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institute of consecrated life : ウィキペディア英語版
institute of consecrated life
Institutes of consecrated life are canonically erected institutes in the Roman Catholic Church whose members profess the evangelical counsels of chastity, poverty, and obedience by vows or other sacred bonds.〔(Code of Canon Law, canon 573 )〕 They are defined in the Code of Canon Law under canons 573–730.
The more numerous form of these are religious institutes, which are characterized by the public profession of vows, life in common as brothers or sisters, and separation from the world.〔(Code of Canon Law, canon 709 )〕 They are defined in the Code of Canon Law under canons 607–709. The other form is that of secular institutes, in which the members live in the world, and work for the sanctification of the world from within.〔(Code of Canon Law, canon 710 )〕
Institutes of consecrated life need the written approval of a bishop to operate within his diocese, and a diocesan Bishop can erect an institute of consecrated life in his own territory, after consulting the Apostolic See.〔Code of Canon Law, canons (312, ) (609–612, ) (679, ) (715 )〕
The Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life has ecclesial oversight of institutes of consecrated life.
== Terms ==

Some canonical terms associated with consecrated life are frequently misused in common speech.
* Institutes of consecrated life are canonically erected by competent church authority to enable men or women who publicly profess the evangelical counsels by religious vows or other sacred bonds, "through the charity to which these counsels lead to be joined to the Church and its mystery in a special way" (cf. (canon 573 §2 of the Code of Canon Law) ), without this making them members of the Church hierarchy.
* Although the state of consecrated life is neither clerical nor lay, institutes of consecrated life are clerical if, with recognition from the Church, they are directed by clerics and exercise sacred orders, and they are lay if recognized by the Church as not exercising sacred orders.〔(Code of Canon Law, canon 588 )〕 For instance, the Order of Friars Preachers (O.P.) is a clerical institute of consecrated life, and the Sisters of Charity a lay institute of consecrated life.
* A religious institute is an institute of consecrated life whose members take public vows, lead a life in common and are in some way separated from the world.〔(Code of Canon Law, canon 607 )〕 A secular institute is an institute of consecrated life whose members living in the world, striving for the perfection of charity and seeking to help to sanctify the world, especially from within.〔(Code of Canon Law, canon 710 )〕 The current Code of Canon Law has not maintained the distinction that the earlier Code (1917) made between orders (religious institutes in which the members took solemn vows) and congregations (those in which simple vows were taken).〔(1917 Code of Canon Law, canon 488 )〕
* A monk (Greek: ''monachos'', Latin: ''monachus'') is a person that leads the "monastic life" in a "monastery". Nowadays it tends to be wrongly assumed that it signifies someone living in community. From early Church times there has been a lively discussion of the meaning of this term (Greek: ''monos'' alone), namely whether it denotes someone living alone/away from the rest of society, or someone celibate/focused on God alone. St Benedict understood it as meaning the latter, namely a celibate dedicated to God, as becomes clear from his consideration of a hermit to be a kind of monk (Rule of St Benedict, ch. 1).
* A monastery (Greek: ''monasterion'') is a place where a monk lives and works, and may be home to any number of monks, one or many. Often a monastery of one is, however, called a "hermitage", and the person living there, a "hermit". "Convent" is the generic term for the community house of other religious, male or female. "Friary", "priory" and the like are other terms in use.
* The term "religious" (as in, "he/she is a religious") means a member of a religious institute, a person in religious vows.
* A friar is a male member of a mendicant order, principally, the religious families of Franciscans, Dominicans and Carmelites.
* Priests in vows retain their usual title of "Father", and "Reverend Father". With a few exceptions, all men in vows who are not priests and would therefore not be addressed as "Father" are addressed as "Brother". That is to say, all monks are brothers, but not all brothers are "fathers".
* Women religious are addressed as "Sister". The 1917 Code of Canon Law reserved the term "nun" (Latin: ''monialis'') for women religious who took solemn vows or who, while being allowed in some places to take simple vows, belonged to institutes whose vows were normally solemn.〔(Code of Canon Law of 1917, canon 488 )〕 It used the word "sister" (Latin: ''soror'') exclusively for members of institutes for women that it classified as "congregations"; and for "nuns" and "sisters" jointly it used the Latin word ''religiosae'' (women religious). The current Code of Canon Law has dropped those distinctions. Some women superiors are properly addressed as "Mother" or "Reverend Mother". Benedictines have traditionally used the form of address "Dom" for men and "Dame" for solemnly professed nuns.

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