The whole of Constitution 1 enumerates the elements that constitute us:
The call of Jesus Christ, heard within the Church through people’s need for salvation, draws us together as Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate. Christ thus invites us to follow him and to share in his mission through word and work.
We are a clerical Congregation of pontifical right. We come together in apostolic communities of priests and Brothers, united to God by the vows of religion.
Cooperating with the Saviour and imitating his example, we commit ourselves principally to evangelizing the poor. (Constitution 1)
The highlighted section gives the legal description, according to the Church’s Canon Law, of the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate. From the beginning, Eugene started with a group of priests because all the ministries involved the priestly sacramental and preaching function – hence the “clerical Congregation.” A few years later, men responded to the call of Jesus Christ to participate in the religious missionary life but not as priests. Thus, the Oblate Brothers were born: participating fully in the Oblate mission but using their talents and gifts for evangelization rather than the sacramental priestly ministry.
Over a century later, lay men and women felt called to live the Mazenodian charism and began to do so, From 1982 onwards our Rule of Life acknowledged this in Rule 37a:
The charism of Saint Eugene de Mazenod is a gift of the Spirit to the Church, and it radiates throughout the world. Lay people recognize that they are called to share in the charism according to their state of life, and to live it in ways that vary according to milieu and cultures. They share in the charism in a spirit of communion and reciprocity amongst themselves and with the Oblates.
In order to live more intensely the mission of evangelization according to the Oblate charism, some lay people gather in associations.
Thus, the response and origin of the Oblate Charismatic Family