What discernment was to Francis, community is to Leo
Jun 4, 2025
|Senior Correspondent
Pope Leo XIV (right)
celebrates the birthday of his friend Father Alejandro Moral (second from
right) during lunch with other friars at the St. Monica International College
adjoined to the Augustinian curial headquarters in Rome June 1, 2025. Also
present was Bishop Luis Marín de San Martín (left), undersecretary of the Synod
of Bishops. (Credit: Order of Saint Augustine Facebook page.)
ROME – Early on in Pope Francis’s papacy, it became clear
that “discernment” would be one of his buzzwords, and the Ignatian concept went
on to become a bedrock of his Magisterium and pastoral decision-making process.
Discernment is a loaded term for the Jesuits, carrying with
it a specific interpretation and certain rules for how to exercise it according
to Ignatian spirituality, as laid out by St. Ignatius in his famed Spiritual
Exercises.
This emphasis on discernment became so central to Francis’s
papacy, it was difficult to understand him and many aspects of his papacy
without having at least a basic knowledge about the Jesuit spin on it.
In much the same way, Pope Leo XIV – who like Francis, also
belongs to a religious order, the Augustinians – the Augustinian sense of
“community” is quickly becoming a defining aspect of Leo’s life and ministry.
Almost immediately after his election, Pope Francis had a
private meeting with the Father General of the Jesuit order, Spanish Father
Adolfo Nicolás, and he also made a visit to the Jesuit curial headquarters in
Rome, located a stone’s throw from the Vatican walls.
Likewise, Pope Leo XIV after his election May 8 made a
surprise visit to the Augustinian headquarters in Rome, just a few steps from
the Vatican, where he celebrated Mass and joined them for lunch, as he had done
almost daily as a cardinal.
He had a private May 16 audience with the Augustinian Prior
General, Spanish Father Alejandro Moral, whose 70th birthday celebratory lunch
he attended Sunday, June 1, again joining the Augustinian friars at the
Augustinian headquarters and St. Monica International College adjoined to it
for festivities.
As the Jesuits place a strong emphasis on the process of
discernment, the Augustinians emphasize a harmonious community life before all
else.
The Rule of St. Augustine, written around the year 400,
making it the oldest monastic rule in existence, outlines the essentials for religious
life in community as guided by the Gospel, rather than spelling out specific
instructions for details such as schedule, furniture arrangement or the kinds
of foods that can be consumed.
In a sense, Augustinian spirituality is almost entirely centered
on community life, and how to live it well.
The preface of St. Augustine’s Rule stresses the need to
place love of God and neighbor before all else, as based on Jesus’s
instructions in the Gospel.
In Chapter one, the Rule immediately states that for friars,
“The main purpose for your having come together is to live harmoniously in your
house, intent upon God, with one heart and one soul.”
Friars are called, among other things, to share what they
have with the rest of the community, to maintain a strong prayer life, and to
support one another in their spiritual journeys, striving to avoid internal
conflict and to apologize to one another when needed.
Community life is described by the Augustinians themselves
as “the axis” around which their religious life turns, living “harmoniously
together, united by a single soul and a single heart, seeking God together and
open to the service of the Church.”
The goal is to imitate the first community of apostles who
came together and shared all things in common while ministering to God’s
people, being “of one mind and heart on the way to God.”
It is becoming increasingly clear that this sense of
community and life in common is central to Pope Leo, who not only visited the
Augustinian community daily in Rome as cardinal, but he also often took
meetings there and has visited twice since his election a month ago, including
once to celebrate the birthday of his close friend, Moral.
During the pre-conclave general congregation meetings held
in the weeks before the electing cardinals entered the Sistine Chapel to cast
their votes for the next pontiff, two of the key words that routinely emerged
from those conversations were communion and unity.
In a deeply divided and polarized society, and Church, the
cardinals saw the need to seek a path of unity and communion, and they were
looking for a candidate whom they believed could help the Church bridge its
internal divides and lead faithful down a clear path toward unity.
It is perhaps no surprise, then, that an Augustinian was
elected, whose formation in a harmonious “life in common” could lay the
groundwork for unity that so many cardinals saw as of paramount importance for
the Church at this time.
Pope Francis in emphasizing discernment encouraged faithful
to find a path to God in any circumstance, even amid life’s most complex
situations and problems.
By stressing the importance of community, if not in words,
in actions, even subconsciously, Pope Leo is inviting faithful to walk this
path together, in harmony rather than division, and he is doing it with the
heart of an Augustinian.
https://cruxnow.com/vatican/2025/06/what-discernment-was-to-francis-community-is-to-leo

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