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Religious Life Conference Draws Record Crowds
An
international audience of religious of all ages came to hear the Marist priest
from New Zealand who is currently in Britain to deliver the Martin D’Arcy
Lectures at Oxford University on the theme: Healthcare in Chaos: Models in
Conflict? His inspirational talks on religious life were received with
great enthusiasm by all who attended the day.
"Many
religious were disappointed that they couldn’t get to the day", said
Sister Gemma Simmonds CJ, director of the Institute, "so we have taped the
lectures in order to offer them as a set of audio-CDs for discussion among
communities further afield. We were delighted to welcome members from the
Conference of Religious of Ireland and Vocations Ireland who had flown over
specially for the day. Participants remarked on the wealth of pastoral
experience that was in the room, spanning many decades of ministry in all five
continents of the world. We had people there ranging from candidates
still discerning their vocation to golden jubilarians - there is still a great
deal of energy around in religious life in Britain."
Sponsored by the Conference of Religious of England and Wales and Heythrop
College, the mission of the RLI is to foster a theological vision of Christian
religious life through study and research. It offers an accredited course
of study in the theology of religious life at Heythrop and seeks to foster a
new generation of writers and experts to help religious look beyond the
post-conciliar agenda. By generating good materials for study and
reflection and making them widely available through a variety of media it aims
to develop a renewed appreciation of the place of the consecrated life within
the Church.
Dr Gerald A Arbuckle has written extensively on the refounding of
religious life in books such as Out of Chaos: Refounding Religious
Congregations (1988), Refounding the Church: Dissent for Leadership (1993),
From Chaos to Mission: Refounding Religious Life Formation (1995). His most
recent book is Culture, Inculturation, and Theologians: A Postmodern Critique
(Liturgical Press, 2010).
Independent Catholic News

