| Spiritual
Commitment
The Order of Malta has been a religious Order since
1113, the year it was recognised by Pope Paschal II. As a religious
Order, it is linked to the Holy See, but at the same time it is
independent as a sovereign subject of international law.
In this respect the religious character of the Order coexists with
its full sovereignty. The Grand Master is at the same time head
of a sovereign State and head of a religious Order. In this second
capacity the Holy Roman Church gives him the rank of Cardinal.
The Order of Malta is a lay religious Order according to Canon Law,
where some of its members are religious - they have professed the
three vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience - and others have
taken a special vow of obedience, while the great majority of the
knights and dames are lay members. The Grand Master of the Order
is elected from among the Professed Knights of Perpetual Vows.
The eight-pointed Cross which symbolises the Order represents the
eight Beatitudes and is thus a visual memento of its spirituality.
According
to the Constitutional Charter, members of the Order are required
to maintain exemplary Christian behaviour in their private and public
life, contributing to the maintenance of the Order's traditions.
According to Constitutional Charter rules, the Pope appoints a Cardinal
as his representative to the Order, the Cardinalis Patronus, whose
duty it is to promote the spiritual interests of the Order and of
its members and to maintain relations with the Holy See.
The Pope also appoints the Prelate of the Order from the three candidates
proposed by the Grand Master. The Prelate is the ecclesiastic superior
of the Order's clergy.
The Order remains
true to its inspiring principles: defence of the Faith and service
to the suffering. Its members share the same vocation and strive
together for solidarity, justice and peace, based on the teaching
of the Gospels and in the closest communion with the Holy See. They
are involved in active and dynamic charity supported by prayer.
No Knight or Dame is such by privilege of birth or merits acquired,
but for having answered to the call to be where there is a material
or moral need, where there is suffering.
Wherever they
settled, the Knights Hospitallers always established first a Hospital
and Hospice and then, if they needed to, built defence fortifications.
What does being a Hospitaller mean in the Third Millennium? It means
dedicating oneself to easing suffering and to bringing the balm
of Christian charity to the sick, anywhere in the world, not only
in hospitals but also in private homes and nursing homes in the
shantytowns of destitute populations. The Order does not only dedicate
itself to the sick, but to the socially isolated, the victims of
persecution and the refugees of any race and religious faith as
well.
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