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A brief
review of our history
1540 Society of Jesus is founded by Ignatius of Loyola.
1563 A Jesuit teacher by the name of Jean Leunis
gathers a group of students of the Roman College for spiritual
advancement -- the Marian Congregation is born. This first group
quickly becomes a model for other congregations throughout the
world.
1578 The Superior General of the Society of Jesus,
Claudio Aquaviva, approves the Common Rules for those who wishes
to follow Congregation life.
1584 Pope Gregory XIII with the papal Bull Omnipotentis
Dei entitles the first Congregation at the Roman College (the
Primaria) to be the head of all the Congregations.
1587 Pope Sixtus V, following the request of the Society
of Jesus, issues the Bull Superna Dispositione. This Bull
states the right of the Superior General of the Society of Jesus
to create aggregates of the first Congregation within other
localities, even among persons who were not students of Jesuit
schools.
It might be interesting for us today to remember that in this
early time of the Society of Jesus, Jesuits and lay people who
were members of the Congregations would frequently work as a
team. The seventeenth century not only saw the highpoint of
Congregation life but also the beginning of its decline in
spirit.
1748 Pope Benedict XIV, with the Bull Praeclaris
Romanorum, tries to renew the vigour of Congregation life.
This Bull increases the advantages of membership by granting the
members enlarged spiritual benefits and this perhaps has a
reverse effect. At this time the Society of Jesus, a victim of
political intrigues, is already struggling for its life.
1773 Pope Clement XIV signes a document to suppress the
Jesuit Order. The Congregations, by the order of the same pope,
become one of the normal works of the universal Church. In the
eighteenth century membership increases vastly, from 2500 groups
to 80.000. The consequence is a diminishment in fervour and
practice. The spiritual life of the members and the social
concern for the rejected of society is reduced to pious
practices and annual and symbolic events. The Marian
Congregations have become a pious mass movement, different from
what Ignatius or Jean Leunis or Aquaviva had meant it to be.
1922 Fr Ledochowski, Superior General of the Society,
convenes a meeting of Jesuits working with the Marian
Congregations or Sodalities, as they are called in some
countries. The central secretariat, a service centre, is
founded. It is the first secretariat for Jesuit works. Today the
SJ curia has eight similar offices for other works. This is the
first step towards restoration.
1948 Pope Pius XII with his Apostolic Constitution Bis
Saeculari, gives an important push towards renewal of the
Marian Congregations. A Bis Saeculari was exactly what
was needed: a clear, authoritative statement on the authentic
identity of the Marian Congregations, a pressing call for
reform, orientations towards the future and some declarations on
lay apostolate in general. The impact of this document was
enormous (Fr Paulussen, SJ in: A GOD WORKS LIKE THAT).
1950 Seventy one Jesuits from forty countries follow the
call of the Superior General Fr Jansen and meet in Rome as a
first answer to Bis Saeculari.
1951 The first world congress for the lay apostolate is
held in Rome. Forty delegates from 16 countries take the
opportunity to meet and discuss the idea of a world federation.
1952 Eucharistic Congress in Barcelona: the opportunity
is used to meet and discuss the A World Federation further. The
central secretariat in Rome is asked to prepare some Statutes.
1953 The World Federation of the Marian Congregations is
approved by the same Pope.
1954 1st assembly of the world federation in Rome.
1959 2nd assembly in Newark, USA.
1962 opening of the Second Vatican Council.
1964 3rd assembly of the world federation in Bombay,
India.
1967 4th assembly and a new name and a new beginning:
Christian Life Communities.
1968 on the Feast of the Annunciation, Pope Paul VI
confirms the General Principles of the World Federation of the
Christian Life Communities.
1970 5th assembly in Santo Domingo a crisis and a
challenges (the General Principles are amended and approved in
1971 by the Holy See).
1973 6th General Assembly in Augsburg/Germany: the call
to be free, the liberation of all men and women.
1976 7th General Assembly in Manila/Philippines: the call
to be poor, poor with Christ for a better service.
1979 8th General Assembly in Rome: call towards a World
Community, at the service of One World.
1982 the General Assembly in Providence: the
challenge to be one World Community on mission to Abring about
justice.
1986 10th General Assembly in Loyola: seeing Mary
as model of our mission, being asked to do "whatever Christ
tells us".
1990 11th General Assembly in Guadalajara: an
international community "at the service of the Kingdom, to go
out and bear fruit".
1994 12th General Assembly in Hong Kong: CLC
Community in Mission AI have come to bring fire to the earth,
and how I wish it were blazing already!".
1998 13th General Assembly in Itaici (Brasil):
Deepening our identity as an apostolic Community - clarifying
our common mission. "CLC, a letter from Christ, written by the
Spirit, sent to today's world.".
2003 14th General Assembly in Nairobi (Kenya): Sent by
Christ, members of one body .
Graced history of CLC
Part I,
Part II (Power Point Presentation from the CLC Philippines) |
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