The eve of our 2021 Jubilee Year saw one of the most unprecedented peacetime disruptions to the modern world as we know it, the Covid-19 crisis, providing a timely reminder of the precariousness of all things. This is of course a lesson that we have learnt repeatedly across the centuries of its existence: prosperity and properties have come and gone, security has been found and then lost, eager novices have joined us and old men have faded away. Nonetheless, the mission has endured and will endure from generation to generation: founded on the Dominican ethos, and formed by the Spirit to respond to the challenges of each age.
In the coming years, new moral and philosophical problems will surely arise, as the world grapples with the latest fruits of our fallen nature, be they in the areas of biosecurity, or digital identities, or ‘upgrading’ the human genome. And as always, the Dominicans will respond, with one eye on our intellectual heritage, and the other on the people we care for – committed to upholding human dignity, to caring for the vulnerable, and above all to preaching the gospel of Jesus Christ.