. At the times determined by the minister, after having consulted his council, the local fraternity, following the director's report, shall discuss and reflect together on the suitability of the candidates and its own manner of acting towards them.
  2. During the novitiate and before perpetual profession, the perpetually professed brothers who have lived for four months in the formation fraternity concerned shall also express their opinion by a consultative vote in the manner to be determined by the minister.
  3. The brothers in temporary vows shall not be excluded from expressing their opinion even though they do not have a vote.
  4. A report on every such meeting, and the results of any votes taken, are to be sent to the minister.

2/16

  1. A document of both temporary and perpetual profession shall be drawn up, indicating the brother's age and other necessary information. This document must be signed by the professed, by the one who receives his profession and by two witnesses. This document, together with the others prescribed by the Church, must be carefully kept in the provincial archives.
  2. The profession should also be recorded by the minister in a book of professions to be kept in the archives. In the case of perpetual profession, the minister must notify the pastor of the place where the professed brother was baptised.

2/17

When collaborating with other institutes, the primary duty and right of the Order to form its brothers must always be safeguarded. An assessment must be made to see whether the right conditions exist for such collaboration to arise, and whether it shall be continued.

2/18

Consent to receive sacred orders is to be given to those aspirants who, as well as being endowed with due human and spiritual maturity, have competently completed the study of philosophy and theology as required by the Church.

2/19

After the completion of specific formation, the religious ordinary may present a perpetually professed brother to the General Minister, so that, with the consent of his council, he may admit him to ordination as a permanent deacon. For a religious, this admission also requires the permission of the Holy See. The permanent deacon, who exercises his ministry with the consent of the local ordinary and of his religious ordinary, remains a professed brother subject to our proper law and cannot insist on being assigned to a fraternity within the territory of the diocese where he was ordained.

2/20

In addition to a central or regional library, which is highly recommended, there should be a community library in all our houses, adequately supplied to meet the needs of the particular fraternity. Where possible and with due precautions, our libraries shall be accessible to non-members of the Order. As far as possible, we should ensure that our libraries use information systems.

2/21

Decisions regarding the International College pertain to the General Minister with the consent of his council.

Chapter III

OUR LIFE OF PRAYER

3/1

In our fraternities, when circumstances suggest, some brothers shall be appointed to prepare the liturgical celebrations.

3/2

1. Every year, after the solemnity of Saint Francis, each local fraternity shall celebrate a commemoration of all deceased brothers, sisters, relatives, and benefactors.

2. Regarding suffrages, it is decreed that each fraternity shall celebrate a Mass on the death of the Roman Pontiff, of the General Minister, and of a former General Minister. The same shall done for general councillors and former general councillors in each fraternity of the group to which they belonged.

3. It is the responsibility of the provincial chapter to determine the suffrages to be offered for deceased Provincial Ministers, former Provincial Ministers and for deceased brothers, parents, and benefactors.

3/3

In the circumscriptions, there shall be directives to ensure that at least one period of meditation is spent in common.

3/4

It is commendable to occasionally organize times of retreat or recollection, using a variety of styles and taking into account the diversity of duties.

3/5

It pertains to the provincial chapter or Conference of Major Superiors to judge the advisability of establishing fraternities of recollection and to provide for their governance.

Chapter IV

OUR LIFE OF POVERTY

4/1

Each circumscription or group of circumscriptions shall devise and implement particular ways of being present among the poor.

4/2

1. The ministers and guardians, either personally or through others, within the limits of their own competence and in obedience to universal law, can perform civil acts in connection with temporal goods, if and insofar as this may be necessary for the brothers or for the works entrusted to us.

2. All the temporal goods belonging to the Order are ecclesiastical goods that must be administered according to universal and proper law, while also respecting civil law. We shall ensure that entities recognised in civil law are also ecclesiastically recognised. When this is not possible, ministers shall designate the physical or juridical persons in whose name the Order’s goods are to be registered in civil law. In this case, care shall be taken to ensure, through appropriate means, that the goods registered to physical or juridical persons are in any case ecclesiastical goods and are equally governed by canonical norms.

4/3

In particular cases, the ministers may give permission for individuals to administer money, but only for a limited time. The permission must be given in writing, and must indicate for how long it is given, and the manner of accounting for the administration.

4/4

1. The minister, with the consent of his council, and having consulted the local chapter, determines the maximum sum that each fraternity can manage and makes appropriate arrangements concerning money that is not necessary for the needs of the local fraternity. It is appropriate that the economic administration in each circumscription be centralized. For this purpose it is useful that there be a system of budgets at each level.

2. In each circumscription, the chapter is to decide how much is necessary for the ordinary management of the circumscription, and the total amount held in reserve for internal extraordinary expenditures (e.g., maintenance of buildings, the sick, employees insurance, formation) and for external solidarity (e.g., missions and charity). Monies exceeding the ordinary and extraordinary needs of a circumscription shall be generously made available to the Order, the Church, and the poor.

3. It is the responsibility of ministers, with the consent of their councils, to set up the funds or financial reserves mentioned in §2. The income from such investments should be used for the same purpose as that of the fund. All investments, whether in the form of fixed assets, cash or other financial instruments, must be managed and evaluated on the basis of ethical principles that are consistent with the social doctrine of the Church.

4/5

Having observed the norms for the administration of temporal goods, the General Minister or the Provincial Minister, with the consent of the respective council, is to decide what is to be done with the surplus goods of the provinces or custodies.

4/6

It pertains to the provincial chapter to lay down norms for the use of the goods of suppressed fraternities, maintaining the wishes of the founders and donors and their legitimately acquired rights. If the goods of a suppressed circumscription are involved, the competent authority is the General Minister, who must proceed collegially with his council, having consulted the relevant Conference and the ministers concerned and their councils.

4/7

Economic solidarity in the Order shall be regulated by an appropriate statute, which defines the relationships between the circumscriptions and the Conferences, among themselves and with our entire fraternity. This statute is to be approved by the general chapter.

4/8

Each circumscription shall periodically assess the buildings it has available, and proceed to sell those that are unnecessary or to allow others to use them, observing the norms of common and particular law. Where possible, this shall be done in dialogue with the neighbouring circumscriptions and with the Conference. For this purpose the General Minister with his council shall issue appropriate guidelines.

4/9

1. The construction, acquisition and alienation of our houses are the responsibility of the Provincial Minister with the consent of his council, the prescriptions of law being observed.

2. When construction is finished, a guardian may not build or demolish anything or enlarge a building without consulting the local chapter, and obtaining the consent of the councillors and the permission of the minister.

3. The guardian must carefully provide for the maintenance of the house and the care of the property, obtaining the consent of the councillors in matters of greater importance.

4/10

In the larger houses, the office of the bursar shall ordinarily be separate from that of the guardian.

4/11

In each circumscription, or if appropriate also at other levels, formation and in-service training of brothers in economic administration shall be provided.

4/12

1. All bursars, administrators and guardians are to give an exact account of their administration to their superiors and to the fraternity at a time and in a manner determined by the ministers.

2. On the occasion of the triennial report, the Provincial Ministers, in a document signed by the council, shall present to the General Minister a true account of the financial situation of the province, so that its needs may be appropriately provided for and the observance of poverty effectively supervised.

3. The Custodes shall also provide a financial statement for their minister, signed by the councillors.

4. The General Minister shall report on the financial situation of the Order at the general chapter in the manner determined by the chapter itself. The other ministers shall do likewise at their respective chapters.

4/13

To change regulations regarding temporal goods or to take any action involving them that exceeds the limits of one’s own competence, the permission of the immediate major superior is required.

4/14

1. The Order should prepare a statute for the administration of assets, which must be approved by the general chapter.

2. Circumscriptions or groups of circumscriptions, or even Conferences as appropriate, shall have similar statutes, which must be approved by the General Minister, with the consent of his council.

4/15

1. In the circumscriptions of the Order, a finance committee, as mentioned in the Code of Canon Law, can. 1280 must be established. It is recommended that one or more committees on financial matters, whose function would be to offer advice about the administration of goods, and on the building, maintenance and alienation of houses, be established.

2. These commissions are established by the chapter, which also determines their competence. However, their members, some of whom may be lay people, are appointed by the minister with the consent of the council.

4/16

1. After consulting the ministers or, if necessary, the Conferences of Major Superiors, the General Minister, with the consent of the council, shall establish limits, according to the differing values of currencies, beyond which ministers are bound to ask either the consent of the council or the permission of a higher authority to validly contract obligations, alienate goods or incur extraordinary expenses. Such permissions must be given in writing.

2. The minister, with the consent of the council, will do the same with appropriate adaptations for the guardians of his circumscription.

3. Expenses are considered extraordinary that are unnecessary either for the minister in the exercise of his office or in the ordinary service of the brothers, or for the guardian in those matters that do not pertain to the ordinary care of the fraternity entrusted to him.

Chapter V

THE MANNER OF WORKING

5/1

It is up to the chapter of each circumscription to adopt suitable norms regarding holidays and free time, based on the principles of fraternal fairness.

Chapter VI

OUR LIFE IN FRATERNITY

6/1

In circumscriptions where it seems useful, a shared infirmary may be established.

6/2

1. Where an enclosure cannot be maintained because of particular circumstances, the minister, with the consent of his council, shall provide norms adapted to the local circumstances.

2. It pertains to the ministers to determine the precise boundaries of the enclosure or to change them for legitimate reasons. They may also suspend the enclosure temporarily.

3. In urgent cases, on a particular occasion, the guardian can dispense from the enclosure.

6/3

1. The consent of the local chapter shall be obtained for laymen who wish to share temporarily in our life. If, however, the stay is to be protracted, the consent of the minister is also required.

2. The minister, with the consent of the council, may admit laymen as members of the family perpetually dedicated to God, i.e., oblates, after an agreement has been drawn up concerning mutual rights and obligations.

6/4

1. It pertains to the General Minister, with the consent of his council, to issue travel regulations for the whole Order, and to the Provincial Minister, with the consent of his council, to do likewise for his province, in accordance with the instructions of the General Minister.[2]

2. For a prolonged stay outside a house of the fraternity, the norms of universal law must be observed.

6/5

It is the Provincial Minister’s responsibility, after consulting his council, to judge the appropriateness of having vehicles for a ministry, an office, or the service of a fraternity, and to decide how they are to be used.

6/6

The brothers, as far as possible, shall inform the guardian in advance of their arrival. They shall spontaneously show their letters of obedience, if these are necessary.

6/7

If brothers, for reasons of study, need to stay for a long time in a house of another circumscription, the ministers of those involved shall fraternally come to an agreement about payment for living expenses.

6/8

1. In the case of associating a monastery to the Capuchin Poor Clares, the General Minister, with his council, proceeds collegially in accordance with the provisions of law.

2. The minister exercises his office in relation to the associated monastery in accordance with universal law and the Constitutions of the sisters themselves.

6/9

The General Minister must proceed collegially with his council in every case concerning the aggregation of an Institute of Consecrated Life.

6/10

As a sign of co-responsibility, the governing board of the respective Secular Franciscan fraternities shall be consulted in the appointment of spiritual assistants or when establishing fraternities.

Chapter VII

OUR LIFE OF PENANCE

7/1

1. In addition to what is provided in the Constitutions, it is the responsibility of the chapter of each circumscription to establish further norms regarding both the days of fasting and abstinence and the manner of fasting.

2. Equally, in each circumscription, chapters shall make appropriate regulations about other forms of communal penance according to the circumstances of time and place.

7/2

If a brother is guilty of an offence against a person or an ecclesiastical or social institution, by the same law of charity which requires justice and respect for the rights and dignity of all, especially the most vulnerable, we shall help him to assume his responsibilities, make good the harm he has done and accept the canonical and civil consequences of his behaviour. Indeed, responsibility for an offence rests with the one who commits it.

7/3

In order to prevent sin, ministers and guardians shall encourage the brothers to observe in all things our own law and that of the Church, as well as civil legislation. But if a brother commits an offence, or there is a danger of its being repeated, the ministers should take all possible suitable measures, including cooperation with the civil authorities, to prevent it. In every case, even a brother who sins or is suspected of an offence must always be accorded the rights and protections enjoyed by any accused person. Our collaboration with civil authorities shall not be in conflict with the divine or canon law.

Chapter VIII

THE GOVERNANCE OF OUR ORDER

8/1

For the establishment, suppression and unification of provinces, local situations shall be taken into account and at least the following aspects should be assessed:

- the presence of a group of brothers and fraternities able to sustain effectively, either by themselves or through the solidarity of the Order, the various aspects of the life and activities of the brothers, both internally and externally, in terms of their openness to the needs of the Order and the Church;

- their capacity to assume the promotion of vocations, formation and apostolic works also in cooperation with other circumscriptions,

- material and economic needs.

In particular, the following should be verified:

- the brothers’ sense of belonging to the brothers, at its various levels;

- the possibility of filling the offices of governance and ensuring an effective turnover of officeholders;

- the capacity to assume a missionary commitment;

- geographic and linguistic unity, as far as possible.

8/2

  1. In particular circumstances, the General Minister, observing the conditions for altering the circumscriptions, may establish a federation of several provinces, with its own statute.
  2. A federation entails unity of governance: a single Provincial Minister, with his council, who has jurisdiction over all the federated provinces.

8/3

  1. When helping a circumscription temporarily, that is, for not more than three years, Provincial Ministers have the faculty of sending their own brothers without having recourse to the General Minister. This time limit does not apply to the service given to a circumscription that depends on one’s own province. For other services which are expected to continue for more than three years, or if it is desired to continue the service after the three years have elapsed, letters of obedience must be requested from the General Minister.
  2. After one year of service, the right to vote mentioned in n.121,6 of the Constitutions is no longer exercised in one’s own circumscription, but in the circumscription in which the service is rendered, except for what is prescribed for delegations. However, voting rights are exercised after the end of the first year of service.

8/4

In exceptional cases, the ministers are not bound to convene their council when it is only a case of consulting them. Outside of a meeting, they may consult the council in a suitable way. The consultation and the decision taken by the minister must be noted in the council minutes. The same may be done in the case of consulting others.

8/5

  1. To be able to proceed to a vote by postulation, at least one third of those having the right to vote must request it in writing from the president of the chapter. In all other cases a vote to postulate must be considered null.
  2. The postulation is valid only if the candidate, in the first scrutiny, obtains two thirds of the votes of the vocals present. Otherwise, further postulations are excluded, and the voting resumes in the normal way, starting with the first scrutiny.

8/6

  1. A minister may be removed by the General Minister, with the consent of his council, for a serious reason, including repeated neglect or violation of his duties even after an admonition, or for maladministration.
  2. The guardian, as also the delegate, can be removed by the Provincial Minister, with the consent of his council, for a just cause, that is, if required by the good of the fraternity, whether local or provincial, or of the particular Church.

8/7

The chapter, at all levels, is a temporary collegial body which exercises its own authority in accordance with the competence accorded to it by the Constitutions.

8/8

In order to allow the participation of qualified brothers who otherwise could not participate in a general chapter, either as a delegate of their provinces or an ex-officio members, each Conference is to elect one perpetually professed lay brother as a delegate. The manner of his election is to be established by the norms of each Conference.

8/9

  1. Once the general chapter has been announced, in every province all the perpetually professed brothers shall elect one delegate to the general chapter and a substitute for every hundred brothers.
  2. This election is conducted in the manner determined by the provincial chapter, and the results are to be published at least three months before the general chapter.

8/10

  1. Preparation for the general chapter and a consultation of the brothers with regard to its agenda shall take place in accordance with the Procedures for Conducting a General Chapter.
  2. The General Minister, with the consent of his council, prepares a list of possible agenda items, and informs all the capitulars in good time. But the chapter itself decides the questions to be treated.

8/11

Nine councillors are to be elected at the general chapter.

8/12

1. If the General Minister is elected from outside the chapter, the chapter is suspended until the new General Minister arrives at the Chapter.

2. General coucilors elected outside the Chapter become, ipso facto, members of the chapter.

8/13

1. A number of offices and structures are established at the general curia for the service of the Order, such as the following:

- the General Secretariat of the Order;

- the office of the General Procurator to handle the Order’s business with the Holy See;

- the office of the General Postulator, for transactions with the Congregation for the Causes of Saints;

- the General Formation Secretariat;

- the General Secretariat for Evangelisation, Mission Animation and Collaboration;

- the office of the General Assistant to the Secular Franciscan Order;

- the Office for Assistance to Nuns and Institutes affiliated to the Capuchin Order;

- the Justice, Peace and Ecology Office;

- the General Archives;

- the Central Library;

- the General Bursary;

- the Offices for Communication, Statistics, and the central Registry (Protocol).

2. Without prejudice to the prescriptions of the Constitutions, and observing the decisions of the general chapters, the General Minister, with the consent of his council, when it is necessary and appropriate, may establish other offices and structures of the general curia, and may also suppress or modify existing ones.

8/14

The electoral assembly is composed of: the General Vicar, the general councillors, the former General Minister in the period from the expiration of his term of office until the next general chapter inclusive, the Provincial Ministers, the custodes, the general secretary and the general procurator.

The work of the electoral assembly will be determined by appropriate regulations approved by the general chapter.

8/15

The ordinary provincial chapter is announced and convened every three years. The General Minister has the faculty to permit the chapter, for a good reason, to be held six months before or after a three year term has elapsed.

8/16

All the capitulars are to be informed in due time about the list of possible agenda items proposed by the Provincial Minister with the consent of his council. The chapter itself, however, decides the agenda items.

8/17

1. In a chapter with delegates, the number of participants by right must be less than the number of delegates.

2. Non-capitulars in a province may attend the chapter as auditors, unless the chapter procedures determine otherwise.

3. Brothers who are capitulars lose active voice if, without lawful dispensation, they are not present at the chapter for the entire time of the chapter itself, whether it is held with direct suffrage or with delegates.

8/18

1. Provinces with one hundred brothers or fewer conduct their chapter with direct suffrage. Provinces with more than one hundred brothers conduct a chapter with delegates. However, even provinces with more than one hundred brothers may conduct the chapter with direct suffrage, and, for good reasons, provinces with one hundred or fewer brothers may hold a chapter with delegates.

2. In both cases, this must be decided by a majority of two-thirds of the voters in a general consultation, in which at least seventy-five percent (75%) of all the perpetually professed brothers must participate. The decision is then recorded in the Procedures for Conducting a Provincial Chapter.

8/19

1. Brothers who have been declared unlawfully absent, and those who have submitted a request for exclaustration or for dispensation from religious vows and from the duties connected to sacred ordination, are deprived of active and passive voice. If the request is submitted after the chapter has been convened, they are excluded from the chapter without being substituted.

2. In the judgment of the Provincial Minister, with the consent of the council, brothers who have submitted a request to be absent from the religious house may be deprived of active and passive voice.

8/20

The Provincial Minister and councilors are elected for three years.

8/21

No brother may hold the office of Provincial Minister and/or Custos for more than three consecutive terms, in whatever legitimate way it may have been conferred on him. Following a third consecutive term of office election, appointment or postulation is not possible.

8/22

In the election of councilors, the outgoing Provincial Minister enjoys only active voice.

8/23

The chapter of a custody is held every three years. The Custos and his councilors are elected for the same length of time.

8/24

The outgoing Custos does not have passive voice in the election of the councilors.

8/25

1. A delegation is a structure of the Order that is transitory in nature. It is made up of a group of brothers gathered in local fraternities, and entrusted to a province. Its purpose is to ensure fraternal life in geographical areas where, although there is more than one house, the prerequisites for establishing or maintaining a circumscription are lacking.

2. The General Minister, with the consent of his council, having consulted the Conferences of Major Superiors concerned, may establish, modify and suppress a delegation.

3. A delegation has its own statute, approved by the Provincial Minister, with the consent of his council.

4. A brother delegated by the Provincial Minister shall be placed in charge of each delegation, and he shall be assisted by two councilors. It is his duty to represent the delegation, in the name of the Provincial Minister, in dealings with the local ecclesiastical and civil authorities, as far as this is possible.

5. The delegate and the two councilors are appointed by the Provincial Minister in accordance with the statute, with the consent of his council, after having first consulted the perpetually professed brothers of the delegation. However, the delegate may not be reappointed for a longer time than in the case of a guardian.

6. The delegate, who is not a major superior, is to receive from the Provincial Minister, in writing, the necessary delegations to facilitate practical, pastoral and administrative governance, and to encourage a certain amount of autonomy of action in the group, especially with a view to service to the local Church and the implantation of the Order.

7. The brothers of the delegation retain all the rights and duties of their respective province.

8. Brothers of another circumscription who are serving in the delegation exercise their voting rights in their own circumscription.

8/26

The term of office of a guardian and a vicar lasts for three years.

8/27

Let the guardians not only inform but also consult the brothers by suitable means about agenda of a local chapter.

8/28

1. In the general and provincial curias and in the residence of the Custos there shall be a private archive, in which are carefully kept all documents that must remain secret.

2. In the management of the archives, the prescriptions of ecclestastical law and of our own law are to be observed. The requirements of archival science are to be respected and an inventory of documents preserved in the archives must not be omitted.

3. The care of the archives should be entrusted to qualified brothers who, for that purpose, with the permission of the minister, may be assisted by external helpers.

8/29

In all the fraternities, the custom of keeping a chronicle (log book) is to be maintained.

8/30

Meetings of the Conferences are attended by the representatives of delegations and of the houses of presence in the territory. General councilors, delegated by the General Minister, also attend the meetings by right. All of the aforementioned do not have the right to vote.

8/31

Conferences shall encourage and promote opportunities and structures of collaboration among themselves so as to increase the sense of brotherhood and the greatest possible sharing in the Order.

8/32

The presidents of the Conferences, convened by the General Minister, shall meet together with the General Minister and his council at least every two years.

Chapter X

OUR LIFE IN OBEDIENCE

10/1

  1. During his term of office, the General Minister shall visit all the brothers either personally or through others, principally through the general councillors.
  2. The other ministers shall make such a visitation to all the fraternities in their own territories at least twice in a three-year term.
  3. The custodies, in addition to a visitation by the Custos, shall be visited by the Provincial Minister during each three-year term.
  4. Moreover, when the opportunity arises, let the General Minister visit the brothers in the various countries and occasionally be present at meetings of the Conferences of Major Superiors.
  5. Let the other ministers as well, in their concern for individuals and their work, willingly take advantage of opportunities of meeting with the brothers.

10/2

  1. Once the visitation is completed, the delegated visitator shall send a complete report to his respective minister.
  2. In a spirit of obedience, the brothers shall welcome the recommendations made after the visitation and seek to implement them faithfully. There shall be suitable community evaluations of the recommendations.
  3. At an appropriate time, ministers and guardians shall report to their own immediate superior on what has been implemented. Similarly, they shall inform them how they have put into practice those things which the Constitutions delegate to provincial chapters or to the superiors.
  4. Once during a three-year term, let the ministers send a report concerning the state of their own jurisdiction to their respective superior.

Chapter XII

The Proclamation of the Gospel and the Life of Faith

12/1

It is for the general chapter, with the consent of two-thirds of the vocals, both to approve the norms of the Ordinances of the General Chapters and to add to, change, derogate from or abrogate them, as the needs of the times and of renewal require, while keeping within the thrust of our tradition. The same general chapter is competent to issue an authentic interpretation of the Ordinances of the General Chapters.

12/2

  1. A temporary dispensation from the disciplinary norms of the Constitutions for an entire province is reserved to the General Minister and for an entire fraternity to its own minister.
  2. It belongs to the General Minister, with the consent of his council, to grant a temporary dispensation on a case-by-case basis from observing the Ordinances of the General Chapters. Other ministers are bound by what is laid down in these Ordinances.

12/3

It belongs to the Provincial Minister or the Custos, with the consent of his council, to approve particular statutes for individual fraternities or houses.


Analytical Index


Absence: from chapter, 130:3, 136:3, 8/17:3; from novitiate, 31:7; from the house, 97:1, 6/4:2, 8/19:2; of a minister, 126:1, 134:1, 136:9; of the guardian, 139:5, 140:1, 140:4; unlawful, 8/19:1

Abstinence, 111:7, 7/1:1

Accountability, 69:2, 75:2, 4/3, 4/12:1; of ministers, 4/12:2-4

Action, 13:3, 15:1, 15:4, 15:6, 45:4, 46:5, 63:3, 80:2, 108:2

Adaptation: of form of life, 41:3, 113:1, 186:4, 187:1, 2/14; of ministry, 148:3, 150:6; of the Rule, 185:4. See also Time and place

Administration of goods, 75:2-3, 76:1, 76:4-7

Admission, 2/15:1-4; of candidates, 18:3; to novitiate, 20:2-3; to postulancy, 29:2, 2/10; to profession, 141:5; to the fraternity, 95:4. See also Re-admission

Advent, 111:4

Advice, 167:1

Affection, 173:1

Affectivity, 171:3, 172:6-7. See also Love

Affiliation, 103:1

Age, 79:2, 91:1-3, 110:5; for profession, 34:3, 2/16:1

Aggregation, 6/9

Agreements, 138:5, 180:2, 2/5, 6/7

Alienation of property, 76:6, 4/15:1, 4/16:1

Alms, 67:4

Alteration of circumscriptions, 119:1

Alternates, 131:1-2

Angelus, 52:6

Anxiety, 67:1, 71:1

Apostasy, 44:3

Apostles, 15:2, 175:1

Apostolate, 4:2, 5:5, 15:1, 125:1, 141:2, 143:2; 146:1-157:4, 146:1; choice of, 147:1, 147:6, 153:3; of evangelisation, 175:5; of the OFS, 155:2; of vocations, 17:4, 138:2. See also Ministry

Apostolic See. See Holy See

Appointment, 123:1, 123:3; of Custos and councillors, 136:11; of guardian and vicar, 139:1-3, 140:5; of minister and councillors, 119:2, 132:6; of Provincial Minister, 133:1-2

Archives, 2/16:1-2, 8/28:2-3; of the Order, 142:1-3, 8/13:1; private, 8/28:1

Area. See Circumscription

Art. See Media

Associates of directors/masters, 28:5

Austerity, 5:3, 61:1, 62:2-3, 65:2, 109:6

Authority, 117:3, 159:3, 159:4, 160:1; civil, 70:1; ecclesiastical, 47:7, 70:1. See also Decision

Automobiles. See Vehicles

Availability, 26:7, 61:3, 61:6, 77:3; of resources, 43:1

Banks, 70:3

Baptism, 16:2, 33:3, 47:1, 100:5, 109:2

Beard, 35:2

Beatitudes, 109:5, 181:2

Begging. See Alms

Believers. See Christian faithful

Belonging. See Family, religious

Benefactors, 51:1, 103:1, 3/2:1, 3/2:3

Bishops, 11:2-3, 84:1, 115:1, 148:2, 180:1-2, 183:4, 2/19

Blessed Virgin Mary. See Mary

Books, 6:2, 53:3, 156:3

Boredom, 171:3

Brotherhood (as Order), 4:1, 6:1, 10:4, 16:5, 24:8, 48:4, 79:3, 117:2, 145:1, 173:6, 185:1; incorporation into, 34:3, 118:1; responsibilities of, 28:2, 30:2, 43:5, 48:2, 71:4

Brotherhood (as value), 4:2, 5:2, 13:3, 46:2, 64:3, 67:4, 75:3, 79:2, 81:3, 88:1-108:5, 109:3, 154:3, 172:6, 181:2; life in, 31:4, 32:2, 37:6, 74:1; universal, 13:1, 173:3

Brothers, 13:2, 13:4

Budget, 4/4:1

Building. See House

Bursar, 76:1-4, 4/12:1; general, 8/13:1; local, 76:2, 4/10

Candidate, 18:2, 19:1-6, 20:1, 24:8, 25:2, 26:1, 29:2; for novitiate, 20:2-3; suitability of, 18:3, 2/15:1

Canticle of Brother Sun, 105:1

Capitulars, 8/16, 8/17:3

Capuchin Order. See Brotherhood (as Order)

Catechists, 177:4

Celibacy, 22:4, 169:6. See also Chastity

Chapter (in general), 117:3, 8/7; composition of first, 119:2; duties of, 65:1, 73:4, 4/4:2, 4/15:2, 5/1, 7/1:1-2

Chapter, Custody, 136:3, 136:7-8, 8/23

Chapter, Extraordinary: general, 124:3-4, 125:1; of a custody, 136:7; provincial, 129:3-4, 130:1

Chapter, general, 124:1-5, 128:3, 186:1-2, 4/12:4, 8/11, 8/12:1-2; Conference delegates to, 8/8; duties of, 125:1-2, 185:4, 2/6, 4/7, 4/14:1, 12/1; preparation for, 8/9:1-2, 8/10:1-2

Chapter, local, 89:4, 141:1-5, 161:4, 163:4, 8/27; duties of, 49:5, 55:3-4, 58:2, 71:4-6, 113:3, 148:4, 4/4:1, 4/9:2, 6/3:1

Chapter, provincial, 129:1-4, 130:2, 130:4, 131:1, 132:1, 133:2, 4/12:4, 8/9:2, 8/15, 8/16; duties of, 55:3, 71:4, 95:4, 120:1, 131:3, 135:2, 140:4, 148:3, 186:4, 2/1:2, 3/2:3, 4/6; participants, 8/17:1-3, 8/18:1-2, 8/19:1

Charism, 5:5, 6:1, 11:3, 17:3, 24:4, 25:1, 43:1, 102:3, 147:1, 154:3, 177:7; in the Church, 10:1-2; of brotherhood, 4:2; of minority, 4:2, 68:1; of poverty, 68:1; of prayer, 55:6

Charity, 61:1, 63:1, 69:1, 79:1, 84:4, 85:3, 95:5, 104:2, 152:2; toward our brothers, 89:2, 99:4, 103:3, 168:2. See also Love

Chastity, 2:3, 22:1, 22:4, 169:1. See also Celibacy

Christ, 1:2, 1:5, 3:2, 9:2, 10:1-3, 15:1, 19:1, 35:4, 45:4, 46:7, 54:6, 60:2, 78:2, 88:2, 105:4, 111:1, 158:1, 175:1, 188:3; Francis and, 2:1, 13:1, 14:2, 19:2, 77:1, 88:6; hymn to, 189:1-3; imitation of, 2:2, 16:4, 22:3, 31:3, 50:1, 109:1, 147:5, 153:2, 159:1, 169:4; union with, 22:1, 26:4, 33:2, 45:3, 49:1, 171:2

Christian faithful, 16:1, 47:1, 49:4, 55:6, 61:4

Christians, non-Catholic, 149:5

Chronicle, 8/29

Church, 1:1-2, 8:3, 10:1-4, 24:2, 49:1, 51:1, 52:1, 52:6, 60:4, 88:3-5, 105:5, 146:2, 151:1, 153:2, 158:2, 169:4; building, 48:3, 74:1; missionary nature of, 16:5, 175:1-5; needs of, 17:5, 39:1, 81:2, 100:6, 101:1, 147:6, 148:5; teaching, 40:3, 76:6, 78:8, 156:4; union with, 10:2, 10:5-6, 11:1-2, 12:1, 26:6, 33:2, 33:5, 109:8, 114:1, 117:1-3, 183:2-3

Church, local, 148:4, 154:1-2; in the missions, 176:2, 177:2-3, 180:4. See also Church, particular

Church, particular, 10:6, 11:3, 179:4. See also Church, local

Circumscription, 25:7, 57:2, 71:3-4, 72:3, 118:1-5, 121:1; duties of, 25:2, 25:10, 43:2, 53:5, 57:1, 76:7, 4/14:2

Clare, Saint, 52:8, 101:3, 173:4

Clement VII, Pope, 10:4

Clergy, 177:3

Clothing, 31:2, 64:3, 71:5. See also Habit

Coetus. See Group, capitular

Collaboration, 121:3, 160:4; in formation, 2/4, 2/8; inter-Franciscan, 72:4; inter-provincial, 98:3, 100:2-3, 100:6, 121:4-6, 138:3, 138:5, 148:5, 154:4, 178:4-5, 2/5, 8/3, 8/25:8, 8/31; with others outside the Order, 177:4, 2/17. See also Cooperation

Commission, 135:3; finance, 4/15:1-2

Communion, 4:1, 7:5, 30:3, 31:4, 72:1, 75:2, 79:3, 84:3, 94:4, 96:2, 117:1, 165:5; with deceased, 51:2; with God and others, 45:3, 48:2, 52:4, 158:4, 182:2; with the Church, 26:6; with the poor, 60:6, 61:6, 63:2. For the sacrament, see Eucharist

Community, 81:4. See also Brotherhood (as Order)

Condition of the poor, 61:6

Conference of Major Superiors, 25:7, 43:5, 119:1, 138:5, 144:1-6, 8/8, 8/25:2, 8/31; fraternities of, 118:9, 3/5; meetings of, 8/30, 8/32, 10/1:4; norms of, 84:1, 143:5, 144:5, 186:4, 4/14:2, 4/16:1

Confession, 114:1-4, 115:4, 149:2, 152:1, 171:2; faculty to hear, 115:1-3

Confessors, 115:4, 152:1-3

Conformity, 109:1, 165:1; to Christ, 23:3, 50:5, 61:3, 93:3, 110:5; to liturgical norms, 74:2; to the world, 44:3

Conscience, 22:2, 55:2

Consecrated life. See Consecration

Consecration, 9:2, 10:2, 32:2, 33:2, 110:4; to God, 35:3

Consent: for ordination, 39:4, 2/18; of general council, 27:3, 36:3, 118:4, 118:9, 119:1-2, 120:2, 121:3, 128:2, 132:3, 133:1, 134:3, 134:5, 143:3-6, 144:1-2, 179:4, 180:1, 186:2, 186:4, 2/5, 2/19, 2/21, 4/14:2, 4/16:1, 6/4:1, 8/6:1, 8/10:2, 8/25:2, 12/2:2; of provincial council, 20:2, 28:3, 120:1, 129:3, 135:3, 136:2, 136:8, 137:3, 139:1, 140:5, 148:3, 180:2, 2/1:2, 2/2, 4/9:1, 8/6:2, 8/16, 8/19:2, 8/25:3, 8/25:5; of respective council, 27:2, 31:6, 70:1, 76:1-2, 84:1, 140:3, 144:5, 154:2, 180:3, 2/11, 4/4:1, 4/5, 4/15:2, 4/16:2, 6/2:1, 6/3:2, 12/3; of the custody council, 137:1; of the General Minister, 129:2; of the Provincial Minister, 136:3, 136:7

Constitutions, 9:1-3, 22:2, 33:3, 71:5, 110:3, 117:3, 118:4, 161:3, 185:1-2, 188:3; authentic interpretation of, 186:1; study of, 9:4, 53:5

Consultation, 20:3, 118:4, 8/18:2; before appointments, 123:3, 133:1, 134:3, 136:11; before elections, 123:3; with Conference of major superiors, 127:6; with local chapter, 4/9:2; with respective council, 20:2, 34:4, 129:2, 8/4

Consumerism, 62:2

Contemplation, 4:2, 5:3, 15:1, 31:4, 46:6, 54:2; Francis and, 15:3, 50:2, 54:1; in Capuchin tradition, 15:4, 50:3. See also Meditation; Mental prayer

Continence, 22:4. See also Celibacy; Chastity

Continuing Formation. See Formation, ongoing

Contracts, 76:6

Conversation, 40:2, 45:5

Conversion, 5:2, 41:3, 81:4, 109:2, 109:7, 110:1, 110:3, 111:6, 113:3, 114:6, 172:1, 184:3; Francis and, 35:3, 50:2, 106:2, 109:4, 110:6, 147:5, 173:2

Cooperation, 107:4, 7/3. See also Collaboration

Correction, 113:2, 163:2-3

Council, 144:6; consent of, 27:2, 31:6, 70:1, 76:1-2, 84:1, 144:5, 154:2, 2/11, 4/4:1, 4/4:3, 4/15:2, 4/16:2, 6/2:1, 6/3:2, 6/4:1; consultation with, 20:2, 34:4, 121:3, 2/8, 2/15:1

Council, custody, 136:2, 137:1, 4/12:3; consent of, 12/3; consultation with, 138:5

Council, formation. See under Secretariat

Council, general, 2/6, 2/7:1, 4/8, 8/32; collegially with, 127:6, 4/6, 6/8:1, 6/9; consent of, 27:3, 36:3, 118:4, 118:9, 119:1, 119:2-3, 120:1-2, 121:3, 127:5, 128:2, 132:3, 133:1, 134:3, 134:5, 143:3, 143:6, 144:1-2, 144:5, 179:4, 180:1, 180:3, 186:2, 186:4, 2/5, 2/21, 4/5, 4/14:2, 4/16:1, 6/4:1, 8/6:1, 8/10:2, 8/25:2, 12/2:2; consultation with, 129:2

Council, local, 4/9:2-3

Council, provincial, 4/12:2; consent of, 28:3, 39:4, 120:1, 129:3, 135:3, 136:2, 136:8, 136:11, 137:3, 139:1, 140:5, 148:3, 180:2-3, 2/1:2, 2/2, 4/5, 4/9:1, 8/6:2, 8/16, 8/19:2, 8/25:3, 8/25:5, 12/3; consultation with, 6/5

Councillor of a delegation, 8/25:4-5

Councillor, custody, 124:5, 136:9-10; election of, 136:4, 8/23; resignation of, 123:8

Councillor, general, 124:4, 125:8-9, 143:4, 3/2:2, 8/11, 8/14; duties of, 125:7, 126:4, 8/30, 10/1:1; election of, 125:4-6, 127:3-6, 8/12:2

Councillor, local, 140:2-3

Councillor, provincial, 130:1, 134:4; appointment of, 134:5; election of, 132:3, 8/20; resignation of, 123:8

Counsel. See Consultation

Creation, 13:2, 60:1, 78:1, 105:3; Francis and, 105:1-2, 156:1, 173:1-2

Creature, 13:2, 46:7

Cross, 2:2, 147:8, 151:3, 165:5, 171:1

Culture, 105:3; respect for other, 47:4, 50:4, 100:5, 177:6-7, 179:4

Curia, general, 76:1, 125:8, 8/28:1, 128:1-3, 8/13:1; establishment, suppression and modification of offices and structures, 8/13:2

Curia, provincial, 76:1, 135:1, 8/28:1

Custody, 118:2, 118:7, 118:10, 131:2, 136-138, 139:2, 10/1:3

Custom, 35:2

Custos, 124:4-5, 130:1, 130:4, 136:2, 136:8-9, 8/14; authority of, 20:1, 118:7, 122:2, 122:4-5, 136:3, 136:6-7, 12/3; duties of, 137:1-2, 138:4-5, 4/12:3, 10/1:3; election of, 125:9, 136:4-5, 8/21, 8/23; resignation of, 123:8

Custos, outgoing, 8/24

Deacon, permanent, 2/19

Death, 92:4

Deceased. See Suffrages

Decision, 160:3, 166:1

Decline, 119:3

Delegate: of General Minister, 132:5; of Provincial Minister, 8/6:2, 8/25:4-6; to general chapter, 124:4, 8/8, 8/9:1-2; to Plenary Council, 143:4-5; to provincial chapter, 131:1-3, 8/17:1, 8/18:1

Delegation, 8/25:1-8, 8/30

Departure, 34:4, 36:3-4, 103:3

Development: human and Christian, 14:4; social, 63:2, 72:5, 149:2, 177:4

Devotion, 80:1, 154:4

Dialogue, 100:5, 147:4, 160:3, 163:3, 166:3, 177:3; intercultural, 89:3; interreligious, 149:6, 177:7, 178:2

Discernment, 28:3, 50:4, 79:3, 82:3, 96:1-2, 160:2, 178:2; vocation, 18:2, 30:2

Disciple, 2:1, 3:2, 23:1, 55:5, 88:8, 89:2, 181:1, 182:1

Discussion. See Dialogue

Dismissal, 34:1, 36:1, 36:4

Dispensation: from disciplinary norms, 186:3, 12/2:1; from impediment to election, 123:7; from Ordinances, 12/2:2; from vows, 36:3, 8/19:1

Divine Office. See Liturgy of the Hours

Division, 119:1

Doubt, 186:2

Drink. See Food

Duty, 19:6, 42:1, 82:4, 125:7

Dwelling. See House

Easter. See Triduum

Ecumenism, 39:1, 149:5, 178:2

Education, 25:3, 26:3, 38:2-3, 41:3, 43:6, 82:1, 156:2; apostolate of, 149:2, 149:4; in economic administration, 4/11; in prayer, 55:7; required of candidates, 18:3

Election, 123:1, 123:3-4, 123:7, 132:6, 141:5; of chapter delegates, 131:1, 131:3, 8/9:2; of Conference officers, 144:4; of custody councillors, 136:4; of Custos, 136:4; of general councillors, 125:4-5, 127:3, 127:6; of General Minister, 125:2-3, 127:4; of general vicar, 125:6, 127:5; of local councillors, 140:2; of ministers, 125:9; of provincial councillors, 132:3; of Provincial Minister, 132:2, 132:5

Electoral assembly, 127:4, 8/14

Employees, 83:4

Enclosure, 95:1-2, 6/2:1-3

Entrance. See Admission

Equality, 32:2, 64:3, 90:1

Establishment: of circumscription, 118:3, 118:5, 119:1-2, 8/1; of house, 120:1; of novitiate, 27:3

Eucharist, 2:2, 14:1, 21:4, 33:6, 47:2, 48:1-4, 51:2, 52:2, 80:4, 88:8, 114:1, 151:3, 161:4, 171:2

Evangelisation, 149:1, 157:4, 175:2, 175:5, 176:1, 176:3, 177:5, 178:1, 180:3, 181:3; collaboration in, 155:1-2, 180:4; means of, 154:4, 156:2; of the poor, 147:5

Examination of conscience, 114:5

Example, 4:1, 17:3, 61:5, 71:1, 159:4, 187:2; of first Capuchins, 50:4; of Francis, 55:1, 92:1, 108:3, 153:1, 173:4, 175:3, 181:1; of Jesus, 50:1, 77:1, 146:3, 147:5; of our missionaries, 177:2; of the saints, 187:1

Expenditures, 4/4:2; extraordinary, 4/16:1, 4/16:3

Faculty, 122:4-5, 126:4, 136:6, 136:9, 148:2, 8/25:6; to admit candidates, 20:1; to dismiss, 36:1-2; to establish fraternities of the OFS, 102:4; to hear confessions, 115:1-3; to receive vows, 21:2

Faith, 18:3, 30:3, 31:4, 51:2, 109:2, 182:1-3

Faithful Believers, 149:6

Faithful. See Christian faithful

Family, Franciscan, 10:3, 13:3, 51:1, 72:4, 101:1-2, 102:1, 102:6, 179:2

Family, natural, 103:1-2, 149:4, 173:6-7, 2/1:3

Family, religious, 5:4, 24:8, 145:2, 168:1, 173:6

Fasting, 111, 7/1:1

Father, heavenly, 2:1, 13:1-2, 16:3, 24:3, 45:5, 49:1, 60:2, 61:2, 67:1, 77:1, 78:1, 88:2, 158:2, 189:3

Federation, 8/2

Fidelity: creative, 6:1, 41:3; to liturgical norms, 47:4; to our vocation, 46:4, 114:3, 157:2; to prayer, 161:1; to the Church, 183:1-2

Following. See Imitation

Food, 64:3, 71:5, 112:2

Form of Life, 10:3, 179:4

Formation, 1:5, 16-44, 141:2, 143:2, 161:2-3; collaboration in, 144:6, 2/8; directors, 28:3-5; dismissal from, 36:1-4; economic, 75:5, 4/11; for ministry, 37:1-6, 38:1-5; fraternities of, 27:1-4; in missiology, ecumenism and dialogue, 178:2; in prayer, 57:1; integral, 23:2; novitiate, 31:1-7; of OFS, 155:2; ongoing, 41-43; post-novitiate, 32:1-3; postulancy, 30:1-3, 2/10; purpose, 23:3; structures of, 25:1-10

Formation council. See under Secretariat

Formation plan, 24:6, 25:9-10, 43:3, 2/7, 2/9, 2/13

Formation, continuing. See Formation, ongoing

Formation, initial, 23:4, 25:2, 25:7, 42:3

Formation, ongoing, 23:4, 25:7, 41- 44

Formed, those being, 24:1, 24:5-6, 26:1-7, 27:1, 40:1

Forming, those, 24:1, 24:6, 24:9, 25:3-5, 26:1, 28:3, 40:1-4, 179:3, 2/3:1

Formula of profession, 21:4

Foundation. See Inheritance

Founder, 1:3, 3:2, 7:2, 7:4, 12:1

Francis, Saint, 1:3, 2:1, 3:1, 5:2, 6:2, 13:1, 15:3, 18:1, 19:2, 26:5, 31:3, 37:2, 38:5, 47:2, 50:2, 51:1, 52:5, 52:8, 54:1, 59:1, 60:4-5, 61:1, 66:1, 68:1, 72:1, 78:4, 84:2, 88:6, 92:2, 101:3, 105:1, 106:1, 107:1, 109:4, 111:2, 116:5, 123:6, 146:3, 150:2, 156:1, 158; example of, 11:1, 14:2, 35:5, 37:1, 45:7, 47:6, 48:4, 53:2, 55:1, 77:1, 80:3, 92:1, 103:1, 108:3, 147:5

Franciscan, 40:4, 149:2; formation, 39:2-3; prayer, 46:6

Franciscans. See Family, Franciscan

Fraternal economy, 75:5

Fraternity, 17:3, 55:7, 57:1, 71:3, 72:3, 76:2, 83:3, 118:1, 118:3, 4/10, 4/12:1; composition of, 94:1, 139:1-2; of formation, 24:8, 27:1-2; OFS, 6/10. See also Brotherhood; Fraternity, local

Fraternity of contemplation, 57:2-3, 3/5

Freedom, 7:5, 16:2, 33:4, 45:6, 111:3, 158:1, 169:5

Friar Minor. See Lesser brother

Friday, 111:4

Friend, 69:4, 173:1

Friendship, 172:6, 173:3, 173:5

General assistant of Secular Franciscan Order, 8/13:1

General Council. See Council, general

General Minister. See Minister, general

General vicar. See Vicar, general

General Curia, see Curia, General

Gifts, 26:7, 69:4, 71:5; of nature and grace, 61:4, 81:1, 89:1

Good, moral, 46:6, 63:1

Goods, temporal, 22:3, 64:2, 67:2, 85:3, 4/13; administration of, 4/2, 4/5; disposal of, 34:5; of suppressed fraternities or circumscriptions, 4/6; use of, 61:5, 66:2, 77:4

Gospel, 1:1-5, 3:1, 4:1, 5:2, 5:5, 7:1, 13:4, 19:3, 52:5, 60:2, 147:2, 149:7, 175:4, 187:1

Gospel counsel, 2:3, 22:1, 33:3, 45:6, 179:1; of chastity, 22:4, 169:1; of obedience, 22:2; of poverty, 22:3

Grace, 16:3, 19:6, 44:2, 184:2

Group: of circumscriptions, 25:10, 57:2, 2/4, 2/8, 4/14:2; of houses, 118:4; of jurisdictions, 25:2, 25:7; of provinces, 25:8

Group, capitular, 127:6

Growth, 17:1, 24:5, 45:6, 78:1, 82:2, 158:3, 173:5; of the Order, 143:2

Guardian, 69:3-4, 97:1, 97:3, 116:5, 118:8, 122:1, 122:3, 139:1-5, 140:5, 148:4, 153:3, 158:7, 166:1, 172:5, 4/9:2, 4/10, 4/16:2, 8/6:2, 8/26; duties of, 7:3, 19:3, 24:9, 42:2-3, 54:5, 55:4, 56:2, 64:4, 69:1, 70:3-4, 71:2, 82:3-4, 92:4, 94:2, 96:23, 98:3, 99:5, 112:3, 114:7, 115:1, 116:2-4, 160-163, 172:7, 186:3, 187:2, 4/2:1, 4/9:3, 4/12:1, 6/2:3, 8/27, 10/2:3

Habit, 35:1-4, 2/14. See also Clothing

Health, 18:3, 172:8

Heritage, 6:1

Hermitage, 57:2

History, 50:4, 108:5; of the Order, 6:2, 32:3

Holidays. See Vacation

Holiness, 10:2, 16:1, 78:6, 114:5

Holy See , 123:7, 126:3-4, 127:1, 185:3-4, 186:1, 2/19

Holy Spirit, 1:2, 1:4, 2:1, 4:2, 9:3, 10:1, 10:3, 13:1, 13:3, 16:3, 24:1-2, 33:2, 45:1, 45:5, 45:8, 52:4, 78:3, 88:2, 158:6, 169:3-4, 175:2, 182:3, 189:3

Honorius, Pope, 185:1

Hope, 51:2, 108:1, 108:5

Hospitality, 95:3, 104:2

House, 27:2, 66:1, 83:2, 95:2, 118:8, 137:3, 2/1:1, 4/9:3; alienation of, 4/9:1, 4/15:1; construction of, 4/9:1-2, 4/15:1; establishment of, 120:1; of presence, 8/30; style of, 73:1-4; suppression, 120:2; suppression of, 4/8

House, brothers living outside a, 56:2, 99:1-5, 6/4:2

Human, 50:3, 50:5

Humanity, 88:2, 106:1

Humility, 14:2, 35:4, 66:3, 89:3, 97:4, 106:4, 110:5, 158:5, 172:8; in our work, 81:3, 85:2, 157:3; of Christ, 2:1, 14:1, 60:1-2, 60:5; of Francis, 60:6

Identity, 9:1, 24:4, 35:3, 148:3

Imitation: of Christ, 3:1-2, 15:3, 19:1-2, 22:3, 60:4, 109:7, 111:2, 165:1, 169:4, 189:1; of Francis, 22:1, 37:1, 45:7, 47:6, 48:4, 53:2, 78:5, 93:3

Impediment: office of Custos, 136:9; office of General Minister, 126:3; office of general vicar, 126:4; office of guardian, 140:1, 140:4; office of Provincial Minister, 134:1; office of provincial vicar, 134:4; to attending chapter, 130:3

Implantation of the Church, 177:3

Implantation of the Order, 136:1, 179:1, 8/25:1, 8/25:6

Incarnation, 2:2, 60:5

Inculturation, 179:4

Individualism, 78:7

Indult of departure, 36:3

Infirm. See Sick

Infirmary, 6/1

Information systems, 2/20

Inheritance, 70:4; spiritual, 3:2, 8:2

Initial Formation. See Formation, initial

Initiation, 26:1-2, 26:5-7, 27:1, 28:2, 29-32, 75:5, 2/13

Initiative, 148:1, 166:1-3

Inspiration, 8:4, 106:1; divine, 178:1

Institute, 40:4, 43:6, 2/1:2-3; Franciscan I. of Spirituality, 2/3:1-3. See also Study center

Institutes of Consecrated Life, 6/9

Instruction, 40:3

Insurance, 64:2, 70:1-2

Intelligence, 105:3

Internal forum, 28:5

International College, 43:7, 2/21

Interpretation: of the Constitutions, 186:1; of the Rule, 185:3

Investments, 70:3, 4/4:3

Itinerancy, 100:4, 175:4

Jesus. See Christ

Joseph, Saint, 52:7

Joy, 16:5, 67:4, 106:4, 108:1, 110:2, 173:2

Justice, 14:5, 63:1, 72:4-5, 107:4, 144:6, 147:5, 175:4

Kenosis, 2:2, 14:1, 38:3, 60:6, 172:6

Kingdom of God, 15:4, 51:1, 78:2, 78:6, 109:8, 153:2, 155:2, 173:3; proclamation of, 39:1; witness to, 4:1, 106:3, 165:4

Kingdom of Heaven, 22:1, 22:4, 24:3, 168:3, 169:6

Labourers, 78:5, 78:8, 149:3

Laity, 76:5, 155:1, 173:7, 177:3, 177:4, 4/15:2. See also Laymen

Law, 186:5; canon, 76:6; civil, 76:6, 83:4; particular, 9:5, 29:1, 67:4, 68:2, 70:3, 76:3, 111:7; universal, 18:3, 29:1, 31:7, 34:5, 36:4, 67:4, 76:3, 111:7, 116:4, 156:6, 185:1

Laymen, 6/3:1, 6/3:2. See also Laity

Laziness, 80:3

Leaven, 14:5, 88:4, 106:3

Legacies, 70:4, 4/6

Lent, 111:4; of Benediction, 111:5

Leper, 3:1, 50:2, 109:4

Lesser brother, 14:2, 14:5, 35:4, 93:1, 158:4; expressions of, 35:3, 46:1, 46:3, 71:6, 78:5, 152:1

Letters of obedience, 178:2, 6/6, 8/3:1. See also Permission

Library, 43:8, 2/20

Life, 149:4

Life, common, 24:7, 64:1, 158:6

Life, fraternal, 53:4, 73:3, 88:5, 110:5, 147:3; formation and, 18:3, 24:7, 43:4, 2/1:1

Lifestyle, 65:2, 112:1

Limits: in financial matters, 4/4:1-2, 4/13, 4/16:1-2; term, 8/21

Liturgical action, 47:5

Liturgical year, 52:1, 52:3, 52:5

Liturgy, 47:1, 47:3, 47:6, 52:4, 52:8, 53:1, 54:3, 74:1, 3/1; formation and, 26:4, 30:3, 32:3. See also Mass

Liturgy of the Hours, 47:2, 49:1-4; celebration in common, 49:3, 49:6

Local fraternity, 43:5, 118:8, 2/15:1, 4/4:1; dependent on the General Minister, 118:9

Local Ordinary. See Bishop

Local vicar. See Vicar, local

Love, 9:3, 12:2, 46:2, 72:2, 89:2, 106:4, 110:2, 111:3, 116:1, 167:2, 169:2, 173:3; chastity and, 169:5, 172:1, 172:4, 172:5; perfection of, 18:2, 33:1, 33:4. See also Charity

Major Superiors. See Superiors

Mary, 1:5, 52:6, 170:2, 171:2, 181:3, 188:2

Mass. See Eucharist

Master of novices, 21:1, 28:4, 31:5, 36:2

Maturity, 18:3, 32:1, 32:3, 78:1; affective, 30:2, 172:1; psychological, 26:3

Media, 156:6, 171:3; discernment about, 71:5, 96:1, 96:2; use of, 96:3, 156:1-4, 156:7

Meditation, 15:5, 150:5, 174:1, 3/3. See also Contemplation; Mental prayer

Meek, 44:4

Membership, 100:1, 121:1, 121:3; of Conferences, 144:2; of custody, 138:1; of Plenary Council, 143:4

Mental Prayer, 54:1, 54:2, 54:3, 54:4, 54:5, 55:2, 55:3. See also Contemplation; Meditation

Mercy, 3:1, 14:2, 60:6, 152:1, 163:1; towards our brothers, 116:1, 116:4-5; works of, 111:3, 111:6

Migrants, 149:3

Minister, 24:9, 31:5, 36:2, 69:3, 71:4, 97:3, 112:3, 125:9, 158:7, 159:3-4, 160-164, 167:1-2, 172:5, 178:1, 183:5, 187:2, 2/8, 4/9:2, 4/12:1, 6/3:1, 6/3:2, 6/8:2, 8/4; duties of, 7:3-4, 17:3, 19:3, 20:2-3, 25:4, 27:2, 31:6, 34:1-4, 42:2-3, 43:6, 49:5, 54:5, 56:2, 64:4, 69:1, 69:4, 70:1-4, 71:2, 76:1-2, 82:3-4, 83:3, 84:1, 92:4, 94:2, 96:3, 98:3, 99:5, 103:3, 114:7, 116:2-5, 141:3, 144:5-6, 148:2, 153:3, 156:2, 172:7, 178:2-3, 179:3, 2/11, 2/15:1, 2/16:2, 4/4:1, 4/4:3, 4/15:2, 4/16:2, 6/2:1-2, 10/1:2, 10/1:5, 10/2:3-4; faculties of, 102:4, 142:2, 154:2, 156:6, 186:3, 2/19, 4/2:1, 4/2:2, 4/3, 12/2:1; obedience to, 12:2, 166:1; removal of, 8/6:1. See also Superior

Minister, general, 12:1, 25:7, 118:2, 118:5, 122:1, 124:4, 125:8, 128:1-2, 129:2, 130:1, 136:11, 143:4, 144:1, 144:5, 178:4, 3/2:2, 4/12:2, 8/12:1; absence of, 126:1, 127:1-4; duties of, 24:9, 124:2-3, 127:5-6, 134:3, 134:5, 179:4, 180:1, 180:3, 2/7:1, 4/5, 4/8, 4/12:4, 4/16:1, 6/4:1, 6/8:1, 6/9, 8/10:2, 8/32, 10/1:1, 10/1:4; faculties of, 20:1, 27:3, 36:3, 118:4, 118:9, 119- 120, 121:3, 123:7-8, 126:2, 132:3, 133:1, 143:3, 143:6, 144:2, 186:2, 186:4, 2/5, 2/6, 2/19, 2/21, 4/6, 4/14:2, 8/2:1, 8/3:1, 8/6:1, 8/13:2, 8/15, 8/25:2, 12/2:1-2; when impeded, 126:3-4

Minister, local. See Guardian

Minister, outgoing general, 125:3-4, 8/14

Minister, outgoing provincial, 8/22

Minister, provincial, 118:6, 122:1, 122:5, 124:4-5, 126:2, 130:1, 3/2:3, 8/14; absence or impediment of, 134:2; duties of, 18:3, 29:2, 121:4, 130:3, 135:1, 135:3, 136:2, 136:5-6, 136:9, 138:4, 139:1, 140:5, 148:3, 180:3, 4/12:2, 4/12:4, 8/16, 10/1:3; election of, 132:1-2, 132:5, 8/20, 8/21; faculties of, 20:1, 21:12, 28:3, 36:1, 39:4, 120:1, 123:7-8, 129:3, 136:3, 136:7-8, 136:11, 137:3, 180:2, 2/1:2, 2/2, 4/5, 4/9:1, 6/4:1, 6/5, 8/3:1, 8/6:2, 8/19:2, 8/25:3-5, 12/3; resignation of, 123:8. See also Minister

Ministry, 15:3, 15:6, 37:1, 55:7, 63:1, 69:1, 71:6, 73:2-3, 117:1, 150:6; choice of, 81:2, 147:6; formation for, 23:4, 30:3, 32:3, 37-40. See also Apostolate

Minority, 4:2, 5:3, 5:5, 16:5, 38:1, 60:1, 62:45, 64:3-4, 67:4, 68:1, 72:1, 75:1, 75:5, 100:3, 175:4, 181:2; offices and, 123:5, 158:5; work and, 83:1, 147:7, 154:3. See also Poverty

Minors. See Lesser brothers

Misconduct. See Offence

Mission, 147:3; 175-181; of Christ, 146:1-2; of Francis, 106:3; of laity, 155:1; of the Church, 10:2, 146:3

Missionary, 26:7, 39:1, 175-181

Missions, popular, 149:2

Money, 64:2, 69:4, 71:3, 85:3, 99:2; accountability for, 69:2, 85:1; administration of, 70:3, 76:1, 4/3, 4/4:1; Francis and, 68:1; use of, 68:2, 69:1, 69:3, 73:4

Mortification, 111:6, 112:2, 171:1

Music. See Song

Name, 2/12

Nature, 19:6

Non-believers, 149:6

Norms, 43:2, 53:5, 69:2, 71:4, 76:3, 76:6; liturgical, 21:3, 47:4, 74:2; of the Conference, 144:5

Novice, 21:1, 27:3-4; dismissal of, 36:1-2

Novice director. See Master of novices

Novitiate, 29:1, 31:1-7, 34:1, 2/15:2; absence from, 31:7; admission to, 20:1-2; location of, 27:3-4; rite of reception, 21:1, 21:3

Obedience, 2:3, 7:5, 12:1-2, 22:1-2, 89:4, 99:1, 158:1-4, 165:2-5, 10/2:2; to Christ, 11:1; to the pope, 11:2, 183:4; work and, 79:3, 82:2, 82:4, 148:1

Oblates, 6/3:2

Observance, 9:1, 188:2-3

Offence, 7/2, 7/3

Office, 82:1, 82:4, 90:3, 117:1, 123:1-9, 126:3, 132:6, 156:7; of treasurer, 76:4; removal from, 123:9; resignation from, 123:8. See also Officials

Office of the Lord's Prayer, 49:6

Officials, 135:1, 144:4. See also Office

Order, Capuchin. See Brotherhood (as Order)

Order, Secular Franciscan. See Secular Franciscan Order

Orders, Sacred, 90:3, 123:6

Ordinances, 118:4, 121:5, 12/1

Ordinary, 115:1, 115:3. See also Bishops

Parents. See Relatives

Parish, 154:1-3

Participation, 74:1, 75:3; in chapters, 131:3

Paschal Mystery, 2:2, 48:1, 78:6, 110:3

Passion of Christ, 52:5, 60:5

Pastoral, 39:1, 52:2

Payment. See Money

Peace, 14:5, 173:2, 175:4; proclamation of, 4:1, 46:7, 107:1, 147:5; work for, 72:5, 106:4, 107:2, 107:4, 144:6

Penalty, 116:4

Penance, 5:3, 16:5, 35:3, 109:1, 109:3, 172:8, 173:2; communal, 7/1:2; Francis and, 3:1, 109:4; preaching of, 4:1, 46:7

Pensions, 64:2

Pentecost, 181:3

People of God. See Christian faithful

Permission, 69:4, 97:1-3, 4/3, 4/13, 4/16:1; for publishing, 156:6

Persecution, 110:5, 147:8, 149:3, 168:4

Person, 41:3, 72:5

Philosophy, 39:2, 2/18

Pilgrim, 5:3, 16:5, 66:3, 73:1, 112:2, 189:1; Christ as, 104:1

Place. See House; Local fraternity

Plenary Council of the Order, 143:1-6

Pluriformity, 7:4, 7:5, 35:2, 49:5, 177:6; of Rite, 10:6

Poor, 16:4, 19:3, 31:4, 44:4, 60:2-3, 66:2, 68:2, 70:1, 71:4, 73:2, 109:3, 110:6, 111:6, 147:5, 149:3, 153:2, 157:3; living among, 5:4, 24:3, 46:3; service of, 10:3, 14:2, 19:4, 65:2, 79:2, 107:3, 108:2; sharing the condition of, 14:3-4, 61:6, 63:1-3, 69:3, 73:4, 108:3, 4/1

Poor Clares, 101:3, 179:2, 6/8:1-2

Pope, 11:2, 51:1, 122:1, 148:2, 183:4, 3/2:2

Post novitiate, 29:1, 32:1-3, 2/13

Post novitiate director, 28:4

Postulancy, 20:1, 29- 30, 2/10, 2/11

Postulancy director, 28:4

Postulant: dismissal of, 36:1-2

Postulation, 123:7, 8/5:1-2, 8/21

Postulator, general, 8/13:1

Poverty, 2:3, 5:3, 22:1, 35:3, 60-77, 96:2, 97:2, 97:4, 110:5, 141:2; as dependence, 22:3, 93:2; Francis and, 2:1, 158:4; work and, 78:7, 81:3, 83:1, 85:2

Power, 62:4, 84:2, 159:2; abuse of, 172:7; ordinary, 122:1; ordinary vicarious, 118:7, 122:5, 136:6; vicarious, 122:2

Praise, 15:5

Prayer, 13:3, 15:2, 15:5, 17:3, 45-59, 94:3, 111:3, 111:6, 160:2, 171:2, 178:6, 182:2; formation and, 26:4, 30:3, 33:6, 43:4, 44:2; fostering, 73:3, 74:1, 95:1, 96:2, 141:2, 157:4, 161:1; Francis and, 15:3, 111:2; priority of, 5:3; work and, 15:6, 80:1

Preaching, 109:5, 150:3-4, 161:4, 177:1; Francis and, 15:3, 150:2; Franciscan, 52:5; of the apostles, 15:2, 150:1

Precedence, 90:2

Priest, 11:4, 39:4, 47:1, 48:2, 115:2-3; admission of, 18:3

Prisoners, 149:2

Procedures for conducting the chapter, 8/17:2; custody chapter, 136:8; general chapter, 125:2, 8/10:1; provincial chapter, 130:1, 132:1, 132:3, 8/18:2

Procurator, general, 124:4, 8/14

Profession, 9:3, 21-22, 23:4, 29:2, 32:1, 33-36, 47:1, 100:5, 121:1; admission to, 20:1-2, 21:2; celebration of, 21:3-4; duties flowing from, 49:2, 64:2, 185:2; exclusion from, 34:4; of faith, 183:5; perpetual, 34:3, 2/15:2, 2/16:1-2; temporary, 34:1-2, 121:2, 2/16:1-2

Professional formation, 37:5

Promise, 66:1

Promotion: missionary, 180:4; of vocations, 17:4

Prophetic, 65:2

Prophets, 50:1

Providence, 61:1, 67:1, 108:4, 177:5, 178:3

Province, 24:8, 25:8, 43:5, 118:2, 118:10, 129:1; characteristics of, 118:6, 8/1

Provincial council. See Council, provincial

Provincial councillor. See Councillor, provincial

Provincial Minister. See Minister, provincial

Provincial vicar. See Vicar, provincial

Prudence, 28:3, 75:1, 95:3, 152:2, 162:3

Publication, 40:4, 156:3-6

Ratio formationis. See Formation plan

Reading, 150:5

Re-admission, 18:3

Reception, 21:1-2

Recollection, 56:1, 99:3, 111:6, 3/4

Reconciliation. See Confession

Recreation, 86:1, 112:2

Reflection, 26:4, 43:4, 2/1:1

Region, 43:5

Regular superior. See Custos

Relatives, 69:4, 103:1, 3/2:1, 3/2:3

Religionis zelus, 10:4

Religious, 18:3, 149:2, 177:3

Religious institutes, 101:4, 180:4

Removal from office, 123:9, 8/6:1-2

Renewal, 10:1, 17:2, 28:1, 41:2, 55:6, 144:6, 164:1, 175:5, 184:3; cultural and professional, 41:3; of profession, 53:5; of temporary vows, 34:4; of the Order, 5:2, 125:1, 143:2, 186:1; spiritual, 9:2, 56:1, 102:6, 110:3

Renunciation, 22:3, 109:2

Report: economic, 4/12:3-4; triennial, 4/12:2, 10/2:4; visitation, 10/2:1, 10/2:3

Reputation, 18:3

Reserved area. See Enclosure

Resignation, 123:8

Resurrection, 2:2, 33:2. See also Paschal Mystery

Retreat, 33:6, 56:1-2, 149:2, 3/4

Right, 42:1, 107:3

Rite, 10:6, 47:7, 179:4

Rome, 125:8

Rosary, 52:6

Rule, 1:3, 5:2, 8:3-4, 9:1, 19:2, 22:2, 35:5, 161:3, 175:3, 185:1-4, 187:1, 188:1, 188:3; according to, 19:5, 33:3, 35:2, 49:6, 90:1, 92:2, 110:3, 164:1; study of, 7:1-4, 9:4, 26:5, 53:5

Sacrament, 52:3, 92:4, 114:3, 114:7, 151:1, 171:2; administration of, 151:2-3

Sacred Scripture, 32:3, 53:1, 53:2, 53:3, 53:4, 53:5, 150:3, 150:5, 183:1. See also Word of God

Sacristy, 74:2

Saints, 6:2, 7:2, 52:6, 52:8

Salary. See Money

Salvation, 16:1, 16:5, 19:1, 51:1, 60:1, 107:1, 110:5, 165:5; work as an instrument of, 78:2, 78:6

Sandals, 35:2

Schedule, 49:5, 86:1

Scripture. See Sacred Scripture

Scrutiny. See Vote

Secretariat, 25:8; for evangelisation and missions, 180:3, 8/13:1; formation, 25:6-7, 2/3:3, 2/6, 2/7:1, 8/13:1

Secretary: general, 124:4, 8/14; provincial, 135:1-2

Secular Franciscan Order, 102:1-5, 155:2, 6/10

Self-abnegation. See Kenosis

Self-denial. See Kenosis

Seniority, 121:2, 126:4. See also Age

Service, 5:5, 14:1, 19:6, 37:6, 73:4, 78:7, 81:2, 83:3, 84:2, 147:7; fraternal, 158:5; of authority, 90:2, 117:3, 123:5, 159:1, 159:3, 172:5; of God, 17:1, 33:1, 110:5; of the Church, 165:1; of the poor, 10:3, 14:2, 19:4

Sexuality, 172:3-4, 172:7

Sharing, 64:1, 72:3-5, 91:3; with the poor, 5:4, 79:2

Shrines, 154:4

Sick, 5:4, 108:3, 110:5, 112:3, 149:2, 153:1, 153:2; brothers who are, 92- 93. See also Infirmary

Signs of the times, 6:3, 45:2, 87:4, 149:1. See also Adaptation

Silence, 58:1-2, 95:1, 96:2; during liturgy, 47:5

Simplicity, 61:1, 62:2, 65:2, 74:2, 83:3, 95:3, 112:1, 181:2

Sin, 44:3, 89:2, 113:1, 116:2, 152:1, 7/3

Social communication. See Media

Social doctrine, 76:6, 78:8, 4/4:3

Solidarity, 50:5, 61:2, 62:3, 63:1, 72:2, 72:4, 79:2, 4/4:2, 4/7

Son of God, 14:1. See also Christ

Song, 47:6

Speculation, 71:2

Spirit, 7:5

Spirit, Franciscan, 26:5

Spiritual assistant, 6/10

Spiritual direction, 114:5, 114:7

Spiritual exercises. See Retreat

Statute, 118:9, 186:4, 2/5; economic, 76:7, 4/14:1-2; for economic solidarity, 4/7; of a Conference, 144:1, 144:4; of a custody, 136:8; of a delegation, 8/25:3; of a fraternity, 12/3; of a general custody, 136:1; of the general curia, 128:2-3

Strangers, 66:3, 73:1, 104:1, 112:2

Structure, 25:2, 25:7, 2/4

Studies, 37:5, 38:4-5, 40:4, 101:2, 2/1:4, 2/3:1

Study, 82:3, 95:1, 157:4, 6/7; of Church teachings, 10:5; of documents of the Church and Order, 161:4; of Sacred Scripture, 150:5; of the Rule, 9:4

Study center, 25:7, 39:3, 2/4. See also Institute

Suffrage, 130:2, 136:4, 8/18:1-2; for the dead, 51:2, 3/2:1-3. See also Vote

Sunday, 52:1-2

Superfluous goods, 4/5

Superior, 6:3, 11:2, 22:2-3, 117:3, 121:3, 122:1, 122:3, 123:5-6, 165:3, 166:2, 4/12:1; duties of, 160:3, 166:1, 4/13; faculties of, 27:4, 142:1, 156:5. See also Minister

Superior, regular. See Custos

Suppression: of a circumscription, 119:1; of a house, 120:2; of a province, 8/1; of novitiate, 27:3

Talent, 19:6, 37:5, 79:2, 82:1, 90:4, 160:5

Technology, 71:5

Temperance, 172:2, 172:8

Territory, 118:3, 119:3

Testament of Saint Francis, 1:3, 7:2, 8:1-4, 9:4, 37:2, 53:5, 90:1

Theology, 32:3, 39:2, 2/18

Third Order. See Secular Franciscan Order

Time, 87:1-4, 94:3; for prayer, 55:2-3, 161:1; for retreat, 56:2; for study, 82:3; free, 86:1, 5/1

Time and place, 7:4, 9:1, 23:3, 26:2, 41:3, 43:2, 64:3, 65:1, 71:3, 113:1, 147:1, 161:4, 7/1:2. See also Adaptation

Timetable. See Schedule

Tradition, 5:1-2, 6:2, 7:2, 8:4, 15:4, 26:5, 30:3, 31:3, 37:1, 50:3, 52:7, 54:1, 55:1, 61:1, 78:5, 82:2, 90:1, 100:4, 108:3, 123:6, 125:1, 150:3, 153:1, 154:1, 177:5, 179:4, 187:1, 2/3:1; of the Church, 183:1

Transfer: of a friar, 36:4, 2/2; of formation house, 27:3, 137:3

Transparency, 75:2

Travel, 71:5, 97:2-4, 98:2, 6/4:1, 6/6

Travelers. See Visitors

Triduum, 52:1

Trinity, 33:1, 60:1, 88:1, 88:3, 146:1, 158:1-3, 165:2, 169:2, 173:3

Truth, 147:5

Tunic. See Habit

Unification, 119:1, 8/1

Unity, 7:5, 12:1, 14:5, 48:2, 157:3, 164:1, 166:2; of the Church, 10:6, 11:2; of the human race, 107:4

Updating, 40:3

Vacancy in office: of custody councillor, 136:10; of Custos, 130:4; of guardian, 140:1, 140:5; of provincial councillor, 134:5; of Provincial Minister, 134:2-3; of the General Minister, 127:1-3; of the general vicar, 127:5-6

Vacation, 86:2, 5/1

Vehicles, 6/5

Veneration. See Devotion

Vicar, general, 122:2, 124:4, 125:6, 126:1-4, 127:1-5, 8/14

Vicar, local, 122:2-3, 139:1-2, 140:1, 140:5, 8/26

Vicar, provincial, 20:1, 122:2, 122:5, 123:8, 124:5, 132:4, 134:1-4

Virtue, 18:2

Visitation, 164:1-4, 10/1, 10/2:1-2; of OFS fraternities, 102:4

Visitator, 126:2

Visitors, 95:3, 104:1-3; Capuchin, 98:1, 98:3, 99:3, 6/6, 6/7

Vocation, 16:3, 17:1-18, 138:2, 179:1, 184:1-2, 2/1

Voice: in custody chapter, 136:3; in general chapter, 124:4; in provincial chapters, 130:1; loss of, 8/17:3, 8/19:1-2; passive, 132:5, 136:5, 8/22, 8/24

Vote, 141:4, 2/15:2; by postulation, 8/5:1-2; right to, 121:6, 130:3, 8/3:2, 8/25:8

Vows, 21:2, 21:4, 22:1, 34:2

Will, 22:2

Wisdom, 19:1, 150:5

Witness, 4:1, 6:3, 17:2, 33:5, 40:2, 46:7, 67:4, 78:7, 84:4, 108:5, 144:6, 149:7, 165:4, 168:4, 177:1, 177:7; of prayer, 45:8; to brotherhood, 100:6; to Christ, 81:5, 182:3; to poverty, 65:2, 75:4, 97:2

Women, 173:4

Word, 4:1, 17:3, 45:2

Word of God, 26:4, 52:2, 53:4, 88:8, 111:6, 150:4, 150:6, 160:5, 161:2, 161:4. See also Sacred Scripture

Work, 31:4, 43:4, 49:5, 61:1, 67:3, 71:6, 73:3, 78-87, 96:2, 110:5, 148:4, 172:8; domestic, 32:3, 90:4; formation for, 37-38; manual, 82:2, 83:1; of formation, 40:1-3

Working people. See Labourers

World, 51:1, 105:1, 105:4-5, 106:2-4, 108:1, 108:5

Worship. See Liturgy

Writings of Saint Francis, 6:2

Youth, 149:3-4