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Superiors and bursars should be careful to provide from the common purse for the genuine and reasonable needs of the brothers so that private life may be completely excluded.
Superiors and bursars should be careful to provide from the common purse for the genuine and reasonable needs of the brothers so that private life may be completely excluded.
Since so many people are compelled by poverty to work hard for a modest living, our brothers must give an effective collective witness by publicly working hard in the apostolate, by living frugally on what is often an uncertain income and by sharing it gladly with the more indigent.
Saint Dominic and his brothers imitated the apostles who, without gold, silver or money, proclaimed the kingdom of God. Conscious of the demands of the apostolate of their time, they decided not to have any possessions, neither income nor money, but to beg their daily bread while preaching the
gospel. This was the apostolic poverty at the beginning of the Order, the spirit of which should animate us, in forms adapted to different times and places.
All the brothers, particularly superiors, moved by a sense of brotherly communion, should with the greatest of charity help those of us who experience difficulties in the matter of chastity. They will do so by acts of genuine kindness, prayer, advice and whatever else that may seem useful.
The brothers who promise chastity ‘for the sake of the kingdom of heaven’ follow in the footsteps of Saint Dominic who for the love of God preserved unblemished virginity throughout his life. Dominic was so much on fire with zeal for souls that ‘he received all in a broad embrace of charity and since he loved them all he was loved by all in return, spending himself fully in the service of his neighbour and with compassion for the afflicted.’1