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Anglican religious order

Anglican religious orders are communities of men or women (or in some cases mixed communities of men and women) in the Anglican Communion who live under a common rule of life. The members of religious orders take vows which often include the traditional monastic vows of poverty, chastity and obedience, or the ancient vow of stability, or sometimes a modern interpretation of some or all of these vows. Members may be laity or clergy, but most commonly include a mixture of both. They lead a common life of work and prayer, sometimes on a single site, sometimes spread over multiple locations. Though many Anglicans are members of religious orders recognized by the Anglican Communion, others may be members of ecumenical Protestant or Old Catholic religious orders while maintaining their Anglican identity and parochial membership in Anglican churches.

Anglican novices in South Africa.

Titles edit

Members of religious communities may be known as monks or nuns, particularly in those communities which require their members to live permanently in one location; they may be known as friars or sisters, a term used particularly (though not exclusively) by religious orders whose members are more active in the wider community, often living in smaller groups. Amongst the friars and sisters the term mendicant is sometimes applied to orders whose members are geographically mobile, frequently moving between different small community houses. Brother and Sister are common forms of address across all the communities. The titles Father and Mother or Reverend Father and Reverend Mother are commonly applied to the leader of a community, or sometimes more generally to all members who have been ordained as priests. In the Benedictine tradition the formal titles Right Reverend and Very Reverend are sometimes applied to the Abbot (leader) and Prior (deputy leader) of the community.[a] Benedictine communities sometimes apply the titles Dom and Dame to professed male and female members, rather than Brother and Sister.

History edit

Overview edit

Religious orders were dissolved by King Henry VIII when he separated the Church of England from papal primacy. In 1626, Nicholas Ferrar, a protegé of William Laud (1573–1645), with his family established the Little Gidding community. Since there was no formal Rule (such as the Rule of Saint Benedict), no vows taken, and no enclosure, Little Gidding cannot be said to be a formal religious community, like a monastery, convent, or hermitage. The household had a routine according to high church principles and the Book of Common Prayer. Fiercely denounced by the Puritans and denounced as "Protestant Nunnery" and as an "Arminian heresy", Little Gidding was attacked in a 1641 pamphlet entitled "The Arminian Nunnery".[1] The fame of the Ferrars and the Little Gidding community spread and they attracted visitors. King Charles I visited three times, including on 2 May 1646 seeking refuge after the Cavalier defeat at the Battle of Naseby. The community ended when its last member died in 1657.

Although the Ferrar community remained a part of the Anglican ethos (Bishop Francis Turner composed a memoir of Nicholas Ferrar prior to his death in 1700),[2] not until the mid-nineteenth century with the Oxford Movement and the revival of Anglican religious orders did Little Gidding reach the consciousness of the average Anglican parishioner. Since that time, interest in the community has grown and not been limited to members of the Anglican Communion. According to ascetical theologian Martin Thornton, much of the appeal is due to Nicholas Ferrar and the Little Gidding community's exemplifying the lack of rigidity (representing the best Anglicanism's via media can offer) and "common-sense simplicity", coupled with "pastoral warmth", which are traceable to the origins of Christianity.[3]

Between 1841 and 1855, several religious orders for women were begun, among them the Community of St Mary the Virgin at Wantage and the Society of Saint Margaret at East Grinstead. Religious orders for men appeared later, beginning in 1866 with the Society of St. John the Evangelist or "Cowley Fathers". In North America, the founding of Anglican religious orders began in 1842 with the Nashotah Community for men in Wisconsin, followed in 1845 by the Sisterhood of the Holy Communion under Anne Ayres in New York.

In recent decades, religious orders have been remarkably grown in other parts of the Anglican Communion, most notably in Tanzania, South Africa, the Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, and Papua New Guinea. About 2,400 monks and nuns are currently in the Anglican communion, about 55% of whom are women and 45% of whom are men.[4]

Restoration edit

During the three centuries from dissolution to restoration some views expressed a desire for the restoration of the religious life within Anglicanism. In 1829 the poet Robert Southey, in his Colloquies (cxiii.), trusts that “thirty years hence this reproach also may be effaced, and England may have its Beguines and its Sisters of mercy. It is grievously in need of them.”

Practical efforts were made in the religious households of Nicholas Ferrar at Little Gidding, 1625, and of William Law at King's Cliffe, 1743; and under Charles II, says Fr. Bede[clarification needed] in his Autobiography, “about 12 Protestant ladies of gentle birth and considerable means” founded a short-lived convent, with William Sancroft, then Dean of St Paul's, for director.

Southey's appeal had weight, and before the thirty years had passed, compassion for the needs of the destitute in great cities, and the impulse of a strong Church revival, aroused a body of laymen, among whom were included William Gladstone, Sir T. D. Acland, Mr A. J. Beresford-Hope, Lord Lyttelton and Lord John Manners (chairman), to exertions which restored sisterhoods to the Church of England. On 26 March 1845 the Park Village Community was set on foot in Regent's Park, London, to minister to the poor population of St Pancras. The “Rule” was compiled by Edward Pusey, who also gave spiritual supervision. In the Crimean War the superior and other sisters went out as nurses with Florence Nightingale. The community afterwards united with the Devonport Sisters, founded by Miss Sellon in 1849, and together they form what is known as Ascot Priory. The St Thomas's sisterhood at Oxford commenced in 1847; and the mother-superior of the Society of the Holy and Undivided Trinity Convent at Oxford, Marian Hughes, dedicated herself before witnesses to such a life as early as 1841.[5]

Activity edit

Four sisterhoods stand together as the largest: those of Clewer, Wantage, All Saints and East Grinstead; and the work of the first may stand as a specimen of that of others. The Community of St John Baptist at Clewer, near Windsor, arose in 1849 through the efforts of a Mrs Tennant and the vicar, afterwards warden of the society, the Revd T. T. Carter, to save "fallen women". Under the first superior, Harriet Monsell, the numbers steadily grew and at the beginning of the 20th century were over 200. Their services to society and the church include six houses for "fallen women", seven orphanages, nine elementary and high schools and colleges, five hospitals, mission work in 13 parishes and visiting in several “married quarters” of barracks. Many of these are notable institutions and their labours extend over a wide area; two of the settlements are in India and two in the United States. A list of 26 sisterhoods is given in the Official Year-Book of the C.E. (1900), to which may be added 10 institutions of deaconesses, many of whom live in community under a rule. In 1909 the number of women in religious orders in England was estimated as some 1300; whereas at the time of the dissolution under King Henry VIII there had only been 745.[6]

The Episcopal Church of Scotland has three sisterhoods and they are found also in Toronto, Saint John the Divine; Brisbane, Sacred Advent. The Year-Book (1911) of the Episcopal Church of America mentions 18 American sisterhoods and seven deaconess homes and training colleges.

Practically all Anglican sisterhoods originated in works of mercy and this largely accounts for the rapidity with which they have won their way to the good will and confidence of the Church. Their number is believed to exceed 3,000, and the demand for their services is greater than the supply. Bishops are often their visitors, and Church Congresses, Convocation and Lambeth Conferences have given them encouragement and regulation. This change in sympathy, again, has gained a hearing from modern historians, who tend more and more to discredit the wholesale defamation of the dissolution period.

This charitable activity, however, distinguishes the modern sister from the nuns of primitive and medieval times, who were cloistered and contemplative, and left external works to deaconesses, or to laywomen of a third order, or to the freer societies like the Beguines. St Vincent de Paul is considered to have begun the new era with his institution of Sisters of Charity in 1634 . Another modern feature is the fuller recognition of family ties: Rule 29 of the Clewer sisters directs that the sisters shall have free intercourse with relations, who may visit them at any time. But in most essential respects modern sisterhoods follow the ancient traditions. They devote themselves to the celibate life, have property in common, and observe a common rule of prayer, fellowship and work. Government is by a sister superior, assisted by various officers. The warden and chaplain are clergy, and the visitor is commonly a bishop.

Types of orders and communities edit

Whilst there is no single central authority for all religious orders, and many member churches of the Anglican Communion have their own internal structures for recognizing and regulating religious orders, some central functions are performed by the Anglican Religious Communities department at Church House, Westminster, the headquarters of the Church of England, Church Commissioners, General Synod, Archbishops' Council, and National Society. This department publishes the bi-annual Anglican Religious Life, a world directory of religious orders, and also maintains an official Anglican Communion website for religious orders. Anglican Religious Life defines four categories of community.[7]

Traditional Celibate Religious Orders and Communities
Orders and communities in which members take a vow of celibacy (amongst other vows) and follow a common Rule of life. They may be enclosed and contemplative or open and engaged in apostolic works.
Dispersed Communities
These are orders or communities whose members, whilst taking vows (including celibacy), do not live together in community. In most cases the members are self-supporting and live alone, but follow the same Rule of life, and meet together frequently in assemblies often known as "chapter meetings". In some cases some members may share a common life in very small groups of two or three.
Acknowledged Communities
These communities live a traditional Christian life, including the taking of vows, but the traditional vows are adapted or changed. In many cases these communities admit both single and married persons as members, requiring celibacy on the part of those who are single, and unfailing commitment to their spouse on the part of married members. They also amend the vow of poverty, allowing personal possessions, but requiring high standards of tithing to the community and the wider church. These communities often have residential elements, but not full residential community life, as this would be incompatible with some elements of married family life.
Other Communities
This group contains communities which are ecumenical (including Anglicans) or that belong to non-Anglican churches which have entered into relationships of full communion with Anglican churches (particularly, but not only, certain Lutheran churches).

In the United States of America, there is a clear distinction between "orders" and "communities", since the Episcopal Church has its own two-fold definition of "religious orders" (equivalent to the first two groups above) and "Christian communities" (equivalent to the third group above).[b] The Anglican Religious Life directory affirms this, stating "This distinction in not used in other parts of the Anglican Communion where [the term] communities is also used for those who take traditional vows."[8]

Anglican orders and interdenominational orders edit

Some religious orders are unique to the Anglican Communion. Certain large orders, such as the Society of Saint Margaret or the Community of the Sisters of the Church, are widespread and follow a rule of life written especially for the community. Other communities follow one of a number of historic rules predating the ecclesial divisions of the Reformation era. These rules are followed by different orders which often have manifestations within different current Christian denominations, particularly (in most cases) Anglicanism, Roman Catholicism and Lutheranism and, in some cases, also Eastern Orthodoxy.

Augustinian orders edit

There are a number of Anglican communities of nuns following the Rule of St Augustine of Hippo. This rule has a particular focus on making all of one's thoughts and speech God-centred. There is no central Augustinian administration beyond the common rule.

Benedictine orders edit

The Benedictine order is active in all the Christian denominations mentioned above, including the Eastern Orthodox tradition. Within the Roman Catholic Church there is a central Benedictine Confederation (notwithstanding the autonomy of each abbey) and the Anglican Benedictine orders maintain close relations with this central organisation (although without actual membership). The rule has a particular emphasis on community life, hospitality for strangers and achieving a proper balance of work, prayer and recreation.

Carmelite orders edit

The Carmelite Rule has found more limited use in the Anglican Communion than some others. The Community of the Sisters of the Love of God in Oxford, England, are heavily influenced by Carmelite spirituality and follow elements of the Carmelite Rule, but their rule also has many other influences. The Episcopal Carmel of Saint Teresa in Maryland is a full expression of the Carmelite order and rule within Anglicanism, founded for that purpose with the support of the American House of Bishops. The sisters follow the Discalced Carmelite rule and therefore use the post-nominal initials OCD.

Cistercian orders edit

Although a number of cloistered Cistercian orders have been founded within Anglicanism, none has proved enduring. The longest Cistercian experiment was the community of Ewell Monastery (1966 to 2004). Some Anglican communities follow an adapted form of the Cistercian Rule and a single member of the former Ewell Monastery lived as a Cistercian solitary until 2022. Since 2010 there exists the Order of Anglican Cistercians who enjoy an ecumenical link with the Roman Catholic Cistercians.

Dominican orders edit

The Anglican Order of Preachers is a recognized "Christian Community" of the Episcopal Church in the United States and has spread to Canada, the United Kingdom and Europe, the Philippines, Australia and India. The friars and sisters live under a common rule of life and vows of simplicity, purity, and obedience. There are also Anglicans who are members of ecumenical and Old Catholic Dominican religious orders and priories.

The Order of Christ the Saviour is a dispersed Dominican Order within the Episcopal Church, and an "Associate Community" of the National Association of Episcopal Christian Communities.[9] [10] The Order is characterized by its unique blend of Thomistic scholarship and a dedicated focus on deliverance ministry in the Anglican tradition. The Order embraces the Rule of St. Augustine, guiding its members towards a life of prayer, community service, and frequent engagement with the sacraments. Membership in the Order is open to confirmed Anglican communicants in good standing and in communion with the See of Canterbury.[11]

Franciscan orders edit

A number of Anglican religious orders follow the Rule of St Francis of Assisi, although the Society of St. Francis is the largest and most widespread. The rule has a particular focus on poverty and identifying with the poor and the destitute as well as care of the environment and respect for all of creation.

Vincentian orders edit

The Vincentian Family of religious institutions founded by, or in the spirit of, Saint Vincent de Paul, is found within the Roman Catholic and Anglican traditions. In Anglicanism the main Vincentian Order for women is the Sisters of Charity, and the main order for men is the Company of Mission Priests. The rule has a particular emphasis on care for the poor and marginalised in society.

List of current orders edit

The following is a list of the religious orders in the Anglican Communion with their initials and locations:

Orders of men edit

  • Brotherhood of the Ascended Christ (BAC) India
  • Community of Our Lady & Saint John Alton Abbey (OSB) England
  • Community of the Resurrection (CR) England
  • Elmore Abbey (OSB) England
  • Little Brothers of Francis (LBF) Australia
  • Melanesian Brotherhood (MBH) Solomon Islands, Papua New Guinea, Vanuatu, the Philippines
  • Oratory of the Good Shepherd (OGS) England, Australia, United States, South Africa
  • Order of the Holy Cross (OHC) United States, Canada, South Africa
  • Order of St. Cuthbert (OSC) United States, Canada, Nigeria
  • "Order of Saint Francis (OSF)". United States, Canada.
  • Saint Gregory's Abbey (OSB) United States
  • Society of the Sacred Mission (SSM) England, South Africa, Australia
  • Society of Saint Francis (SSF) England, United States, Australia, New Zealand, Brazil, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands
  • Society of St. John the Evangelist (SSJE) England, United States
  • Society of St. Paul (SSP) United States

Orders of women edit

Mixed orders of men and women edit

List of other communities edit

In popular media edit

In her autobiographical series Call the Midwife, British author Jennifer Worth portrayed her time working as a district nurse and midwife in the East End of London in the late 1950s alongside the Community of St. John the Divine. In the books, and the BBC television drama series of the same name, the order is renamed the Sisters of St. Raymond Nonnatus.

The 1939 novel Black Narcissus by Rumer Godden is about a group of Anglican Nuns (the Order of the Servants of Mary) who persist in trying to establish a religious community in the Palace of Mopu in the Himalayas, Nepal, despite the sisters feeling sexual repression and enduring forbidden love. Both the 1947 film Black Narcissus and the 2020 miniseries of the same name were adaptations of the book.

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ See, for example, the titles stated at: at the Wayback Machine (archived April 30, 2012).
  2. ^ See Title III, Canon 24, sections 1 and 2 of the Canons of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America, also quoted at . communities.anglicancommunion.org. Archived from the original on 21 February 2015.
  1. ^ "The Arminian Nunnery".
  2. ^ Ferrar 1837.
  3. ^ Thornton 1963, p. 46-47, 116, 226.
  4. ^ Anon 2007, p. 24.
  5. ^ Liddon 1893, p. iii.
  6. ^ Kelway, Clifton (1933) The Story of the Catholic Revival. London: Cope & Fenwick; p. 125 (citing Dictionary of English Church History. 1912)
  7. ^ Dunstan 2011, pp. iii, iv, 19, 147, 151, & 171.
  8. ^ Dunstan 2011, p. 151.
  9. ^ "Communities". naecc. Retrieved 2024-02-08.
  10. ^ mmacdonald (2023-09-13). "New Anglo-Catholic Dominican Religious Community Founded in The Episcopal Church". Episcopal News Service. Retrieved 2024-02-08.
  11. ^ Saviour, Order of Christ the. "About Us". Order of Christ the Saviour. Retrieved 2024-02-08.
  12. ^ "A sisterhood in Christ, empowerment through education!". Community of the Holy Family (communityoftheholyfamily.org). Retrieved 2020-04-12.
  13. ^ Robins 1939.
  • Anon (2007). Anglican Religious Communities Yearbook 2008-2009. Norwich: Canterbury Press. ISBN 978-1853118142.
  • Dunstan, Peta (2011). Anglican Religious Life 2012-13. Norwich: Canterbury Press. ISBN 978-1848250895 – via Hymns Ancient & Modern.
  • Ferrar, Nicholas (1837). Turner, Francis; MacDonogh, The Revd Terence Michael (eds.). Brief memoirs of Nicholas Ferrar: founder of a Protestant religious establishment at Little Gidding, Huntingdonshire. London: Jas Nisbet.
  • Liddon, Henry Parry (1893). Life of Edward Bouverie Pusey. London: Longman, Green. p. 1.
  • Robins, Margaret W. (1939). Mother Cecile of Grahamstown, South Africa: A Record of a Great Educational Work. Gardner, Darton.
  • Thornton, Martin (1963). English spirituality: an outline of ascetical theology according to the English pastoral tradition. S.P.C.K. ISBN 9780281004270.

Further reading edit

  • Religious Communities in the American Episcopal Church and in the Anglican Church of Canada. Poor Clares of Reparation and Adoration. 1956 – via Holy Cross Press.
  • Magee, William Connor (1886). Anglican sisterhoods: their inestimable value in rescue work among fallen women. Torquay: Church Penitentiary Association.

External links edit

  • Historical documents on Anglican religious orders

anglican, religious, order, this, article, about, active, religious, orders, orders, which, have, closed, former, religious, orders, anglican, communion, communities, women, some, cases, mixed, communities, women, anglican, communion, live, under, common, rule. This article is about active religious orders For orders which have closed see Former religious orders in the Anglican Communion Anglican religious orders are communities of men or women or in some cases mixed communities of men and women in the Anglican Communion who live under a common rule of life The members of religious orders take vows which often include the traditional monastic vows of poverty chastity and obedience or the ancient vow of stability or sometimes a modern interpretation of some or all of these vows Members may be laity or clergy but most commonly include a mixture of both They lead a common life of work and prayer sometimes on a single site sometimes spread over multiple locations Though many Anglicans are members of religious orders recognized by the Anglican Communion others may be members of ecumenical Protestant or Old Catholic religious orders while maintaining their Anglican identity and parochial membership in Anglican churches Anglican novices in South Africa Contents 1 Titles 2 History 2 1 Overview 2 2 Restoration 2 3 Activity 3 Types of orders and communities 4 Anglican orders and interdenominational orders 4 1 Augustinian orders 4 2 Benedictine orders 4 3 Carmelite orders 4 4 Cistercian orders 4 5 Dominican orders 4 6 Franciscan orders 4 7 Vincentian orders 5 List of current orders 5 1 Orders of men 5 2 Orders of women 5 3 Mixed orders of men and women 6 List of other communities 7 In popular media 8 Gallery 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksTitles editMembers of religious communities may be known as monks or nuns particularly in those communities which require their members to live permanently in one location they may be known as friars or sisters a term used particularly though not exclusively by religious orders whose members are more active in the wider community often living in smaller groups Amongst the friars and sisters the term mendicant is sometimes applied to orders whose members are geographically mobile frequently moving between different small community houses Brother and Sister are common forms of address across all the communities The titles Father and Mother or Reverend Father and Reverend Mother are commonly applied to the leader of a community or sometimes more generally to all members who have been ordained as priests In the Benedictine tradition the formal titles Right Reverend and Very Reverend are sometimes applied to the Abbot leader and Prior deputy leader of the community a Benedictine communities sometimes apply the titles Dom and Dame to professed male and female members rather than Brother and Sister History editOverview edit Religious orders were dissolved by King Henry VIII when he separated the Church of England from papal primacy In 1626 Nicholas Ferrar a protege of William Laud 1573 1645 with his family established the Little Gidding community Since there was no formal Rule such as the Rule of Saint Benedict no vows taken and no enclosure Little Gidding cannot be said to be a formal religious community like a monastery convent or hermitage The household had a routine according to high church principles and the Book of Common Prayer Fiercely denounced by the Puritans and denounced as Protestant Nunnery and as an Arminian heresy Little Gidding was attacked in a 1641 pamphlet entitled The Arminian Nunnery 1 The fame of the Ferrars and the Little Gidding community spread and they attracted visitors King Charles I visited three times including on 2 May 1646 seeking refuge after the Cavalier defeat at the Battle of Naseby The community ended when its last member died in 1657 Although the Ferrar community remained a part of the Anglican ethos Bishop Francis Turner composed a memoir of Nicholas Ferrar prior to his death in 1700 2 not until the mid nineteenth century with the Oxford Movement and the revival of Anglican religious orders did Little Gidding reach the consciousness of the average Anglican parishioner Since that time interest in the community has grown and not been limited to members of the Anglican Communion According to ascetical theologian Martin Thornton much of the appeal is due to Nicholas Ferrar and the Little Gidding community s exemplifying the lack of rigidity representing the best Anglicanism s via media can offer and common sense simplicity coupled with pastoral warmth which are traceable to the origins of Christianity 3 Between 1841 and 1855 several religious orders for women were begun among them the Community of St Mary the Virgin at Wantage and the Society of Saint Margaret at East Grinstead Religious orders for men appeared later beginning in 1866 with the Society of St John the Evangelist or Cowley Fathers In North America the founding of Anglican religious orders began in 1842 with the Nashotah Community for men in Wisconsin followed in 1845 by the Sisterhood of the Holy Communion under Anne Ayres in New York In recent decades religious orders have been remarkably grown in other parts of the Anglican Communion most notably in Tanzania South Africa the Solomon Islands Vanuatu and Papua New Guinea About 2 400 monks and nuns are currently in the Anglican communion about 55 of whom are women and 45 of whom are men 4 Restoration edit During the three centuries from dissolution to restoration some views expressed a desire for the restoration of the religious life within Anglicanism In 1829 the poet Robert Southey in his Colloquies cxiii trusts that thirty years hence this reproach also may be effaced and England may have its Beguines and its Sisters of mercy It is grievously in need of them Practical efforts were made in the religious households of Nicholas Ferrar at Little Gidding 1625 and of William Law at King s Cliffe 1743 and under Charles II says Fr Bede clarification needed in his Autobiography about 12 Protestant ladies of gentle birth and considerable means founded a short lived convent with William Sancroft then Dean of St Paul s for director Southey s appeal had weight and before the thirty years had passed compassion for the needs of the destitute in great cities and the impulse of a strong Church revival aroused a body of laymen among whom were included William Gladstone Sir T D Acland Mr A J Beresford Hope Lord Lyttelton and Lord John Manners chairman to exertions which restored sisterhoods to the Church of England On 26 March 1845 the Park Village Community was set on foot in Regent s Park London to minister to the poor population of St Pancras The Rule was compiled by Edward Pusey who also gave spiritual supervision In the Crimean War the superior and other sisters went out as nurses with Florence Nightingale The community afterwards united with the Devonport Sisters founded by Miss Sellon in 1849 and together they form what is known as Ascot Priory The St Thomas s sisterhood at Oxford commenced in 1847 and the mother superior of the Society of the Holy and Undivided Trinity Convent at Oxford Marian Hughes dedicated herself before witnesses to such a life as early as 1841 5 Activity edit Four sisterhoods stand together as the largest those of Clewer Wantage All Saints and East Grinstead and the work of the first may stand as a specimen of that of others The Community of St John Baptist at Clewer near Windsor arose in 1849 through the efforts of a Mrs Tennant and the vicar afterwards warden of the society the Revd T T Carter to save fallen women Under the first superior Harriet Monsell the numbers steadily grew and at the beginning of the 20th century were over 200 Their services to society and the church include six houses for fallen women seven orphanages nine elementary and high schools and colleges five hospitals mission work in 13 parishes and visiting in several married quarters of barracks Many of these are notable institutions and their labours extend over a wide area two of the settlements are in India and two in the United States A list of 26 sisterhoods is given in the Official Year Book of the C E 1900 to which may be added 10 institutions of deaconesses many of whom live in community under a rule In 1909 the number of women in religious orders in England was estimated as some 1300 whereas at the time of the dissolution under King Henry VIII there had only been 745 6 The Episcopal Church of Scotland has three sisterhoods and they are found also in Toronto Saint John the Divine Brisbane Sacred Advent The Year Book 1911 of the Episcopal Church of America mentions 18 American sisterhoods and seven deaconess homes and training colleges Practically all Anglican sisterhoods originated in works of mercy and this largely accounts for the rapidity with which they have won their way to the good will and confidence of the Church Their number is believed to exceed 3 000 and the demand for their services is greater than the supply Bishops are often their visitors and Church Congresses Convocation and Lambeth Conferences have given them encouragement and regulation This change in sympathy again has gained a hearing from modern historians who tend more and more to discredit the wholesale defamation of the dissolution period This charitable activity however distinguishes the modern sister from the nuns of primitive and medieval times who were cloistered and contemplative and left external works to deaconesses or to laywomen of a third order or to the freer societies like the Beguines St Vincent de Paul is considered to have begun the new era with his institution of Sisters of Charity in 1634 Another modern feature is the fuller recognition of family ties Rule 29 of the Clewer sisters directs that the sisters shall have free intercourse with relations who may visit them at any time But in most essential respects modern sisterhoods follow the ancient traditions They devote themselves to the celibate life have property in common and observe a common rule of prayer fellowship and work Government is by a sister superior assisted by various officers The warden and chaplain are clergy and the visitor is commonly a bishop Types of orders and communities editWhilst there is no single central authority for all religious orders and many member churches of the Anglican Communion have their own internal structures for recognizing and regulating religious orders some central functions are performed by the Anglican Religious Communities department at Church House Westminster the headquarters of the Church of England Church Commissioners General Synod Archbishops Council and National Society This department publishes the bi annual Anglican Religious Life a world directory of religious orders and also maintains an official Anglican Communion website for religious orders Anglican Religious Life defines four categories of community 7 Traditional Celibate Religious Orders and Communities Orders and communities in which members take a vow of celibacy amongst other vows and follow a common Rule of life They may be enclosed and contemplative or open and engaged in apostolic works Dispersed Communities These are orders or communities whose members whilst taking vows including celibacy do not live together in community In most cases the members are self supporting and live alone but follow the same Rule of life and meet together frequently in assemblies often known as chapter meetings In some cases some members may share a common life in very small groups of two or three Acknowledged Communities These communities live a traditional Christian life including the taking of vows but the traditional vows are adapted or changed In many cases these communities admit both single and married persons as members requiring celibacy on the part of those who are single and unfailing commitment to their spouse on the part of married members They also amend the vow of poverty allowing personal possessions but requiring high standards of tithing to the community and the wider church These communities often have residential elements but not full residential community life as this would be incompatible with some elements of married family life Other Communities This group contains communities which are ecumenical including Anglicans or that belong to non Anglican churches which have entered into relationships of full communion with Anglican churches particularly but not only certain Lutheran churches In the United States of America there is a clear distinction between orders and communities since the Episcopal Church has its own two fold definition of religious orders equivalent to the first two groups above and Christian communities equivalent to the third group above b The Anglican Religious Life directory affirms this stating This distinction in not used in other parts of the Anglican Communion where the term communities is also used for those who take traditional vows 8 Anglican orders and interdenominational orders editSome religious orders are unique to the Anglican Communion Certain large orders such as the Society of Saint Margaret or the Community of the Sisters of the Church are widespread and follow a rule of life written especially for the community Other communities follow one of a number of historic rules predating the ecclesial divisions of the Reformation era These rules are followed by different orders which often have manifestations within different current Christian denominations particularly in most cases Anglicanism Roman Catholicism and Lutheranism and in some cases also Eastern Orthodoxy Augustinian orders edit Main article Augustinian nuns in the Anglican Communion There are a number of Anglican communities of nuns following the Rule of St Augustine of Hippo This rule has a particular focus on making all of one s thoughts and speech God centred There is no central Augustinian administration beyond the common rule Benedictine orders edit Main article Order of St Benedict Anglican The Benedictine order is active in all the Christian denominations mentioned above including the Eastern Orthodox tradition Within the Roman Catholic Church there is a central Benedictine Confederation notwithstanding the autonomy of each abbey and the Anglican Benedictine orders maintain close relations with this central organisation although without actual membership The rule has a particular emphasis on community life hospitality for strangers and achieving a proper balance of work prayer and recreation Carmelite orders edit The Carmelite Rule has found more limited use in the Anglican Communion than some others The Community of the Sisters of the Love of God in Oxford England are heavily influenced by Carmelite spirituality and follow elements of the Carmelite Rule but their rule also has many other influences The Episcopal Carmel of Saint Teresa in Maryland is a full expression of the Carmelite order and rule within Anglicanism founded for that purpose with the support of the American House of Bishops The sisters follow the Discalced Carmelite rule and therefore use the post nominal initials OCD Cistercian orders edit Main article Anglican Cistercians Although a number of cloistered Cistercian orders have been founded within Anglicanism none has proved enduring The longest Cistercian experiment was the community of Ewell Monastery 1966 to 2004 Some Anglican communities follow an adapted form of the Cistercian Rule and a single member of the former Ewell Monastery lived as a Cistercian solitary until 2022 Since 2010 there exists the Order of Anglican Cistercians who enjoy an ecumenical link with the Roman Catholic Cistercians Dominican orders edit The Anglican Order of Preachers is a recognized Christian Community of the Episcopal Church in the United States and has spread to Canada the United Kingdom and Europe the Philippines Australia and India The friars and sisters live under a common rule of life and vows of simplicity purity and obedience There are also Anglicans who are members of ecumenical and Old Catholic Dominican religious orders and priories The Order of Christ the Saviour is a dispersed Dominican Order within the Episcopal Church and an Associate Community of the National Association of Episcopal Christian Communities 9 10 The Order is characterized by its unique blend of Thomistic scholarship and a dedicated focus on deliverance ministry in the Anglican tradition The Order embraces the Rule of St Augustine guiding its members towards a life of prayer community service and frequent engagement with the sacraments Membership in the Order is open to confirmed Anglican communicants in good standing and in communion with the See of Canterbury 11 Franciscan orders edit Main article Franciscan orders in the Anglican Communion A number of Anglican religious orders follow the Rule of St Francis of Assisi although the Society of St Francis is the largest and most widespread The rule has a particular focus on poverty and identifying with the poor and the destitute as well as care of the environment and respect for all of creation Vincentian orders edit The Vincentian Family of religious institutions founded by or in the spirit of Saint Vincent de Paul is found within the Roman Catholic and Anglican traditions In Anglicanism the main Vincentian Order for women is the Sisters of Charity and the main order for men is the Company of Mission Priests The rule has a particular emphasis on care for the poor and marginalised in society List of current orders editThe following is a list of the religious orders in the Anglican Communion with their initials and locations Orders of men edit Brotherhood of the Ascended Christ BAC India Community of Our Lady amp Saint John Alton Abbey OSB England Community of the Resurrection CR England Elmore Abbey OSB England Little Brothers of Francis LBF Australia Melanesian Brotherhood MBH Solomon Islands Papua New Guinea Vanuatu the Philippines Oratory of the Good Shepherd OGS England Australia United States South Africa Order of the Holy Cross OHC United States Canada South Africa Order of St Cuthbert OSC United States Canada Nigeria Order of Saint Francis OSF United States Canada Saint Gregory s Abbey OSB United States Society of the Sacred Mission SSM England South Africa Australia Society of Saint Francis SSF England United States Australia New Zealand Brazil Papua New Guinea Solomon Islands Society of St John the Evangelist SSJE England United States Society of St Paul SSP United States Orders of women edit All Saints Sisters of the Poor ASSP England Benedictine Sisters of Bethany EBSB Cameroon Chama Cha Mariamu Mtakatifu Community of Saint Mary of Nazareth and Calvary CMM Tanzania Zambia Chita che Zita Rinoyera Community of the Holy Name CZR Zimbabwe Community of the Holy Family CHF United States 12 Christa Sevika Sangha Handmaids of Christ CSS Bangladesh Community of All Hallows CAH England Community of Christ the King CCK Australia Community of Jesus Compassion CJC South Africa Community of Nazareth CN Japan Community of St Andrew CSA England Community of St Clare OSC England Community of St Francis CSF England United States Community of St John Baptist CSJB England United States Community of St John the Divine CSJD England Community of St Laurence CSL England Community of St Mary CSM United States Malawi the Philippines Community of St Mary at the Cross OSB England Community of St Mary the Virgin CSMV England Community of St Peter CSPH Horbury England Community of the Blessed Lady Mary CBLM Zimbabwe Community of the Companions of Jesus the Good Shepherd CJGS England Community of the Franciscan Servants of Jesus amp Mary FSJM England Community of the Good Shepherd CGS Malaysia Community of the Holy Cross CHC England Community of the Holy Name Australia CHN Australia Community of the Holy Name CHN England Lesotho South Africa Community of the Holy Spirit CHS United States Community of the Sacred Name CSN Fiji New Zealand Tonga Community of the Sacred Passion CSP England Community of the Sisters of Melanesia CSM Solomon Islands Community of the Sisters of the Church CSC Canada England Solomon Islands Australia Community of the Sisters of the Love of God SLG England New Zealand Community of the Transfiguration CT United States Dominican Republic Congregation of the Sisters of the Visitation of our Lady CVL Papua New Guinea Daughters of St Francis DSF Korea Episcopal Carmel of Saint Teresa OCD United States Fikambanan ny Mpanompovavin l Jesoa Kristy Society of the Servants of Jesus Christ FMJK Madagascar Malling Abbey OSB England Order of St Anne OSA United States Order of St Anne at Bethany OSA United States Order of St Helena OSH United States Order of the Holy Paraclete OHP England Ghana Swaziland Sisterhood of St John the Divine SSJD Canada Sisterhood of the Holy Nativity SHN United States Sisters of Charity SC England United States Sisters of the Incarnation SI Australia Sisters of the Love of God SLG England Society of Our Lady of the Isles SOLI Scotland Society of St John the Divine SSJD Natal South Africa via worldanglican com Society of St Margaret SSM England United States Haiti Society of the Holy Cross SHC Korea Society of the Precious Blood SPB England South Africa Lesotho Society of the Sacred Advent SSA Australia Servants of the Sacred Cross SSC Canada Society of the Sacred Cross SSC Wales Society of the Sisters of Bethany SSB England Mixed orders of men and women edit Anglican Order of Preachers Dominicans OP Chita che Zvipo Zve Moto Community of the Gifts of the Holy Fire CZM Zimbabwe Christ Mission Anglican Benedictines OSB Community of Divine Love CDL California Community of the Glorious Ascension CGA England France Community of the Holy Spirit Monastery HSM Zimbabwe Community of the Holy Transfiguration CHT Zimbabwe Community of the Mother of Jesus CMJ Chicago Community of the Resurrection of our Lord CR Grahamstown South Africa via worldanglican com 13 Community of the Servants of the Will of God CSWG England Companions of Our Lady of Walsingham OLW United States Mucknell Abbey OSB England Order of Christ the Saviour OCS Dominicans Order of Julian of Norwich OJN United States Society of the Sacred Mission SSM England Lesotho Japan Australia South Africa Order of Saint Benedict OSB Camperdown NSW Australia Third Order of Saint Francis TSSF List of other communities editAnglican Order of Preachers Dominicans Brotherhood of Saint Gregory Community of Celebration Community of the Gospel Community of the Paraclete Community of St Barnabas and Cecelia South Australia Community of St Denys Companions of St Luke OSB Company of Mission Priests Congregation of the Companions of the Holy Saviour Little Sisters of Saint Clare Moana St Clare Diocese of Polynesia Fiji Order of Anglican Cistercians Order of the Ascension OA The Emmaus Community Victoria BC Canada Order of Christ the Saviour OCS Order of St Andrew Holywell Community Abergavenny Order of St Anthony the Great OPC Rivendell Community The Order of Mission TOM The Servants of the Sacred Cross Sisterhood of Saint Gregory Worker Brothers of the Holy Spirit Worker Sisters of the Holy SpiritIn popular media editIn her autobiographical series Call the Midwife British author Jennifer Worth portrayed her time working as a district nurse and midwife in the East End of London in the late 1950s alongside the Community of St John the Divine In the books and the BBC television drama series of the same name the order is renamed the Sisters of St Raymond Nonnatus The 1939 novel Black Narcissus by Rumer Godden is about a group of Anglican Nuns the Order of the Servants of Mary who persist in trying to establish a religious community in the Palace of Mopu in the Himalayas Nepal despite the sisters feeling sexual repression and enduring forbidden love Both the 1947 film Black Narcissus and the 2020 miniseries of the same name were adaptations of the book Gallery edit nbsp Community of Saint Mary nbsp Sisters of Bethany nbsp Community of Saint Francis nbsp Community of the Holy Name nbsp Community of the Transfiguration nbsp Order of Julian of Norwich nbsp Order of the Holy Paraclete nbsp Order of Saint Helena nbsp Anglican novices in South Africa nbsp Handmaids of Christ nbsp Community of the Resurrection nbsp Alton Abbey nbsp The Community of St John Baptist at Mendham NJSee also editAugustinian nuns in the Anglican Communion Franciscan orders in the Anglican Communion Order of St Benedict Anglican References edit See for example the titles stated at Alton Abbey website at the Wayback Machine archived April 30 2012 See Title III Canon 24 sections 1 and 2 of the Canons of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America also quoted at Anglican Communion religious communities communities anglicancommunion org Archived from the original on 21 February 2015 The Arminian Nunnery Ferrar 1837 Thornton 1963 p 46 47 116 226 Anon 2007 p 24 Liddon 1893 p iii Kelway Clifton 1933 The Story of the Catholic Revival London Cope amp Fenwick p 125 citing Dictionary of English Church History 1912 Dunstan 2011 pp iii iv 19 147 151 amp 171 Dunstan 2011 p 151 Communities naecc Retrieved 2024 02 08 mmacdonald 2023 09 13 New Anglo Catholic Dominican Religious Community Founded in The Episcopal Church Episcopal News Service Retrieved 2024 02 08 Saviour Order of Christ the About Us Order of Christ the Saviour Retrieved 2024 02 08 A sisterhood in Christ empowerment through education Community of the Holy Family communityoftheholyfamily org Retrieved 2020 04 12 Robins 1939 Anon 2007 Anglican Religious Communities Yearbook 2008 2009 Norwich Canterbury Press ISBN 978 1853118142 Dunstan Peta 2011 Anglican Religious Life 2012 13 Norwich Canterbury Press ISBN 978 1848250895 via Hymns Ancient amp Modern Ferrar Nicholas 1837 Turner Francis MacDonogh The Revd Terence Michael eds Brief memoirs of Nicholas Ferrar founder of a Protestant religious establishment at Little Gidding Huntingdonshire London Jas Nisbet Liddon Henry Parry 1893 Life of Edward Bouverie Pusey London Longman Green p 1 Robins Margaret W 1939 Mother Cecile of Grahamstown South Africa A Record of a Great Educational Work Gardner Darton Thornton Martin 1963 English spirituality an outline of ascetical theology according to the English pastoral tradition S P C K ISBN 9780281004270 Further reading editReligious Communities in the American Episcopal Church and in the Anglican Church of Canada Poor Clares of Reparation and Adoration 1956 via Holy Cross Press Magee William Connor 1886 Anglican sisterhoods their inestimable value in rescue work among fallen women Torquay Church Penitentiary Association External links editHistorical documents on Anglican religious orders Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anglican religious order amp oldid 1212241830, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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