Saturday

Delegate Report

Dear Carmelites,
There have been questions asked about our province’s revised statute that a member of your local council cannot serve more than two consecutive terms. The original statute stipulated that condition for only your president, but Rome approved our extension of the limitation to include all local council members. What this means is that we are no longer allowed to merely re-arrange the furniture at election time in 2008. “Re-arranging the furniture” means electing someone already on the council president or formation director, then having the former president or formation director move down to simple councillor position. The statute applies to all five council members. The president and formation director are both councilors. So if you’ve been formation director since 2002 (that’s two consecutive terms), you cannot be elected president in 2008 (because that would be a third consecutive term on the council).

The reason for the statute is to promote leadership in our canonical communities. The statute does not apply to our Study Groups where councillors are not elected but appointed. Nevertheless the same principle applies to them as well, given the added in factor that our Groups have a more limited pool of personnel from which to choose. We need to keep rotating our leaders. Part of belonging to an organization that elects their leaders is that sometimes you are in and sometimes you are out (out of the loop of the decision makers of your community). This is always hard to take for those who have been in a long time --to find themselves suddenly excluded from the inner circle. But it’s a simple fact of political life that we must adjust to in our community relations.

Another thing to consider as you prepare for elections next year is this. Always plan to have some new blood on the council so everyone’s eligibility for office does not expire at the same time. It always seems best to have some councillors left to help make the transition from one term’s council to the next a smooth one. The provincial council will keep this in mind if you decide to postulate a council member for a third term when all the others have been in for two consecutive terms. Postulation means asking the Provincial superiors (myself and the Councillors) for permission to be dispensed from the general law for a serious reason.

--Fr. John Michael OCD, prov delg.
Kansas

The evening of Thursday July 12 began at Holy Name church in Topeka with meditation at 5:00 pm followed by the Profession Mass celebrated by Assistant James Moster OFM Cap. Left to right: Geri Prather, Sheila Head and Marian Ganser made their Definitive Promise. Geri is a councillor, and Marian has served a secretary. Guests at the reception after our meeting were Marian’s husband Mike, Sheila’s husband Kevin, and Geri’s friend Mary Kay. Both Mary Kay and Debbie’s friend Sharon shared how they have become interested in Carmel. Congratulations Geri, Marian and Sheila.

Louisiana

Former Councillor Rachél Stevens requested voluntary release from her Promises and vow in August. Mary Mother of Grace Community of Lafayette offered Rachél inactive status, as health issues were reasons given; but she decided to “relinquish the benefits of membership.” The council, on 07-Aug-07granted her request “with compassionate understanding for your difficult decision, and sorrow for the community's loss.” Rachél was a wonderful and valued member of our order. We will miss her.

DeRidder lost their Assistant when Fr. Daniel Torres was reassigned. I await word from this Study Group as to who they recommend I appoint as their new Assistant. Howard Duhon plans to make his First Promise in October in Lafayette at the hands of Fr. Kieran Kavanaugh OCD.

Tennesse

At our July 15, 2007, meeting of the OCDS Group of the Holy Spirit in Knoxville, Tennessee, we celebrated a profession and a clothing.

This picture, shows the First Promise of Dorothy Terheyden. Fr. John Dowling, our Spiritual Assistant, [left] and our Formation Director, Jan Hicks, OCDS, receive the profession of Dot [right]. Reception of the Scapular was given to Susana Navarro-Valenti. The picture shown in our last Flos Carmeli was of a retreat hosted by Knoxville.

Iowa
Sioux City’s Council and Visitator has suggested the Provincial Council appoint Steve Vacha coordinator, and Stephen Ramsay Director of Formation for a Group in Discernment to be formed in the state of Nebraska. We are also overseeing a newly formed group in South Dakota.

Texas
New assistant appointed for New Caney. Deacon Scott Matz has served us well for the past few years; I appointed him on 28-Apr-03. Job, family and deaconate obligations forced him to resign his position on 31-Aug-07. On October 2, I appointed the other deacon at St John of the Cross parish where our community meets each month. The new Spiritual Assistant is Deacon Bob Keller.

I gave a retreat on St. Therese for our Houston Carmelites from Sept 14-16 at Deertrail Rd. This retreat was hosted by San Juan de la Cruz community, but members from New Caney and St. Therese also attended. At the final liturgy we clothed five new novices, and I received the Definitive Promises of Leta Melder from the Community of the Most Holy Trinity in New Caney [left], Mary Cano [below] and Jerry McBeth [right] from San Juan de la Cruz community. The profession Mass was celebrated on Sunday 16-Sep-07 at 11:00 am, and preceded by the clothings.
When we celebrate both clothings and professions at the same time, it is preferable to perform the admission ritual before or after Mass, and the profession ritual after the homily of the Mass. Confusion often rises as the ritual states that the admission ceremony “is held during a liturgy of the Word.” Notice that the introduction to our ritual does not state that the admission rite is performed “during a Eucharistic liturgy,” as it does for the rite of Promises. The solemnity of our professions is emphasized by making the Promises during Mass, and having our clothings outside the Mass, preferably after the reading of the Divine Office which would be “a liturgy of the Word.”

Visitation of our original Houston community has been rescheduled from October to January of next year due to scheduling conflicts. Councillor Natalie Ocansey has moved to the California province. Sherry Maniscalco was elected to replace Natalie on the council of the Most Holy Trinity and St Joseph community.

--Fr. John Michael OCD, prov. delg.

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Promise Expiration

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Dear Father, we are in the process of receiving a transfer from another community, and the time of her First Promise is about to expire. How do we handle this situation?

A: Thank you for asking about this. Most of us, including myself, have not been aware until recently of the gravity of the wording of our First Promise, that it is made “for three years.” Technically, on the day of the third anniversary of this promise, that Promise expires, and the member of our order is no longer bound to the Promise. I say “technically” because “for three years” is normally interpreted to mean “until that time, three years from now, when I will be evaluated for the Definitive Promise.” So we remain a professed member of the order until we are either dismissed or the date is set for our Definitive Promise to be made. And we will not quibble about a few weeks that might extend our temporary promise beyond the 3 times 365 days that may lapse between one ceremony and the other.

But other circumstances outside the normal formation period need to be considered, and you have mentioned the most common, which is someone moving during his or her 3 year formation period between promises, and finding the expiration date approaching in the middle of the move or shortly thereafter. The new community needs time to evaluate the incoming member; so if you are moving at this critical time, you should make arrangements with your original community BEFORE YOU MOVE to extend your formation to allow proper evaluation from the new community who will need time to get to know you and see how you fit into their community before they can properly evaluate you to take the Definitive Promise. All extensions require you to repeat your First Promise (before an Assistant or authorized cleric) for the extended length of extension granted. If you do not do this, your original Promise expires, and you will be left in Carmelite limbo until some authority decides what to do with you.

Note to our local canonical councils: Read our provincial Statute I. 6) about how you can “authorize” a priest to accept a Promise if your Asssistant is unavailable.

So finally the answer to your question: Grant the transfer an extension, and have your Assistant accept her Promise for the length of the extension. Your community needs at least six months to get to know the new arrival. Fr. Aloysius has allowed us to extend a two year novitiate period for up to another year and the three year formation period for up to a year and a half. The extension, he said, should not however extend for more than half the normal period.
--Fr. John Michael OCD, prov. delg.

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Provincial Council report


REPORT FROM THE PROVINCIAL COUNCIL
October 2007

This reporting period was a time of a number of visitations. Amelia insanely left the cooler tempertures of Iowa to visit the Dallas community in August, the hottest part of the year in Texas. In Sept, she visited our Oklahoma City community. Nancy journeyed to Lafayette to visit the two communities there in June and Little Rock in Sept. She visited the Sioux City community in July which included meeting the South Dakota and Omaha Groups in Discernment. We have decided that Gerald is truly jinxed in relation to our Topeka group. He managed to visit the Houston St Therese study group in August but a serious family emergency resulted in a third postponement of his visit to Topeka. Elizabeth had car trouble on her way to visit Lubbock which resulted in a shortened visit although she was glad to be able to still keep to her overnight stay with one of our isolates on the way back home. She tried to escape the August Texas heat with a visitation to Cedar Rapids but it was just as hot and humid up there as it was back in Austin.

When not on the road, the Provincial Council has been working on guidelines for our canonical communities when they mentor a group in discernment, the leadership/elections FAQ in this issue, provincial council elections, and various pastoral questions that have come up with communities around the province.

We’d like to remind everyone to regularly check in on the provincial website at http://www.carmelitesok.org/ocdsok/oklahoma_province.htm We update it all the time with new stuff that we come across which we feel might be helpful to the members of our province. Check the “What’s New” link towards the bottom of the page if you don’t want to simply browse…although you might find (or re-find) something interesting just by browsing around things. We especially encourage all our councils to take note of the Best Practices areas particularly the section on discernment. We are finding ourselves referring councils to that information frequently when giving advice on discernment issues.

Our Houston communities are making good progress on planning next year’s OCDS Regional Congress. They have a webpage up at http://ocdscongresshouston.com/ so check it regularly for updates.

And a final reminder for planning ahead. We anticipate once again offering workshops for councils in spring of 2009. We want to give you this early reminder so communities can plan financially to cover the costs of sending at least one council member to one of the workshops.
--Provincial Council:
Pascal Alfano, Gerald Alford, Elizabeth Korves, Nancy Thompson, and Amelia Wilken

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Secretary's letter

Letter from Pat Darby
Provincial Secretary
October 2007
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
Please remember to include in your daily prayers and also your Community's prayers the petition for more vocations to the priesthood in our Province. We have a dire need for friars in our (province. Quoting from Fr. John Michael’s Pastoral Letter in the Winter Flos Carmeli:

"The direst need in our province is personnel for our nuns and our friars. Our secular order has plenty of vocations. In fact, we have more than we can handle! The California Province has many students studying for the priesthood. We have only two... Please pray for vocations."

Please remember to send Martha Hanley your Memorials and items that you wish published.
Martha's email address is:
tnmhanley@yahoo.com

Send inquiries and requests for additions and/or corrections to the number of copies being received and all donations/dues to the
Central Office
Pat Darby
315 N Greenville Ave., #1214
Allen, TX 75002
jmjtj33@aol.com
214 495-0597

ANNUAL DUES
JANUARY 1, 2008


Members at the time of First Promise pay annual dues of $30
Isolates pay their annual dues of $30 to the Community to which they belong. That Community sends their names and addresses and dues to the Central Office for mailing of the Flos Carmeli and recording of their information.
Aspirants who wish to receive the Flos Carmeli pay $12.
Subscribers outside of our Province pay $18.00 per year. This has been increased
due to postage and printing expenses.

These dues may be pro-rated. Please identify all monies that you send to the Central Office by listing your Community Name and the city where you meet.

In closing, I would like to quote something from Community and Growth by Jean Vanier which I think is a beautiful definition of "Community."

"A Community is like an orchestra: each instrument is beautiful when it plays alone, but when they all play together, each given its own weight in turn, the result is even more beautiful. A community is like a garden full of flowers, shrubs and trees. Each helps to give life to the other. Together, they bear witness to the beauty of God creator and gardener-extraordinary."

Let us all pray together for more vocations and also for our coming Spring elections. May the Holy Spirit grant us the gift of many new and holy men to serve and new councils dedicated to the charisms of our treasured vocation.
--Pat Darby, Provincial Secretary

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Houston Congress

Carmel Seculars – Bringing Light to the World
15th Regional OCDS Congress
September 11 through September 14, 2008
Houston, Texas

REGISTRATION FORM

The registration fee for the Congress is $245 per person if you register by May 31, 2008. After May 31, the registration fee is $275. This fee includes all of your meals (breakfast, lunch, dinner) at the Congress.

Please fill out the information requested on this form and mail it to the address listed below with your nonrefundable deposit of $125. Make your check (or money order) payable to "OCDS Congress." The fee balance of $120 (or $150 for those registering after May 31) is due when you check-in at the Congress registration table if full payment has not been made before then.

Form may be downloaded in MS Word.doc or PDF form from congress website:
http://ocdscongresshouston.com/

Mail your form and accompanying payment to:

OCDS Congress 2008
1450 W. Grand Parkway S., Suite G-154
Katy, Texas 77494

A Registration Form must be submitted for each person attending the Congress.
If your spouse is accompanying you, please follow the instructions above and submit a form for him/her.

Please send any questions to: jeannice.theriot@gmail.com


List of Speakers

Cardinal Daniel N. DiNardo
Archbishop of Galveston-Houston
Archbishop DiNardo was born in Steubenville, Ohio, on May 23, 1949. He entered St. Paul Seminary and Duquesne University in 1967-1969. In 1969 he won a Basselin Scholarship for Philosophy studies at the Catholic University of America and there obtained a B.A. and M.A. Degree in Philosophy. His theological studies were taken at the North American College, Rome, where he earned the S.T.B. Degree at the Gregorian University and the S.T.L Degree in Patristics at the Augustinianum. Archbishop DiNardo was ordained a priest on July 16, 1977 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. In 1984 he was named a staff member of the Congregation for Bishops at the Vatican in Rome, Italy where he remained until December 1990. He was named Coadjutor Bishop of the Diocese of Sioux City on August 19, 1997, and ordained bishop on October 7, 1997. He became Diocesan Ordinary on November 28, 1998. When Galveston-Houston was designated an archdiocese by Pope John Paul II on December 29, 2004, Bishop DiNardo was also elevated to archbishop coadjutor. He became the chief shepherd of the Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston on February 28, 2006, and named Cardinal on October 17, 2007 by Pope Benedict XVI.

Elda Maria Estrada, OCDS
Elda Maria was born in Cuba. She earned a degree in Social Sciences from Loyola University in New Orleans and holds Master's Degrees in Theological Studies from the Oblate School of Theology in San Antonio, Texas and in Spiritual Theology from the Teresianum OCD International College in Rome, Italy. Elda Maria is involved in evangelization at the local and national level and has lectured throughout the United States, Canada, and Latin America. She currently directs retreats, workshops and conferences.

Fr. Johannes Gorantla, OCD
Fr. Johannes Gorantla, was born in Andhra Pradesh, India in 1974. He was professed in 1994. In 1998 he won the University Gold Medal for Philosophy and was sent to Rome for his theological formation at Teresianum OCD International College. He made his solemn profession in 2000 and was ordained as the first native priest of Andhra Pradesh, (which is now a Comissariate) in 2002. In 2006 he obtained the Licence degree in Sacred Scripture from Biblicum, the Pontifical Biblical Institute in Rome. At present he is working on a Doctorate in Scripture from Gregorian University in Rome. Fr. Johannes always felt it was his duty to make known the rich treasures of Carmel to his people in Telugu. To that end he has published the following in Telugu language: 1993- translated the Book of Life of St. Teresa of Avila; 1994- Unending Light of Avila (the life and spiritual doctrine of St. Teresa); 1995- Time a Precious Gift of God; 1996- Secularism, and Religious Tolerance in India. (These both were prize winning essays on a national level in India); 1996- Relevance of Evangelization in India; 2001- A Precious Pearl in the Church (the life and the spiritual doctrine of St. Theresa of the Child Jesus); 2006- Understanding the Infancy Narratives: A Brief Theological and Spiritual Commentary.

Dr. Susan Muto
Susan Muto received her Ph.D. in English literature from the University of Pittsburgh where she specialized in the work of post-Reformation spiritual writers. Dr. Muto is the former director of the Institute of Formative Spirituality at Duquesne University where she taught as a full professor in its master's and doctoral programs. She is currently Executive Director of the Epiphany Association, and Dean of the Epiphany Academy of Formative Spirituality: a nonprofit ecumenical center dedicated to spiritual formation. She teaches courses on an adjunct basis at many schools, seminaries, and centers of higher learning. Her teachings focus on integrating the life of prayer and presence with professional ministry and in-depth formation in the home, the church, and the marketplace. Dr. Muto is the author of more than 90 articles and 30 books, (http://www.epiphanyassociation.org/)

Fr. John Michael Payne, OCD
Provincial Delegate, Oklahoma Province

Fr. John Michael entered the Carmelite novitiate of Marylake in 1963 and was professed in 1964. He studied philosophy in Santa Clara, CA, theology in Washington, D.C. and was ordained June 13, 1970 at Marylake. After serving as head of theology and philosophy at Dominican College of Houston, and the Assistant Pastor of the Cathedral of Dallas, he returned to Marylake as Prior in 1975. He then served as Superior in Oklahoma City, returning to Marylake in 1981. He was appointed provincial delegate to the Secular members of the Oklahoma Province in 1981, and except for one triennium [1990-93] has served in this position, sometimes with co-delegates, until his anticipated resignation in May 2008.

Deacon John Pelletier, OCDS
Vice-Chairman, Deacon Community Board of Galveston-Houston
Deacon John Pelletier grew up in New England but then came to Texas where he received his Masters Degree in Engineering from the University of Texas at Austin in 1977. He has worked for a major oil company since that time. John has been married to his wife Ellen for 30 years and they have two college age sons. He was professed on April 25, 1992 and made his definitive promise in 1995. He was ordained a Permanent Deacon for the diocese (now Archdiocese) of Galveston-Houston in 1999. He is currently assigned to St. Thomas More Parish. He previously served as a Council Member for the Community of the Holy Trinity and St. Joseph OCDS in Houston where he now serves as Spiritual Assistant.

Fr. Bonaventure Sauer, OCD
Parochial Vicar, Basilica of St. Therese, San Antonio, Texas
Fr. Bonaventure Sauer was born in Columbus, Ohio in 1953 and at an early age moved to Illinois. He received a Masters Degree in Scripture and entered the Carmel in San Antonio in the Oklahoma Province. He transferred to Little Rock in 1991 and was ordained a Priest in 1992. After his ordination he was transferred to New Orleans and became Student Director and taught at the New Orleans Seminary until 1997. In 1999 he moved to Oklahoma City where he served as Provincial until 2002 when he became Superior at Marylake Monastery in Little Rock, Arkansas. Since 2005, Fr. Bonaventure has served as Parochial Vicar at the Basilica of the National Shrine of St. Therese, as Editor of the Apostolate of the Little Flower magazine, and is serving as Spiritual Assistant of the Austin Chapter.

Dr. Nancy Thompson, OCDS
Member, Oklahoma Provincial Council
Nancy Thompson was born and raised on a farm in Iowa. She is the mother of four sons and has served the church in several professional roles in parishes and dioceses and at the national level since 1980. Nancy was professed in 1990 as an Isolate and joined a one-year-old group in discernment that was convened in Cedar Rapids in 1994 (now the St. Teresa of Jesus OCDS Community), where she served in leadership roles until becoming a member of the Oklahoma OCDS Provincial Council. In the late 1990s she began serving for six years on the Executive Committee of the Carmelite Institute of North America and later as a member of the OCDS National Council. In 1999 she attended the 2nd OCDS International Congress on the Rule of Life in Mexico. Dr. Thompson completed her Doctorate of Ministry in Applied Ministries in February 2000. In June 2007 Dr. Thompson left her role as theology teacher at Xavier High School in Cedar Rapids and became Director of Programs and Diocesan Relations for the National Catholic Partnership on Disability. She has authored many articles and presented on a variety of topics related to spirituality and the life of a Discalced Carmelite Secular, as well as other themes.

Hotel information
for O.C.D.S. Regional Congress, Houston
The congress will be held Sept. 11-14, 2008, at

Omni Houston Westside
13210 Katy Freeway (I-10)
Houston, TX 77079
281-558-8338

Please make your reservation by Aug. 28, 2008, to obtain our special rate of $94 per night – per room (for single, double, triple, or quad). To make your reservation online, type in the following URL address:

http://www.omnihotels.com/FindAHotel/HoustonWestside/Meeting%20Facilities/OrderofCarmelitesDiscalcedSecular9.aspx

If making your reservation by phone, please call Omni Houston Westside at 281-558-8338. Be sure to identify yourself with the group "Order of Carmelites Discalced Secular" to obtain our group rate. The number of rooms with King or Two Queen beds is pre-set; therefore, we recommend reserving your room as early as possible to receive the type of accommodation you desire.

If you have any questions, please contact:
Ms. Jeannice Theriot
OCDS Congress 2008
1450 W. Grand Parkway S., Suite G-154 ,
Katy, Texas 77494
or e-mail jeannice.theriot@gmail.com


Carmelite jewelry
for sale to support 2008 O.C.D.S. Congress

Beautiful Carmelite secular jewelry is for sale to help in defraying expenses of the 2008 Congress. The men's and ladies rings and pendant are made by a jeweler in Houston. Prices are as follows:

Ladies Rings:
............... W .....Price
Silver .......7.0 ...$185.00
Gold 10K... 8.0 ...$280.00
Gold 14K.. 10.0 ...$370.00


Pendant:
..............W .......Price
Silver .......5.2 ...$150.00
Gold 10K... 6.0 ...$225.00
Gold 14K... 7.0 ...$270.00

Men's Rings:
................W .....Price
Silver ...... 13.0 ..$280.00
Gold 10 K.. 14.0 ..$445.00
Gold 14 K.. 16.0 ..$535.00

Add $15 to price of jewelry for shipping and taxes. Send orders (specify item, ring size and initials to be inscribed inside the ring) with checks made out to "O.C.D.S. Congress" to Margaret Nunez, 22568 Yancy Road, Porter, TX 77365.

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Statistics

O.C.D.S. statistics

For the United States:
Oklahoma Province: approximately 870 members
Washington Province: approximately 4,000 members
California-Arizona Province: approximately 2,300 members

For the world:
Of the 40,000 Carmelite seculars in the world, 24,000 live in these five countries:

1. India
2. United States
3. Mexico
4. South Korea
5. Philippines

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Memorials

Silvia Chester
Killeen, Texas


Our beloved sister Silvia Chester was born Nov. 3, 1935, in Chirriqui, Panama, was professed March 21, 1999 at Cedarbrake in Belton, Texas, made her Definitive Promise in 2003 and died in Temple on July 18, 2007.

She worked very hard for our group as our secretary and translated a lot of documents into Spanish for us. She was a member of our council. Due to her illness (emphysema), she was confined to her home during the last months of her life. But she always kept in contact with the group; our group also always kept in touch with her. Silvia was a very organized person. She had two daugthers and a son. Our group and her family were with her until her last hour of life. She was called to the Father's house at the age of 71. She was a great woman, mother and sister in Carmel, a wonderful Carmelite to know and to admire.
—Angel Moises Acosta, Killeen

Louise DeBlanc, Monita Oubre, Lucy Fitch
New Iberia, LA


The following members of Mary, Beloved of the Trinity Community in New Iberia, La., announces the death of the following members:

• Louise DeBlanc, born on Oct. 25, 1919, and died on Aug. 13, 2005. She was professed on May 7, 1982, taking the devotional name of "Theresa of the Cross," and made her Definitive Promise in 1985.

• Monita Oubre, born on Feb. 20, 1917, and died on Aug. 3, 2007. She was professed on May 15, 1988, taking the devotional name of "Monica of Holy Souls," and made her Definitive Promise in 1991.

• Lucy Fitch, born on Aug. 6, 1928, and died on Aug. 9, 2007. She was professed on Nov. 18, 2001, taking the devotional name of "Mary Lucy Therese," and made her Definitive Promise in 2004.

—Terri Hebert, New Iberia

Eleanor Lindauer St. Louis

On Aug. 9, 2007, the memorial of St. Teresa Benedicta of the Cross, our St. Louis community lost another of our dear members. Eleanor Lindauer, whose name in Carmel was Carmel of Mary, had been a resident of St. Agnes Home for some years, a facility run by the Carmelites of the Divine Heart of Jesus. She was born on May 22, 1910, and entered Carmel in July 1975. Her clothing took place in September 1977, First Promise Nov. 21, 1982, and Definitive Promise Oct. 16, 1983. Eleanor had been a nun earlier in her life and had never married after leaving the convent. She was especially close to another member of our community who has since moved to Texas to live near her children, Esther Schmitt.

Eleanor never held office in the community but was an unofficial ambassador of welcome and a delight to the community and to all who knew her.

At the memorial Mass the priest at St. Agnes Home said that he found her to be always smiling, a quiet woman who loved people and was at peace with herself. He said that we get to be at peace with ourselves when we are one with Christ. And we get to be one with Christ through prayer and the Eucharist. Being in Christ's Heart we then try to be better and to bring him to others. He said, Christ is the way, the truth and the life and that Eleanor showed the way to follow Christ to others.

One little personal note: When I came to my first meeting at Carmel in 1988 the president and the formation director were both unexpectedly unable to attend, and a member offered to show a travelog movie of a trip to the Holy Land. I was very disappointed and was leaving when this smiling, friendly woman came up to me and introduced herself as Eleanor and asked if I was a new member. I told her it was my first meeting, but it wasn't what I thought it would be and wouldn't be coming back again. She said, "Oh, dear, please don't judge us by this meeting. Please come back again and see for yourself." Well, thank God for Eleanor seeking me out to speak to me and invite me back.

Eleanor didn't attend many meetings after that because of age, poor health and not being able to drive, so I didn't get to know her well. But for those who did know her she was a warm, gentle, friendly, prayerful woman who showed others the way to Christ's Heart. She will be missed.
—Sharon Schulte, St. Louis

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Stepping forward in leadership
in the Secular Discalced Carmelite Community

by Hank Hurley, O.C.D.S.

It is a hallmark of our age that everyone is looking for leaders and usually can't find them. This is true in politics, education, the business world and the church. Why are people reluctant to be leaders? Are the risks of leadership somehow seen as less than the rewards? In our Carmelite communities the risks are fewer and the rewards are greater because we perform our duties within the Rule and with confidence in the charity of our spiritual brothers and sisters in Christ.

Leadership is an activity that each of us accepts at certain points in our lives, and it doesn't mean that some people are leaders and some aren't. This view is possible if we put aside the worries and self-concern about leadership and concentrate on the fundamental requirement for accepting leadership duties, which is humility. There has never been a better time to step forward and help the community through your talents.

As our spiritual parents Saint Teresa and Saint John teach us, humility is the glue which holds the virtues and contemplative experiences together. And we know from our own personal experiences, humility binds our promises of chastity, poverty and obedience together so that our actions out of contemplation are simply and profoundly NOT for our own self-interest but for Christ and our fellow Carmelites. If humility is the spirit of leadership, then what are the practical actions?

First, self- knowledge: Am I in a good place to practice leadership activities in my community? Do I have time, and am I free of personal interest and ambition that would lead me astray by thinking I know what is best for my brothers and sisters in Carmel? Am I focused on the Constitutions and particularly on utilizing their guidance in a spirit of charity and love to each of my brothers and sisters? Can I exercise responsibility and duty with common sense and charity? The reward of accepting leadership will be increased self-knowledge and greater awareness of the real needs of my companions on our spiritual journey.

Second, do I want to serve more than I am serving now —not in an egocentric way, but in whatever way the Council deems appropriate? When I bring this to prayer, do I gain confidence that my desire to practice leadership is what God wants of me? Can I devote myself to learning something new in the way I practice leadership and serve others? The reward will be new skills in how I live my life and how I make decisions.

Third, can I be courageous when necessary? My beloved brothers and sisters in Carmel will not always agree with my decisions or my actions. In truth and humility I must accept their views but also do what is right and obedient to my calling and my leadership duties. Can I do this at this point in my life? The reward will be a self-confidence based on my real talents, exercised through serving God and the community.

Finally, if I accept a leadership position and then find that the leadership role is too challenging for me, will I be able to ask for the help that I need through grace and genuine humility?

Now is the time to step forward and offer your talents to your community, in humility as a leader and for the welfare of your sisters and brothers. The reward will be a stronger sense of who you are as a Carmelite. You will be able to bring to your prayer a renewed confidence in yourself and love for our Lord.
--Hank Hurley, O.C.D.S.

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Elections Q&A

Q: If someone has been a councilor for one term and is now president of the community, can that person serve another term as president?

A: Sec. 2.d of our Provincial Statutes says: "In order that leadership qualities be developed in our communities, all council members (President, Councilors and Director of Formation) shall serve no more than two consecutive terms. Since it is not possible to be elected to a third consecutive term, in order to hold a third consecutive term, a postulation is required from the Provincial Council." This means that the person in question could not serve as president, as formation director, nor as a councilor during the next triennium unless the community seeks postulation from the Provincial Council. The term limit applies regardless of which specific role a person has served on the council.

Q: What is postulation and how do we get it?

A: Postulation is when you ask for an exemption from the legislation of the Order. If a community wishes to seek postulation for a council member, then they must vote on whether to request postulation. This vote must be well in ADVANCE of the regular council elections. Once the ballots are counted by the Local Council, the Spiritual Assistant should contact the Provincial Council with the results of the postulation vote and provide his own recommendation as well. The Provincial Council will then decide whether to approve the postulation or not.

The request to the Provincial Council should include an explanation for why the community is seeking an exemption for this person. The Provincial Council will want to know such things as:

How is your community actively forming members to assume leadership roles?
The tradition in Carmelite leadership is that sometimes you are a leader and sometimes, you are not. How does your community prepare everyone for the application of that principle?
Were there enough candidates on the ballot to choose a council without this person? If not, why not?

If the Provincial Council approves the postulation, then the community holds regular elections for the remaining council positions. For example, if the postulation was for Jane Doe to serve an additional term as President, then the community election would only be for the open councilor positions. No election for President would be held.

Q: How do we choose a Formation Director?

A: According to Art. 53, the Formation Director is ELECTED by the council. According to Fr. John Michael: "All elections of personnel need to be done by secret ballot. I think most communities settle these matters by consensus agreement, but the problem in this is that a consensus is usually declared to be achieved by the strongest person in the group, and there is pressure on anyone who opposes that consensus to go along. Because of considerations such as these, the general principle was developed that all elections involving personnel be done by secret ballot and votes tabulated and recorded by the secretary. This would not apply to minor matters such as appointments of secretaries, treasurers, infirmarians, phone committee members, etc., but would apply to serious matters such as ones admittance to clothing or profession or continuance in formation."

Naturally, the council will want to choose someone with the gifts of a good formation director. At the same time, it is important to remember that the FULL council is responsible for "the formation and Christian and Carmelite maturing of the members of the community." (Art. 46) Also, in many of our communities, the Formation Director oversees a formation team (so all the work does not fall on just the Formation Director). Thus a Formation Director needs to also be someone who can delegate tasks.

Q: But we already know who the Formation Director will be. We've already decided.

A: Sec. III.l states: "To preserve freedom of the newly elected Local Council, all other offices (Secretary, Treasurer, Formation Director, etc.) shall be vacated at the end of the same meeting." Only the newly elected Local Council may determine who the Formation Director should be. The previous council does not choose. Even the larger, full community does not choose. The Formation Director from the prior triennium does not automatically continue in that position. We know that sometimes there is discussion prior to election among members about who should be the Formation Director. Sometimes a person is kept off the council ballot because everyone thinks that person should be the Formation Director. This would be wrong. Sec. III.4.C covers what to do if the newly elected Local Council wishes to elect one of their own to serve as Formation Director.

Q: What happens if we only have one candidate for President?

A: The answer to this depends upon which set of parliamentary procedures the community has decided to follow for the election process. (see Sec. III.l) Most people have some passing familiarity with Robert's Rules of Order. For instance, in Robert's Rules of Order, if there is only one candidate standing for election to a particular position, then a ballot vote must still be taken for that one person (provided there are no nominations from the floor at the time of the vote). If someone does not wish to vote for the one nominee, they either vote for the unopposed candidate, write in someone else's name, or abstain.

Q: Who gets to vote?

A: Voting is a privilege granted upon membership in the Order. According to Art. 12, a person becomes a full member of the Order upon making the First Promise. Visitors, aspirants, novices, those whose First Promise has expired, and Spiritual Assistants (unless they are also professed in the OCDS) are not eligible to vote. In certain rare circumstances, a professed member of the Order might have their voting rights suspended and so are not allowed to participate in the elections either. Note also that the Provincial Statutes require a member to be physically present at the time of the vote.

Q: Do those who do not have a right to vote stay in the room or do they have to leave during the voting?

A: There is no legislative requirement that non-voting members leave the room at the time of elections. However, care should be taken that ballots are only given to those with voting rights.

Q: The statutes say that the incumbent councilors count the ballots but what if they are on the ballot? Isn't this a conflict of interest?

A: If all three councilors are on the ballot for re-election, then it would be appropriate to have a neutral party (someone who is not on the ballot) also present to help with counting of the ballots. If at least one councilor is not up for re-election then that person is the neutral party and so there's no need for someone else to help with the count.

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Friday

Leadership and Collaboration

Responsible Leadership and Collaboration
in Light of the Constitutions

Father Aloysius Deeney, O.C.D., General Delegate
Transcript of address at the Western Regional Congress
June 17, 2007


Good Morning, Carmelites!

You know in 1988, I came back from spending a year in Avila in Spain where I studied St. John of the Cross. I was invited to many places including here to Washington in 1989 and 1990. It was here in Seattle. I was invited all over the country: to monasteries of nuns and to secular order groups to talk about St. John of the Cross. It was really wonderful. I really very much enjoyed it. I was very welcomed every place, all the time. Now I am invited many places to speak, but I've almost stopped talking about spirituality, and I am always talking about organization. I've been invited to talk about organization here as well. But I am going to change it around and talk a little bit about spirituality. But the spirituality of organization!

The Rule of St. Albert, the Source of Living Streams, is a source that continues to give itself to us. And yes, somebody had mentioned yesterday that it is more than just a plan of life or formula of life or an organization. It's actually a source of inspiration for living the spiritual life. There is a fundamental presumption in the fact that these hermits asked St. Albert of Jerusalem for a formula of life. It was that these hermits, who were now together, did not know how to be alone without being together and needed something to guide their togetherness.

That also is the basic presumption that comes through the spirituality especially of our Holy Father to which I'm going to refer, the spirituality of St. John of the Cross, in that we do not know how to be alone before God or by ourselves. We need to come together in order to learn how to be alone before God. With that realization in our minds we can then look at: Why are we organizing ourselves to begin with? That will purify many things that come through in our organization.

Yesterday, thanks be to Father Pat McMahon's outline of the five points of the classical letter of the early middle ages, where there was the introduction -- the salutation and the exordium, and the application, and the petitio, and the conclusio.

I want to point out some things in [St. Albert's] Rule of Life that talk about governance. Because he says in the first part, "This is what I expect you to have." He says, The first thing I require, the first thing. You want to learn how to live alone? You want to learn how to be a hermit before God? You want to learn how to live deep spirituality? The first thing I require of you is —not to go to Mass every day. The first thing I require of you is —not to say the canonical hours or the 50 Our Fathers and 75 Our Fathers on feast days. The first thing I require of you is that —you have a prior. You have somebody in charge; one of yourselves, who is to be chosen for the office by common consent or that of the greater or more mature part of you. Second thing, each of the others must promise him —obedience, of which, once promised, he must try to make his deeds the true reflection. Then later on, in 1247 (and also chastity and renunciation of ownership), the basic idea was that we, as members, were to make our lives a reflection of cooperation and collaboration with the one who was in charge.

Now remember Father Pat said that there was first what was expected and then the application, because there is, later on, an application of how this collaboration and cooperation was to function. In No. 15 of the Rule of St. Albert: "On Sunday too or other days, if necessary, you should discuss matters of discipline and your spiritual welfare, and on this occasion, the indiscretions and failures of the brothers, if any be found, should be lovingly corrected."

So he not only says that you're to have a prior, but he says how the prior is to function. You discuss things. You are to meet on Sundays, then discuss the discipline of your lives, how are your lives going? There is the promise of obedience, which means you listen. That's what the word obedience means, that you listen, but it also means that you speak. In the way that this is described, you are to meet on Sundays to discuss how your is life going. Now we know that there are different systems, even in the church, there are different systems of governance. We have a hierarchical system, correct? It's the pope and the bishops, the parish priests and the parishioners. You might say there is the most basic line of how things function in the hurch, in the hierarchical system. This is not a hierarchical system, because the prior is someone who is elected from among the members or by the more mature members, the greater part of the community who elect the person who is supposed to be in charge.

Anyway, the person who was elected to be prior, his first purpose for being, was supposed to be that he could handle the business of the community (have his cell closest to the entrance gate of the compound where the hermits lived). But the actual decision of how the community was doing, the evaluation, was done through the community meeting, which was held every Sunday. So it was not something where the prior was understood to have the answers and it was up to the community of hermits to abide by the answers given by the prior. It was that the prior was to handle the business of the community. The others were to cooperate with him, and they cooperated with him by every Sunday discussing what was the nature of the community life: how was it going, what needed to be done, what was being done well. That, to me, that's the original way that the community on Mount Carmel was to function. The prior's biggest responsibility had to do with outside the community, because the evaluation that was done on Sundays by the community established how things were to be done.

In the Constitutions, No. 46, which is a section taken right out of the Rule of Life, just repeated word for word, I believe: "The council, composed of the president and the three councilors and the director of formation, constitutes the immediate authority of the community. The primary responsibility of the council is the formation and Christian and Carmelite maturing of the members of the community."

Now, if that's the primary responsibility, "...the formation and the Christian and Carmelite maturing of the members of the community," it also reflects what is the primary responsibility of the members, correct? The primary responsibility of the people who are in charge of the community (of those who have inherited the place of prior from the tradition of the Rule of St. Albert), if the primary responsibility for those people is to organize the formation of the community and to assist the members in maturing both as Christians and as Carmelites, then the primary responsibility of the members is participation in the program of formation and participation in the programs that help in maturing and identifying ourselves as Christians, as Carmelites.

So it's not just simply the structure or the spiritual inspiration that's given for being a member of the secular order or participation in the secular order. It's not just some system of governance. But it actually and very much is a way to participate and grow in the spiritual life. That's why we came here. We did not come here just to join one other organization. We came here moved by the desire to grow in the spiritual life. And that desire to grow in the spiritual life, we find we came here because we could not do it alone. You were sitting in your home, or you were sitting in a church one day, and you heard someone talk about Carmelites or Discalced Carmelites or third order and maybe you thought to yourself, I'd like to find out about that. But you got to a certain point where you said, I need that —I need what that is because I'm not doing it perfectly all alone. I am doing it so imperfectly [that] I feel like I am not doing it.

So I join the organization, but when we join the organization it's not just like joining a club. It demands our participation in it. Because the effects for which the organization exists will have no fruit unless I participate in it. Make sense? And so the purpose of the organization is to produce fruit in our spiritual lives. But in order to participate in it, there are some spiritual principles involved in the participation. The Rule of St. Albert laid down the requirement that there be someone responsible for the community. The other members of the community were to cooperate in obedience with that person. They were, however, to arrive at decisions about the community through the community meeting, through discussion. There is no presumption that the prior speaks for God. The presumption is that it is the community's discernment that determines what is the will of God and how we are living.

In the Constitutions, quoting exactly the Rule of Life, which I think reflects the nature of the secular order, see there are Nos. 46 and 47. The most important part of the requirement for leadership in the communities is No. 46. Forty-seven has to do with housekeeping, all those little things, among which is to dismiss a member. (Which has seemed to have gotten out of hand in some ways, or some places, where people are looking at dismissing members as something that they have some divine right to do.) What the divine obligation to do, for those who are responsible for the community, is formation and the Christian and the Carmelite maturing. Your collaboration, your cooperation as a member (our cooperation because this applies to us who are friars) [is to] cooperate and collaborate in obedience, so that we might grow in our vocation as Carmelites. It's not just to comply, or it's not just to keep the peace, or just to not ruffle any feathers. It's actually to cooperate in order to grow in the spiritual life.

Now I want to talk about a few things that St. John of the Cross says to us, about spiritual direction, because the spiritual purpose for which we became Carmelites is the overwhelming purpose. It's the only purpose that gives any sense to being a member of the secular order, to grow in the spiritual life. And in a sense since the leadership or the governance of the community is for the purpose of assisting people to grow in the spiritual life, St. John of the Cross has certain things that he says to us as members or directees and certain things that he says to us as leaders or directors.

And I want to take these things that St. John of the Cross is speaking about spiritual direction —and he's talking about receiving spiritual direction and he's talking about giving spiritual direction-- but I am applying it to membership in the community and leadership in the community. In the second book of The Ascent of Mt. Carmel, in Chapter 22, St. John of the Cross goes through a large reflection on the humanity of Christ, which we read in the Divine Office once in the liturgical calendar of the year, this section is read and another time on the feast of St. John of the Cross for us who are Carmelites. And it's where St. John of the Cross says, "God could respond as follows: 'I have already told you all things in My Word, My Son, and I have no other Word. Fasten your eyes on Him, look for Him, seek Him.'"

He applies this in the Incarnation of Christ, in the Word spoken by the Father; God has revealed everything. And he takes that Word spoken by the Father and applies it to spiritual direction. St. John of the Cross says in Article 9 of the 22nd chapter in the second book of The Ascent ofMt. Carmel. He says this, "What God said at that time did not have the authority or force to induce complete belief unless approved by priests and prophets."

Then this is the line, "God is so content that the rule and direction of man be through other men and that a person be governed by natural reason that He definitely does not want us to bestow entire credence upon His supernatural communications or be confirmed in their strength and security until they pass through this human channel of the mouth of a man." So he's saying in terms of spiritual direction, that God is so content, contento, God is happy. God is so happy that we be directed by men (by human beings). God is so happy that we be directed by human beings that He does not wish us to put trust or confidence entirely in what we think, in what we feel, in what we receive, unless it's confirmed. This gives us an attitude of, with regards to the spiritual life, the necessity for direction.

We have come here to Carmel, myself, yourselves, moved by the desire for God, so we know that we need the direction that comes to us from this organization that we have joined. It's not optional, and we have to approach this with the necessity of listening to what is said. We have a spiritual obligation —to cooperate. We cooperate with our confessor, when we confess to him. We cooperate with our spiritual director when we listen to what he has to say and are even willing to abandon what we think in order to trust. And we have a responsibility to cooperate, to work together, to collaborate (they all mean the same thing) with the one who is directing us in the leadership of the community. As members, we must have this disposition, to cooperate with the community, with those who are leading us. As often as God reveals something to a person, God confers a kind of inclination to manifest this to the appropriate person. Until a soul cooperates with the authority, he is restless. He's not restful.

No. 11 of the same chapter is about the soul cooperating with the spiritual director, and I am saying that this spirituality which comes from John of the Cross also informs us and forms us as members of a community. This is the trait of the humble person (a side point, how important is the virtue of humility in the writing of St. Teresa of Jesus. In The Way of Perfection, remember it's detachment, fraternal charity and humility: "And even though I mention this as last, it's more important than the other two because it includes the other two.")

So this is the trait of the humble person. The humble person is the person who is the member and the humble person is the person who is the leader. But this is the trait of the humble person; he does not dare deal with God independently. Nor can he be completely satisfied without human counsel and direction. God is desirous of this, for to declare and strengthen truth on the basis of natural reason, He draws near those who come together in an endeavor to know Him. There's the whole cement of community life. It is a cement, community life. We did not come here to live community life. We live community life in order to do what we came here to do.

You form community. You don't find it when you get there because when you get there the community is changing, and you're forming community, and your joining and the cement of this is to come together to know what is it that God is asking of us. What is it that God is asking of me? I join a community in order to learn it. And I am a member. Before I am ever a leader, I am a member of a community. No one, absolutely no one, in religious life has a vocation to be a leader. We have no hierarchy. Everyone has a vocation to be a member, and certain members are asked at certain times to take on the responsibility of leadership, but no one has the vocation to be president of the community. No one. Everyone has a vocation to be a member of a community. So we approach this membership as the most important part of our spiritual life.

The second half of paragraph 11 of the 22nd chapter of the second book of The Ascent of Mount Carmel: "Thus God announces that He does not want the soul to believe only by itself the communications it thinks are of divine origin, of for anyone to be assured or confirmed in them without the Church or her ministers. God will not bring clarification and confirmation of the truth to the heart of one who is alone. Such a person would remain weak and cold in regard to truth." Remember this is St. John of the Cross, our Holy Father, who is writing for us who come from a very eremitical tradition. But remember that the original hermits were not solitaries. They were living together and wanted to learn how to be alone. So this spirituality of membership, this spirituality of being a directee, the one who receives direction from someone else, this guides ourselves whether it's you or me or Sister [from Seattle Carmel] yesterday. As Carmelites we are members and that's what gives us our identity. And that's why we came here, to be a member with other members so that we can know God.

It's rather demanding what St. John of the Cross then said about being a spiritual directee. It's very demanding. We're not our own director, and that's what we really have to avoid. You can look in The Sayings of Light and Love what St. John of the Cross says about people who direct themselves, who listen to no one else but themselves. If you want to know what that looks like in the spiritual life, you can look in your own communities and see people who direct themselves as members of the community and how they do not build community. In the beginning then we say that they're a little bit different: "Well that person's a little bit different, you know." But then in the end we say "that person is a pain." But that pain came from that being a little bit different. And that little bit different came from not listening, not listening. Hearing but not listening. So that there's a demand that St. John places on people who are going to enter spiritual direction. And that demand is to listen. In your heart, to cooperate with the Holy Spirit, who speaks through direction and that God's very happy that we do things that way.

It also guides our way of being, of being members in the community. Remember when I said being members in community has never been, in the Carmelite tradition, being "yes men." Remember I said in the very beginning that the way things were done was by discussion. So yes, we cooperate, we listen, and we do that after we have spoken what we think, how we understand things, the way we see things. And having done and said and spoken what we think, we then listen and cooperate. So as members we have the obligation to speak our minds. And after having spoken our minds, we have the obligation to cooperate with what is decided. And that's the importance of the business meeting that's part of your community structure, is that you have the opportunity, not just to listen to what the council has decided, but that you actually have the opportunity (and it's the importance of the opportunity) to say what you think and when it's done, to cooperate.

Okay, now St. John of the Cross has some very interesting things to say to spiritual directors. And it's in the third stanza of The Living Flame of Love, from about Section 34 to 72, where St. John of the Cross talks to spiritual directors. St. John of the Cross says (here's the principle) a person goes to a spiritual director because the person wants to grow in the spiritual life. A person comes to the community of Carmel because they want to grow in the spiritual life. Now we've looked at, a little bit, how being a spiritual directee has its influence on being a member of the community. Spiritual directors have certain things that they must remember if they're going to be a spiritual director and remembering these, we're going to apply these principles to the role of leadership in the community whether it's for the friars or the nuns or the seculars. But it's the same spirituality that fills the role.

God alone is the agent. That's the principle that begins this discussion on spiritual direction. Now if God alone is the agent, then the spiritual director must be very humble before God, wanting to know not what I want to do, but what does God want. I can be very clear about what I want done, can't I? I can be very clear about what I want done. What does God want done? What is God doing with these people? St. John of the Cross says there is as much difference between what the soul does itself and what it receives from God as there is between human work and divine work, between the natural and the supernatural. In the one, God works supernaturally in the soul, and in the other the soul works only naturally. But the point here is that there is as much difference sometimes between what I want done and between what God wants done as there is between the natural and the supernatural.

"Let directors be content with disposing [these people that they are directing] for this according to evangelical perfection, which lies in nakedness and emptiness of sense and spirit... In this matter of striving for perfection, not to turn back is to go forward." (Living Flame, Stanza 3, Nos. 47, 48) If someone is not going backwards they are going forward. That's the presumption. You don't see them going forward; you see them going backwards.

About spiritual directors or about leaders or about presidents or about council members. Perhaps in their zeal these directors err with good will, because they do not know any better: "Not for this reason should they be excused for the counsels which they give rashly without first understanding the road and spirit a person may be following and for rudely meddling in something they do not understand instead of leaving the matter to One who does understand."

You are the president of a community and you have 22 members of the community and you have a council of four other persons (there is a council of five persons) so that leaves 17 other members. There could be 17 other ways of approaching God. There are 17 other ways because each person approaches God as an individual. If you have a very monolithic, one way of doing things, which is usually your way of doing things, then you're going to expect that everyone fits in that mold. And expecting that everyone fits in that mold, you're going to see people outside of that mold and you're going to say, "They do not belong." Whereas if you realize that you are in some way or another acting so as to introduce this person to God, who is leading this person in this way, then you're going to look and say, "Well, this person is moving at his or her pace and at his or her way." You're going to be open to understanding --what is God asking of this person, how is God asking this person to be a Carmelite?

All right, there are plenty of indications as to which one must be a Carmelite and things that one must do and there are indications as to people who have no vocation to Carmel:

• They have no interest in Carmelite spirituality
• They have a Marian spirituality that has nothing to do with contemplation or meditation or Our Lady of Mount Carmel
• Or they are not practicing members of the Catholic Church.

These are indications as to who does not have the vocation. But once all of us have entered into it, there are as many ways as there are persons. Even our Holy Mother St. Teresa in the fifth chapter of The Book of Foundations begins by saying: "There are many ways in this way of prayer and I'm going to write a few things about one of them." That thick! The few things she writes are about —that thick, about one of those ways!

There are so many ways to be a Carmelite. There are many ways not to be one and they are clear if we follow reading through the Constitutions or reading through the spirituality but there are also many ways [to be a Carmelite]. This is community life and not communism. We're not being forced to be a certain way in order to grow. As a matter of fact, if we force people to be a certain way, I guarantee you: they will not grow. So the spiritual director, therefore the leaders in community, have to be very aware that God leads souls along different paths. "Granted", says St. John of the Cross, "that you may possess the requisites for the full direction of some soul, for perhaps it does not have the talent to make progress. It is impossible [doesn't say it's difficult, he says]"it is impossible for you to have the qualities demanded for the guidance of all those you refuse to allow out of your hands. God leads each one along different paths so that hardly one spirit will be found like another in even half its method of procedure." [Living Flame of Love, third stanza, Chapter 59]

The greatest obligation, therefore, on those who have the responsibility of leadership is to respect the differences that exist in the members of the community. I believe that those who are given the responsibility of leadership in community are called to a deeper humility. Because it's a humility that almost can be crucifying. They elect you to come up with all the answers and you know you don't have them. They elect you to decide things and you don't know what to do. It is a deeper humility that's required and the humility demands a deeper cooperation with the members of the council. And the deeper cooperation with the members of the council increases the responsibility of the council to listen to the members of the community.

The council is not like the bishop. The bishop has a vocation to be leader. He therefore receives the grace to be leader. We have the grace to be members. And out of that membership, we cooperate in leading the community. Then when we're no longer the leader, we go back to being a cooperator. The bishop never goes back to being a diocesan priest. It's a different vocation. But we can't use that model for understanding how we function.

I have a few communities that are directly under my tutelage in different countries of the world. I'm the spiritual assistant for some communities in Malaysia and in Romania. I only visit them twice a year, but anyway some of those communities are still in the process of formation. And last year, in two of the communities in Malaysia, they had their first elections three years ago. The first time they ever elected. They're still not canonically erected communities. They're rather young in their history. One's maybe 11 years old, the other's seven years old. So after two years, I took the people who were responsible out of responsibility, and then appointed other members, not elected. And I told them I was doing it for two reasons. I wanted to see how the communities ('cause they're brand-new communities) I wanted to see how do these communities adjust to different personalities, different types of leaders. Because there are different types of leaders, there's no one way to do everything. So they're going to now arrive at professing definitively their first members and be established as a community of the secular order, canonically established and follow the rules. I want to see how they adjust to having different leaders. That was the one thing because that is very important.

The second thing I wanted to see was how do the leaders adjust to being only members. Do those leaders who come back now, join back in, in being members and cooperate? Or do they think they knew how to do it better and become uncooperative? Were those, with whom they're supposed to be, cooperative? One community's doing very well, the other community is not doing as well. What we see in the ways that we do things is that there are interchanges that take place in our roles in the community but we're always members.

So what St. John of the Cross says, about giving the spiritual direction and the humility that's required to give spiritual direction, and the realization about the one who gives spiritual direction must have is, namely, that they do not have all of the answers for everybody that comes to them —and also helps or informs or guides or gives a spirituality to the way that we fulfill the role of leadership. We do our best in cooperation, certainly with the council, but we must realize that after we have done our best, we must trust God with the results. So I take these two attitudes, actually it's one basic attitude, to be humbly before God, a member of the community, and when called upon by the community to realize that we're called upon by God to fulfill a responsibility to the community, to fulfill that responsibility, humbly. Not with arrogance! Not giving the impression that I know and you do not! Because we must be aware that we could be trampling on the Holy Spirit active in the life of another person. But equally as members, we must realize that before God we are charged with the responsibility of cooperating with those who have this burden to be leaders and that this cooperation that we have to give speaks about the maturity of our spiritual life.

QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS

So in order to leave time for questions, that's basically what I have to say about the role of leadership from a spiritual perspective. But I want to leave time now for these questions that are written. I have no idea of what they are.

Q: There is a situation where the council of the community asks the spiritual assistant for help in discerning whether to accept a candidate for the promise. The spiritual assistant replies, "He has good attendance at the meetings so he should make the promise." How can the council go forward to a more careful discernment for the candidate?

A: Well, number one, the primary responsibility for discernment does not go to the spiritual assistant. Primary responsibility for the discernment belongs to the formators and to the council of the community. The spiritual assistant is consulted, and I hope that the spiritual assistant is not a Carmelite! Probably not a member of community life because if the only point of evaluation is the attendance at meetings than it's more like, if the factory belt is working that they've gone along and so far so good! My definition of the eternal optimist: the eternal optimist is the man who falls from a 40-story building who is heard to say as he passes the 20th floor, "So far, so good!" So then if the only evaluation for whether or not someone should go to the next step is "they stayed on the belt," but the evaluation is not for the spiritual assistant. He's consulted. The work of the evaluation belongs to the community: to the council, to the formation director. That's where the work of the evaluation is.

So this question seems to me to present the idea that it's possible that in some communities the spiritual assistant still does the evaluation and the community is not doing the evaluation to the extent that it does. In many ways I bet you if the community does a good evaluation, if the council, if the formation director does a good evaluation of a person, when they consult with the spiritual director, he's probably going to say yes, if the answer was yes from the community. And if the community does a good evaluation and they say no, probably the spiritual assistant is going to say "Oh, no." But it's when the community is not doing an evaluation that there's confusion as to even what is the role of the spiritual assistant. OK?

Q: How do you address the issue of people who have been in the community for 15 years but refuse to hold any office or position?

A: Oh, how do I address that? Well the first thing, the first observation is that something was lacking in j formation, unless there's a specific reason for why that person cannot fulfill an office. You know, if there's some particular reason that has to do with health or with work obligations or others things, that dispenses that person, but I presume the question comes from the background of well, people just don't want to do. Sometimes people just don't want to be bothered to do things for community. And that again is a problem of the discernment of the people who then become part of the community and the formation of people who become part of the community. Because you know you do not have to be here to live Carmelite spirituality. You don't have to be a secular order member to be a layperson who lives Carmelite spirituality. You can live Carmelite spirituality without being a member of the secular order. You can pray the Office everyday. You can make mental prayer. You can read St. Teresa, St. John of the Cross. You can pray to Our Lady of Mount Carmel, have a great devotion, go to every Carmelite feast-day Mass and not be a member of the secular order, and that's fine. If you're a member of the secular order, there's something else involved. If you're a member of the secular order there's some way in which you are being called to give yourself. Not receive! You can receive all those other things by yourself. But if you're being called to be a member of the Discalced Carmelite family, you are being called to give yourself in some way.

Now there may be reasons, we all recognize, there may be reasons why people cannot do certain things, but being too humble is not one of them. "Oh, I'm not worthy!" Who cares? We all know you're not worthy, but you can go ahead and do it! It's not you that needs to do it, it's the community that needs you to do it. OK? Sometimes there are people who want to do it who are really "not worthy": "I should be the Formation Director, because I know better than what she's doing." "I should be the president because I've been the president for the last 15 years and should still be the president." No, there are reasons for which people ought to and reasons for which people ought not to do certain things in the community. But if this is a question of someone who has come to the order for reasons that are not valid and has been formed with a formation that has not challenged those reasons and has remained, they're not going to do it because they don't want to do it. And you're not going to be able to change them.

What you have to do is be sure in your discernment and formation of members that you don't repeat that in new people that are coming. Remember not everybody needs to be here. St. Teresa knew that. St. Teresa, if you specially read in the letters, sent many people home who thought they knew everything what it meant to be about being a Carmelite. She sent them home. She didn't need them in her communities.

Q: What does a council member do who is accused falsely of several things in front of other members of the community and this accuser is the president? A one-way conversation is done by president who refuses to talk privately with the council member and who then takes it to the council for a possible solution and is told by another council member it does not belong in the council. But the president agrees to see the spiritual director but it is not solved. Council member has tried to help president ever since.... What is the solution?

A: Now I want to get this straight.. .in parentheses it says at a one-day retreat. So at a one-day retreat the president accuses a council member falsely (it doesn't say what accused of) of several things and it's in front of other members. A one-way conversation is done by president who refuses to talk privately with the council member. The council member then takes it to the council for possible action and is told by another council member.... This council does not know what it means to be a council. There is something that is lacking altogether in the council's understanding of what it means to be a council. There is something that is lacking in understanding by the president as to what it means to be president of the community and of the council. There's something missing altogether. So that is there's no ability to have communication among the members of the council, the community's at a great disservice. The community's suffering more than the council member who suffers this, because there is a lack of leadership that looks to trying to resolve issues.

First of all, to accuse anybody of anything without having first accused them only alone, then there's something missing in that community. The solution is to have a new election. That's the only solution I could think of. If something is in such disarray as to have this kind of a situation, it needs to be rearrayed. It needs to be redone. To me that's the only solution because there are already people who will not speak to each other.

Q: Are the O.C.D.s and the O.Carms getting closer to unity?

A: No. We both serve Christ (underline, underline!) in different ways. Yes, but we both serve Christ differently. We are two different orders. You could say are the O.C.D.s and the Dominicans getting closer together? Are the O.C.D.s and the Franciscans getting closer together? We have the same fount, but it has produced different fruit. We have the same fount in having St. Albert.

Father Pat [O.Carm.] had to leave. I don't see him anymore, but I am sure that he would say the exact same thing. Yesterday he was talking about he's an O.Carm because he thought he was going to be O.C.D. and then found out there was a difference. Didn't stop him ... he didn't say, "Oh my goodness, I have go become an O.C.D.!" But he said God has us exactly where God wants us to be. I've been involved both as provincial, when I was provincial in my province —it's when the five provinces (Father Gerald was provincial at that time. He's still provincial, for goodness' sake). It seems to me like 16 or 17 or 27 years ago or whenever it was that we established the Carmelite Institute, an institute that's sponsored by the five provinces, three O.C.D. and two O.Carm provinces. We have many things in common. The one thing we do not have in common is the charism, that identifies, distinguishes us.

So, yes, we have many things in common. We share many things in common, but not that which most identifies us in the way in which we are Carmelites. Father Pat answered this yesterday in many ways by talking about how we very much look to St. Teresa, St. John of the Cross. That they look to Albert of Jerusalem, the Rule and the figure of Elijah. One of my professors in the courses I had in Spain said, "When I listen to Elijah, it is the voice of Teresa that tells me what he says." And so it is Teresa who very much identifies for us, what is in this charism that we have together in common. And she explains it in a way, differently, than the explanation that the members of the Ancient Observance may understand things. Yes, we listen to Elijah. We listen to the Rule of St. Albert. But it is the voice of our mother, St. Teresa, that tells us what it means.

Q: Is there a confession guide book for people who go to confession weekly or every two weeks?

A: You might ask the person who's selling the books. There is not one official… I've seen in the missals before Vatican II there was always a guide for confessions in front of missals… different kinds of missals. I'm sure there still are. I'm positive there still are. But there's not one that I would say is Carmelite. Unless there are Carmelite sins...

Q: Is attendance at meetings required by the Constitutions? I have been told that it is strongly recommended but that only Morning Prayer and Evening Prayer and mental prayer are required.

A: No. 1: Nobody has to be here to follow Carmelite spirituality, correct? Can you legislate common sense? You cannot legislate common sense. "Is attendance at meetings required?" is a different question than the question, "Is attendance at meetings required by the Constitutions?" Is it required by the Constitutions? No. Therefore nobody has to go to meetings. Does it say some place in the Constitutions, "You must attend meetings"? No, it does not say that you must attend meetings. Therefore you have your answer if you want to just go up and say, "I can be a Carmelite all by myself." You will have missed everything that the spirituality says. You will have missed the entire spirit of the Rule of St. Albert and the spirit of the Constitutions. But go ahead. Live in your fantasy world!

Meetings are indispensable for keeping ourselves on the right track in regards to what it means to be a Carmelite. They're indispensable for checking ourselves, for not going off on our own tangent, for not thinking, "I know and they don't," for not being arrogant, for not being elitist —"They just aren't where I am. I'm in a place different than they are." Not that you might have anything to contribute to them if you're so special!

You don't go to meeting to get. If you go to meetings to get only, go away! You go to meetings to give as well. And if you have nothing to give, poor you! No matter how much you think you have, if you have nothing to give to your community, you're really very poor. Meetings are not required by the Constitutions. That's the answer to the question. But meetings are indispensable, I believe.

Can you imagine —who's the Carmelite nun who lives outside of community? Carmelite friars who live outside; we have Carmelite friars who live outside of community. Generally speaking they're a little different! Generally speaking they're just a little different. I'm a little bit struck by this sentence: "I have been told that it is strongly recommended but that only Morning Prayer and Evening Prayer and mental prayer are required." How minimalist are you, if you think you only do what is required? It's like the man in the Gospel who goes up to Jesus and says, "I've done all those things. What's required to get into heaven?" He comes up with the minimal. What's required to get into heaven? Jesus says do this this and this and don't do that. Then he says, "I've done all these."

"Oh, Oh," says Jesus, "you want something more?"
"Yes, I want something more."
And then who was the one? Jesus was sad.

Now, attendance at meetings is indispensable, but it's not required. There are many reasons for missing meetings: sickness, work, family obligations that are really more important. I have often said that when you get to the throne of judgment, God is going to ask you first about your family and then he's going to ask you, maybe, about being a Carmelite. And when I get to the throne of heaven, he's going to ask me about my Carmelite obligations because I don't have family. I sure don't work!

With regard to what your obligations are, sure there are things, because of family and come to you because of work, that interfere with your responsibility to attend meetings. But it is responsible to attend meetings. The longer you do not attend meetings, the more difficult it is for you to stay in the middle ^ course.This is why the Mother who was here yesterday, the prioress of the Carmel, and we friars, we live in community and this is why you have to make community in order to guarantee that Carmelite life is taking place for you as individuals. OK?

--Fr. Aloysius Deeney ocd, genrl. delg. ocds

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