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- From: mjsmith@cac.washington.edu (Martha Smith )
- Subject: Re: Re: lay associates to holy orders
- Message-ID: <1992Dec22.223209.6918@u.washington.edu>
- Sender: news@u.washington.edu (USENET News System)
- Organization: UW Computing
- References: <CATHOLIC%92122215273237@AUVM.AMERICAN.EDU>
- Date: Tue, 22 Dec 1992 22:32:09 GMT
- Lines: 41
-
- In article <CATHOLIC%92122215273237@AUVM.AMERICAN.EDU>, Jim McIntosh <JIM@AMERICAN.EDU> writes:
- |> On Mon, 14 Dec 1992 18:30:18 GMT Martha Smith said:
- |> >The Sisters of the Holy Family (Bay area) have a program of lay
- |> >associates (both genders) who go through a year's formation (phone
- |> >calls/ weekends etc) and then make commitments (for a year at a time, I
- |> >believe) to religious service. During that year the associates maintain
- |> >certain ties to the community of professed sisters. It is an interesting
- |> >blend of lay and religious life - very appropriate to our time, I
- |> >believe. Does anyone know of other similar programs?
- |>
- |> Well, there's the Secular Franciscan Order -- a lay religious order. The
- |> SFO is both a canonically recognized religious order, with a rule of life
- |> approved by the Pope, and at the same time it is a religious order
- |> composed of lay men and women. We are people who want to live the Gospels
- |> in the way of St. Francis of Assisi, and who are called to live in the
- |> world as lay people. We believe that Francis's total acceptance of the
- |> Gospel Life is a message of importance to today's world.
- |>
- Thank you for your response. I am familar with Third Orders (I attend a
- Domican parish). The primary difference between Third Orders and the lay
- associates of the Sisters of the Holy Family is that the associates are in
- effect temporary members of the order rather than a separate entity and that
- one's committment to a year of service is directly related to the goals of
- the order. In effect, one pledges a part of one's time to doing the same work
- that the professed sisters do. For lack of a bettern analogy I would say that
- the associates are to professed sisters as permanent deacons are to priests.
- The associates differ from "volunteers" in that a year's formation is required
- of them prior to their making their commitment.
-
- I believe that there is a serious need in the Church to provide spiritual
- training and support to laity. I am the coordinator of lay liturgical
- ministers for my parish and as such feel a need for education, community and
- support since I am to provide those to the ministers I coordinate - the
- priest sees his role as a chaplaincy. I firmly believe that in such a role
- the parishioners need to have as much confidence in my training and belief as
- they would have in a priest's. Which is not to say that my knowledge needs to
- be as broad as a priest's - I need some basic liturgical knowledge, some
- theology of the Eucharist and some basic biblical studies if I am supporting
- Eucharistic ministers, Readers and Presiders (for services in absence of a
- priest). Any idea how other dioceses/parishes are handling this problem?
-
-