Opus
Dei: Neither Religious Order Nor Movement in the Church. Rather,
Institutional Organization of the Church
The
Prelature of Opus Dei and ecclesial movements. Ecclesiological and canonical
aspects
José Luis Gutiérrez, The
Prelature of Opus Dei and ecclesial movements. Ecclesiological and
canonical aspects, atwww.collationes.org .
Preliminary observations
1. All ecclesial realities,
of whatever nature, participate in the same life and goal of the one Church.
All, therefore, are called to live in the same ecclesial communion and to
maintain between each other relations of mutual regard. Only from this
theological and spiritual perspective will it be possible to explain the differences
between hierarchical entities and institutions of an associative nature
(institutions of consecrated life, so-called “movements,” and so forth).
2. If the Prelature of Opus
Dei or a diocese or military ordinariate are examined from the perspective of
the activities of their faithful, one will encounter many similarities with
ecclesial movements. In fact, it is evident that both dioceses or prelatures as
well as ecclesial movements endeavor to spread the Christian spirit among all
people within their circles of activity, with fidelity to the Magisterium
of the Church and with a coherence of life. It can well be said that,
sociologically, there are many similarities. Therefore, the differences will
need to be sought in the appropriate ambit, which is the
ecclesiological and, inseparably, the juridical-canonical, distinguishing
between those that are forms of an hierarchical self-organization of the Church
itself and other realities that arise in the body of the Church as fruits of
the initiative and autonomy of the faithful.
The insertion of Opus Dei in the institutional organization of the
Church
The institutional organization of the Church
3. The hierarchical and institutional organization of the
Church, in both its universal and particular dimensions, is necessarily built
upon the relationship between the clergy and laity, in which
each is reciprocally responsible and ordered to the other.[1] The
People of God and each of their portions or parts are gatherings of laity and
clergy, hierarchically structured, at the head of which there is normally a
bishop and in which all participate in the totality of the mission of the
Church, each one in and from within his own state and condition in life.
4. While always respecting divine law (the role of the
episcopacy, the ministerial priesthood, the laity, etc.), it is clear that the
institutional organization of the Church is arranged in different ways in the
course of history: The most common form of that organization—in the Latin rite
Church—are the dioceses, but there are also prelatures, personal ordinariates
for the military, or for Anglicans returning to the Catholic Church, apostolic
vicariates, and so forth. In effect, in a discourse to the Pontifical Council
for the Pastoral Care of Migrants and Itinerant People, John Paul II affirmed,
“If the ordinary pastoral organization is not, in fact, able to reach the
numerous groups of people understood as falling within the phenomenon of
emigration [and the same could be said of other groupings of the faithful],
their right to evangelization and to a normal Christian life will require
an adequate response, as far as is possible, through specific initiatives and
appropriate structures, adapted to the persons and circumstances. Once more, we
must be mindful that the salvation of souls is always the supreme criterion of
all possible organization. Salus animarum suprema lex.”[2]
Opus Dei in the institutional
organization of the Church
5. When the moment came to give a definitive juridical
configuration to Opus Dei, it was extended in many dioceses the world over, and
it was seen “as an apostolic organism composed of priests and laity, both men
and women, simultaneously both organic and undivided, that is to say, as an
institution endowed with a unity of spirit, of aims, of government and of
formation.”[3]
6. Opus Dei, therefore, was to have as its mission an apostolic
task[4] harmonically
inserted into the pastoral work of the Church, a task that could not be
completed without the joint participation and mutual cooperation —an absolute
necessity— of clergy and laity. It had the conditions needed to form and
incardinate its own priests who would have full ministerial dedication to the
faithful of Opus Dei and to its apostolates. Moreover, it was an organic body,
hierarchically structured, in which there was a head (a prelate) with his
presbyterate and lay faithful: it therefore possessed all the requirements to
be inserted by the Pope into the institutional organization of the Church,
specifically under the juridical figure of a personal prelature, as foreseen by
the Second Vatican Council.[5]
Movements
7. Catholic movements,
which, of course, as a development of their own operative dynamism, exist and
develop their lives within the Church, do
not form part of the institutional organization of the Church, but, rather, are
a consequence of the right of association of their members, who get together
for a purpose recognized by ecclesiastical authority. At the present time, the
ecclesial entities that can be put together under the common heading of
“movements” do not have a well-defined juridical configuration, and each of
them adopts its own solution suited to its particular characteristics.
8. Concretely, in Catholic movements the aforesaid ministerial
relationship involving a hierarchical structure (the structure comprising the capital function –the
prelate– assisted by its presbyterate on the one hand, and the rest of the
faithful on the other hand) does not exist. Of course, vocations to the priesthood are promoted in movements, but
those priests ordinarily work in the dioceses to which they belong, dedicating
a part of their time to the apostolates of the movement. But even in the case
of a full dedication to the movement, they do not constitute a presbyterate of
that movement.
9. Obviously, it is not
excluded the possibility that an existing movement be erected by the Pope as a
personal prelature, if it can be configured as an organic unity, with a capital
function exercised with the collaboration of its own presbyterate, for the
ministerial service in favor of the faithful belonging to the movement and its
apostolates.
[Blogger insert: although irreducibly different as layman and priest, the difference being ontologically grounded by two distinct sacraments of Baptism and Order, both layman and ministerial priest are persons - subjects - participating in the one priesthood of Christ. That priesthood consists in the ontological configuration of mediating between self and the Father for the good of others. That mediation in Christ - the ontological prototype of priest - is based on Christ being one divine Person with two natures, and therefore capable of Self-gift through the human will that he assumed from and through the Virgin. The human person is created in the image of that.
By vocation to Opus Dei, both laymen and ministerial priests are called to make the gift of themselves totally, such that they are radically equal and radically "one" as the Church is one. The characteristic of both is "secularity" whereby the self-gift takes place precisely on the occasion of being in the world. The layman's vocation is to the world - to be Christ in each and every human activity, while the ministerial vocation of the priest is to serve the layman by Eucharist, sacraments (especially Penance) and preaching the Word].
[Blogger insert: although irreducibly different as layman and priest, the difference being ontologically grounded by two distinct sacraments of Baptism and Order, both layman and ministerial priest are persons - subjects - participating in the one priesthood of Christ. That priesthood consists in the ontological configuration of mediating between self and the Father for the good of others. That mediation in Christ - the ontological prototype of priest - is based on Christ being one divine Person with two natures, and therefore capable of Self-gift through the human will that he assumed from and through the Virgin. The human person is created in the image of that.
By vocation to Opus Dei, both laymen and ministerial priests are called to make the gift of themselves totally, such that they are radically equal and radically "one" as the Church is one. The characteristic of both is "secularity" whereby the self-gift takes place precisely on the occasion of being in the world. The layman's vocation is to the world - to be Christ in each and every human activity, while the ministerial vocation of the priest is to serve the layman by Eucharist, sacraments (especially Penance) and preaching the Word].
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