In the
first chapter of the exhortation, the late Holy Father reflects on “The Origins
of the Consecrated Life in the Mystery of Christ and of the Trinity.” He first
notes the unique and sacred connection that consecrated religious have with the
Transfiguration:
All
are equally called to follow Christ, to discover in him the ultimate
meaning of their lives.... But those who are called to the consecrated life
have a special experience of the light
which shines forth from the Incarnate Word. For the profession of the
evangelical counsels makes them a kind of
sign and prophetic statement for the community of the brethren and for the
world.
Just like the Apostles who were present on Mount
Tabor, consecrated religious share in a “special grace of intimacy,” which
makes possible the demands of total self-giving and shapes them as tangible
signs of God’s divine love.
The source of this grace lies in the Holy Trinity.
As St. John Paul II says, “they are in fact an expression of the love of the
Son for the Father in the unity of the Holy Spirit.” The chastity of
consecrated religious reflects the infinite love between the three Divine
Persons. Poverty according to the example of Christ is “an expression of that total gift of self which the three
Divine Persons make to one another.” And obedience reflects the harmony between
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.