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Assumptionists

The Assumptionists, formally known as the Congregation of the Augustinians of the Assumption (Latin: Congregatio Augustinianorum ab Assumptione; abbreviated AA),[1] is a worldwide congregation of Catholic priests and brothers. It is active in many countries. The French branch played a major role in French political and social history in the 19th century.[2]

Assumptionists
Congregation of the Augustinians of the Assumption
Congregatio Augustinianorum ab Assumptione
AbbreviationAA
Formation1845 (179 years ago) (1845)
FounderEmmanuel d'Alzon
Founded atNimes, France
TypeClerical religious congregation of pontifical right (for men)
HeadquartersRome, Italy
Membership (2018)
940 members (529 priests)
Superior General
Ngoya Ya Tsihemba
AffiliationsRoman Catholic Church
Websiteassumptio.org

Founder edit

Born in Le Vigan on August 30, 1810, Emmanuel d'Alzon received his initial formation in the major seminary of Montpellier (1832–1833) which he completed in Rome. A student of Félicité de Lamennais, he broke with his former mentor but remained influenced by several of his ideas. He launched numerous pastoral initiatives in the diocese of Nîmes under successive bishops : Claude Petit Benoit de Chaffoy (1822–1835), Jean-François-Marie Cart (1837–1855), Claude-Henri Plantier (1855–1875), and François-Nicolas Besson (1875–1878). D'Alzon founded two congregations, one for men (the Assumptionists) and one for women (the Oblates of the Assumption).

D'Alzon resigned from his post as vicar general in 1878 after 43 years of service. With his first disciples he undertook bold apostolic goals: the foreign missions (Australia, eastern Europe), education, the press, and pilgrimages. He died on November 21, 1880, in Nîmes and was declared Venerable by Pope John Paul II in December 1991.

Assumptionists/Augustinians of the Assumption edit

The congregation had its origin in the College of the Assumption, established in Nîmes, France, in 1843, by d'Alzon, vicar-general of that diocese. Organized in 1847, the members took their public vows at Christmas of the next year. A second house was established in Paris, and they continued their work there. The congregation was formally approved by a Brief of 26 November 1864. The chief objects of the congregation are to combat the spirit of irreligion in Europe and the spread of schism in the East. To this end the Assumptionists have devoted themselves to the work of Catholic higher and secondary education, to the spread of truth by means of the Press, to the conduct of pilgrimages, and to missionary work in the East. In addition to their college at Nîmes they established Apostolic schools where poor students were educated for the priesthood without expense to themselves.[3]

In the 1870s, the Assumptionists established "La Bonne Presse" which issued periodicals, pamphlets, and books in great numbers and expanded into one of the largest Catholic publishing houses in the world, Bayard Presse. They founded one of the oldest and most influential daily newspapers in France, La Croix. In English-speaking countries its best known publication is Catholic Digest.

In 1873 these religious also began a series of large-scale pilgrimages both within France and to the Holy Land which developed into such current endeavors as the popular national pilgrimage to Lourdes every year on the occasion of the feast of the Assumption, gathering thousands of pilgrims.

Their activities at the time of the Dreyfus Case aroused controversy. The Assumptionists actively promoted the conspiracy theory that unnamed Jews were destroying French institutions, in particular the Army and the Catholic church, and oppressing the people. One of many examples of their unsourced anti-Semitic polemic can be taken from their widely-circulated daily newspaper, La Croix, for 2 February 1898:

Chaque semaine, les Juifs, qui emploient le fisc à cette triste besogne, se ruent sur les biens de gens désarmés; on vole, au nom de la secte, le pain des pauvres; ça et là, des misérables consentent à acheter à bas prix les immeubles sous la direction occulte du syndicat juif,[4]
(Each week, the Jews, who exploit tax law in this sorry task, seize the goods of defenceless people; in the name of their sect, the bread of the poor is stolen; here and there, wretched people agree to buy buildings at knockdown prices under the secret instruction of the Jewish conspiracy.)

No proof of these assertions is given and no Jewish person or organisation is identified. This overt hate campaign no doubt contributed to the subsequent laws which curtailed the activities of the Assumptionists in France.

When the Republican party came to power, it required religious orders to be reorganized and registered. Some organizations, including the Assumptionists, refused and went into exile instead. In 1900 the congregation was suppressed within French territory, this action being based on the charge that they were accumulating a fund to be used in a royalist movement to overthrow the Republic. Many priests went abroad; other remained in France as secular priests under the authority of local bishops.[5]

At the time of their "suppression" the Assumptionists maintained twenty Apostolic schools which were all closed. The congregation then took up the work in other quarters. Similar schools have been established in Italy, Belgium, England, and the United States. "La Bonne Presse" was purchased at the time of the suppression by Paul Feron-Vrau, a wealthy manufacturer of Lisle, and all its publications were continued without any change. Much of the good accomplished by the Assumptionists was effected through this medium. No popular Catholic paper had reached a degree of circulation equal to that of "La Croix". In Chile, they publish in Spanish "Echoes from the Sanctuary of Lourdes". In their journalistic work they were aided by the Oblate Sisters of the Assumption, an order established by d'Alzon to assist in their Oriental missions, but whose activities are not contained to that field. Until the suppression they directed the women's section in the publishing rooms of the "Christian Press" as well as the hospitals, orphan asylums, and schools.[3]

Among other works carried on by the Assumptionists in France prior to their suppression was that of the "Association of Our Lady of Salvation", a society devoted to prayer, almsgiving, and setting a good example for the reformation of the working class. This society was established in eighty dioceses, and it succeeded in drawing the higher classes of society more closely to the workingmen. It encouraged everywhere social prayer, and social and national expiation, and discouraged human respect, social apostasy, and isolation in piety. It raised funds to convey workmen, pilgrims, paupers, and sick poor to Lourdes to the number of a thousand each year; it was zealous in the cause of workmen's clubs, and of Catholic Schools, and was active in the movement in favour of the keeping of Sunday as a day of rest.[3]

Another field of missionary labour was found among the Newfoundland fishermen. Every year 12,000 or 15,000 fishermen left the coasts of France, Belgium, and Ireland, to go to the Banks of Newfoundland for codfish. The Assumptionists organized prominent catholic sailors into a committee and were encouraged to equip two hospital ships to aid the fishermen. The vessels were wrecked twice, but replaced.

In 1925, the Assumptionists absorbed the English branch of the Fathers of St. Edmund, also known as the Oblates of the Sacred Heart of Jesus and of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, founded in 1843 by Dom Muard.

On 11 November 1952 at the central prison of Sofia, Bulgaria three Assumptionist priests (Augustinians of the Assumption), Kamen Vitchev, Pavel Djidjov and Josaphat Chichov were executed by firing squad by the Communist regime. All three have since been beatified as martyrs for the faith.[6]

Present day edit

The current Rule of Life of the congregation draws its inspiration from that of Augustine of Hippo. This international congregation is present in nearly 30 countries throughout the world, with the most recent foundations being established in 2006 in the Philippines, Vietnam, and Togo. The congregation has long been involved in education, the press, ecumenism, pilgrimages, and the missions.

At the General Chapter of 2011, a French priest Benoit Griere, was elected on 11 May to succeed Father Richard Lamoureaux- who had served the maximum of two successive six-year terms-as the 10th superior general. The religious institute's new superior general, a physician, theologian, and ethicist, was born in 1958 in Chauny, France. He studied medicine in Reims, France, and simultaneously began his formation as a candidate for the Assumptionist priesthood in seminary, studying philosophy and sacred theology. He entered the Assumptionists in 1991 and was ordained to the priesthood in 1995. According to the 2012 Annuario Pontificio, the Augustinians of the Assumption number 882 religious, of whom 541 are priests, in 125 communities.

The Assumption family edit

There are thirteen religious congregations which, in one capacity or another, trace their roots either directly to the three major founding figures (Théodore Combalot, 1797–1873, Marie-Eugénie de Jésus Milleret de Brou, 1817–1898, and Emmanuel d'Alzon, 1810–1880) or indirectly under the inspiration. Members are present in over 60 countries throughout the world.

In addition to the Assumptionists, a number of other congregations belong to the larger Assumption Family: The Religious (Sisters) of the Assumption, the Oblates (Missionary Sisters) of the Assumption, the Little Sisters of the Assumption, the Orantes of the Assumption, the Sisters of St. Joan of Arc, the Brothers of the Assumption, the Little Sisters of the Presentation of Our Lady, the Missionary Sisters of the Assumption, and the Sisters of the Cross.

Original Assumptionist congregations edit

Of the six original congregations of the Assumption, five originated in France and are made up of men only .

The Religious Sisters of the Assumption edit

 
Marie Eugénie de Jésus Milleret de Brou

The Congregatiion of the Religious of the Assumption was founded in Paris (Seine), Férou Street, in 1839. The foundress, Mother Marie-Eugénie de Jésus (Marie-Eugénie Milleret de Brou), was born in Metz on August 25, 1817. After being received into the Church in 1836, she met Théodore Combalot in 1837. Under his inspiration, she founded with four other women, a religious congregation, after having trained with the Benedictines of the Blessed Sacrament in Paris and with the Visitation Sisters of Mt. St. Andrew (Isère).[7] At the age of 22, in 1839, she was elected superior of the new congregation. In 1841 d'Alzon became her spiritual guide. She made her final vows at Christmas 1844, and resigned as superior general in 1894. The mother-house was located in the Auteuil mansion from 1857 till their expulsion in 1900 when they moved to Val Notre-Dame in Belgium. The generalate is located in Paris.

  • Missionary Sisters of the Assumption

The Missionary Sisters of the Assumption (M.S.A.) were founded in 1849 in Grahamstown (South Africa) as a result of a split with the Religious of the Assumption. The original mother-house was located in Grahamstown, but was later transferred to Johannesburg.[citation needed] The first superior general was Mother Marie-Gertrude Henningsen (1822–1904). The current superior general is Sr Barbara Standing. There are approximately 70 religious in 10 communities.

Augustinians of the Assumption edit

The Augustinians of the Assumption, known as the Assumptionists (A.A.), founded by Emmanuel d'Alzon at Nîmes, France.

Assumption Oblate Sisters edit

The Oblates of the Assumption (O.A.) were founded in May 1865 in Rochebelle du Vigan (Gard) by d'Alzon and Marie Correnson, known in religion as Mother Emmanuel-Marie de la Compassion (1842–1900), as the women's branch of the Augustinians of the Assumption. From a middle class Nîmes family, Correnson was born in Paris on July 28, 1842. D'Alzon chose her to be the first superior general. The congregation focused on Christian unity.[8]

Little Sisters of the Assumption edit

Little Sisters of the Assumption L.S.A. were founded in Paris (Seine) in July 1865 by Etienne Pernet (1824–1899) and Antoinette Fage, known in the convent as Mother Marie de Jésus (1824–1883). The congregation, from its foundation, has been dedicated to the home care of the sick poor. They were first recognized in 1875 by Cardinal Guibert, the Archbishop of Paris, and by Rome in 1897 and 1901. The Sisters of Charity of the Assumption (S.C.A.) were founded as a result of a split with the Little Sisters of the Assumption in Italy in 1993. They are associated with the Comunione e Liberazione Movement.

The Orantes of the Assumption edit

The Orantes of the Assumption (Or. A.) were founded by François Picard (1831–1903) and Isabelle de Clermont-Tonnerre, known in religion as Mother Isabelle of Gethsemani.[9] It has remained a modest-sized congregation. In 1941 it incorporated the Sacramentine Sisters of Marseille, founded in 1639 by Antoine Le Quien.[citation needed]

In a booklet, entitled, "Origins of the Religious Families of the Assumption," Pierre Touveneraud (1926–1979), former general archivist of the congregation, summarized in 1972 the common patrimony of the six original branches of the Assumption which, while fully respecting their particular vocations, their autonomous governing structures, and their apostolic works, bears witness to their common history strengthened by spiritual friendship, apostolic support, and fraternal collaboration. Some of the traits they share are: an Augustinian spirituality, Christocentrism (special emphasis on the mystical Incarnation and the Kingdom of God), love of the Church and the centrality of the Eucharist, love of Mary, strong common life, common prayer, the role of study. He also points out some of the difficulties, tensions, trials and misunderstandings that occurred over the years among the various members of the Family.[citation needed]

There are other aspects as well which they share: the similarities of their rules of life, a missionary commitment, an insistence on certain human virtues (openness, simplicity, warmth), a balance of the three constitutive elements of religious life (prayer, community, and apostolate), emphasis on co-responsibility in governance, collaboration with the laity, and the importance of belonging to an international family.

Twentieth-century foundations edit

Other foundations of the Assumption Family took place in the 20th century and not all of them bear the name "Assumption" even if they owe their origin to an Assumptionist.

  • The Sisters of St. Joan of Arc (S.J.A.) were founded in 1914 in Worcester, Massachusetts (US) by Marie-Clément Staub and Sr. Jeanne du Sacre Coeur, born Célina Benoît. (1876–1936). The mother-house was established in Sillery, Québec in 1917.
  • The Servas Obreras Catequistas (S.O.C.) were founded in Argentina by Joseph-Marie Moreau (1897–1947) in 1934.
  • The Sisters of the Cross were founded in Athens in 1939. Their mother-house is located on Ipirou Street Agia Paraskevi. This congregation was founded by Elpide Iannis Stephanou (1896–1978).
  • The Brothers of the Assumption were founded in 1951 in Beni (Democratic Republic of the Congo) by Bishop Henri Piérard (1893–1975), as a lay diocesan institute for the diocese of Beni-Butembo. It has remained a small congregation.
  • The Little Sisters of the Presentation of Our Lady were founded in 1948 also by Bishop Piérard as a diocesan institute. Its mother-house is now located in Butembo, North Kivu (DRC).
  • The Little Missionaries of the Cross were founded in Bogotá in 1955. They later became and remain a secular institute with no particular link to the Assumptionists.

Especially since the 1970s, the various congregations of the Assumption Family have highlighted in a more visible way their common origins and their similarities of spirit and life. These efforts have led to greater exchanges and shared programs: inter-novitiates, assemblies, get-togethers of young members of the Assumption Family, colloquia, annual meetings of the general councils of the congregations, joint foundations, collaboration on a provincial level, and the joint preparation of two magazines (Assomption et ses oeuvres and Itinéraires Augustiniens).

Assumptionist spirituality edit

In 1993, a series of articles gathered under the title, The Spirit of Assumption according to Emmanuel d'Alzon described Assumptionist spirituality.

Augustinian edit

Augustinian scholar, Fulbert Cayré (1884–1971), who holds to an Augustinian definition of the charism: the Assumption was born of Augustinian inspiration as evidenced, among other things, by its name, its rule, the institute it founded (Les Etudes augustiniennes), the number of references to Augustine in the founder's writings (he once wrote that The City of God should be for the Assumption "a kind of second revelation"), and the many Assumptionist authors in the Augustinian tradition (Cayré, Edgar Bourque, Marcel Neusch, Goulven Madec, Ernest Fortin, George Folliet, Rémi Munsch, etc.).[citation needed]

Christocentrism edit

Athanase Sage (1896–1971), analyzed d'Alzon's writings comprehensively and edited the Écrits spirituels, a compendium of the basic writings of the founder. Sage focuses on the thought of the founder and using themes constitutive of his thinking, of his spiritual life, and his apostolic work: Kingdom, Mystical Incarnation, Christocentrism, the Augustinian tradition, and the influence of the French school of spirituality (Bérulle, Bossuet, Olier, etc.), which d'Alzon shared with Mother Marie Eugénie.[citation needed]

Trinitarian edit

Assumptionist systematic theologian, George Tavard (1922–2007), a Frenchman living in the United States, places the emphasis on the deeply Trinitarian inspiration of d'Alzon's writings, articulated around themes and actions which champion the rights of God.[citation needed]

References edit

  1. ^ "Congregation of the Augustinians of the Assumption (A.A.)". GCatholic. Retrieved 2021-12-12.
  2. ^ Judson Mather, The Assumptionist Response to Secularisation, 1870-1900." in Robert J. Bezucha, ed., Modern European Social History pp 59-89.
  3. ^ a b c Taaffe, Thomas. "Augustinians of the Assumption." The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol. 2. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1907. 28 August 2019  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  4. ^ "La Croix". 2 February 1898. p. 1. Retrieved 5 March 2022.
  5. ^ Harris, Ruth. "The Assumptionists and the Dreyfus affair." Past & Present (2007) 194#1 pp: 175-211. full article on JSTOR
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 2021-03-06. Retrieved 2019-08-29.
  7. ^ "Our History", Assumption Sisters
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on 2019-08-28. Retrieved 2019-08-28.
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 2021-03-03. Retrieved 2019-08-29.

Further reading edit

  • Mather, Judson Irving. "La Croix and the Assumptionist response to secularization in France, 1870-1900" PhD Dissertation. University of Michigan, 1971.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Augustinians of the Assumption - U.S. Region, North American Province

assumptionists, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding,. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Assumptionists news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2019 Learn how and when to remove this message The neutrality of this article is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met February 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message Learn how and when to remove this message The Assumptionists formally known as the Congregation of the Augustinians of the Assumption Latin Congregatio Augustinianorum ab Assumptione abbreviated AA 1 is a worldwide congregation of Catholic priests and brothers It is active in many countries The French branch played a major role in French political and social history in the 19th century 2 AssumptionistsCongregation of the Augustinians of the AssumptionCongregatio Augustinianorum ab AssumptioneEmmanuel d AlzonAbbreviationAAFormation1845 179 years ago 1845 FounderEmmanuel d AlzonFounded atNimes FranceTypeClerical religious congregation of pontifical right for men HeadquartersRome ItalyMembership 2018 940 members 529 priests Superior GeneralNgoya Ya TsihembaAffiliationsRoman Catholic ChurchWebsiteassumptio wbr org Contents 1 Founder 2 Assumptionists Augustinians of the Assumption 3 Present day 4 The Assumption family 4 1 Original Assumptionist congregations 4 1 1 The Religious Sisters of the Assumption 4 1 2 Augustinians of the Assumption 4 1 3 Assumption Oblate Sisters 4 1 4 Little Sisters of the Assumption 4 1 5 The Orantes of the Assumption 5 Twentieth century foundations 6 Assumptionist spirituality 6 1 Augustinian 6 2 Christocentrism 6 3 Trinitarian 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksFounder editMain article Emmanuel d Alzon Born in Le Vigan on August 30 1810 Emmanuel d Alzon received his initial formation in the major seminary of Montpellier 1832 1833 which he completed in Rome A student of Felicite de Lamennais he broke with his former mentor but remained influenced by several of his ideas He launched numerous pastoral initiatives in the diocese of Nimes under successive bishops Claude Petit Benoit de Chaffoy 1822 1835 Jean Francois Marie Cart 1837 1855 Claude Henri Plantier 1855 1875 and Francois Nicolas Besson 1875 1878 D Alzon founded two congregations one for men the Assumptionists and one for women the Oblates of the Assumption D Alzon resigned from his post as vicar general in 1878 after 43 years of service With his first disciples he undertook bold apostolic goals the foreign missions Australia eastern Europe education the press and pilgrimages He died on November 21 1880 in Nimes and was declared Venerable by Pope John Paul II in December 1991 Assumptionists Augustinians of the Assumption editThe congregation had its origin in the College of the Assumption established in Nimes France in 1843 by d Alzon vicar general of that diocese Organized in 1847 the members took their public vows at Christmas of the next year A second house was established in Paris and they continued their work there The congregation was formally approved by a Brief of 26 November 1864 The chief objects of the congregation are to combat the spirit of irreligion in Europe and the spread of schism in the East To this end the Assumptionists have devoted themselves to the work of Catholic higher and secondary education to the spread of truth by means of the Press to the conduct of pilgrimages and to missionary work in the East In addition to their college at Nimes they established Apostolic schools where poor students were educated for the priesthood without expense to themselves 3 In the 1870s the Assumptionists established La Bonne Presse which issued periodicals pamphlets and books in great numbers and expanded into one of the largest Catholic publishing houses in the world Bayard Presse They founded one of the oldest and most influential daily newspapers in France La Croix In English speaking countries its best known publication is Catholic Digest In 1873 these religious also began a series of large scale pilgrimages both within France and to the Holy Land which developed into such current endeavors as the popular national pilgrimage to Lourdes every year on the occasion of the feast of the Assumption gathering thousands of pilgrims Their activities at the time of the Dreyfus Case aroused controversy The Assumptionists actively promoted the conspiracy theory that unnamed Jews were destroying French institutions in particular the Army and the Catholic church and oppressing the people One of many examples of their unsourced anti Semitic polemic can be taken from their widely circulated daily newspaper La Croix for 2 February 1898 Chaque semaine les Juifs qui emploient le fisc a cette triste besogne se ruent sur les biens de gens desarmes on vole au nom de la secte le pain des pauvres ca et la des miserables consentent a acheter a bas prix les immeubles sous la direction occulte du syndicat juif 4 Each week the Jews who exploit tax law in this sorry task seize the goods of defenceless people in the name of their sect the bread of the poor is stolen here and there wretched people agree to buy buildings at knockdown prices under the secret instruction of the Jewish conspiracy No proof of these assertions is given and no Jewish person or organisation is identified This overt hate campaign no doubt contributed to the subsequent laws which curtailed the activities of the Assumptionists in France When the Republican party came to power it required religious orders to be reorganized and registered Some organizations including the Assumptionists refused and went into exile instead In 1900 the congregation was suppressed within French territory this action being based on the charge that they were accumulating a fund to be used in a royalist movement to overthrow the Republic Many priests went abroad other remained in France as secular priests under the authority of local bishops 5 At the time of their suppression the Assumptionists maintained twenty Apostolic schools which were all closed The congregation then took up the work in other quarters Similar schools have been established in Italy Belgium England and the United States La Bonne Presse was purchased at the time of the suppression by Paul Feron Vrau a wealthy manufacturer of Lisle and all its publications were continued without any change Much of the good accomplished by the Assumptionists was effected through this medium No popular Catholic paper had reached a degree of circulation equal to that of La Croix In Chile they publish in Spanish Echoes from the Sanctuary of Lourdes In their journalistic work they were aided by the Oblate Sisters of the Assumption an order established by d Alzon to assist in their Oriental missions but whose activities are not contained to that field Until the suppression they directed the women s section in the publishing rooms of the Christian Press as well as the hospitals orphan asylums and schools 3 Among other works carried on by the Assumptionists in France prior to their suppression was that of the Association of Our Lady of Salvation a society devoted to prayer almsgiving and setting a good example for the reformation of the working class This society was established in eighty dioceses and it succeeded in drawing the higher classes of society more closely to the workingmen It encouraged everywhere social prayer and social and national expiation and discouraged human respect social apostasy and isolation in piety It raised funds to convey workmen pilgrims paupers and sick poor to Lourdes to the number of a thousand each year it was zealous in the cause of workmen s clubs and of Catholic Schools and was active in the movement in favour of the keeping of Sunday as a day of rest 3 Another field of missionary labour was found among the Newfoundland fishermen Every year 12 000 or 15 000 fishermen left the coasts of France Belgium and Ireland to go to the Banks of Newfoundland for codfish The Assumptionists organized prominent catholic sailors into a committee and were encouraged to equip two hospital ships to aid the fishermen The vessels were wrecked twice but replaced In 1925 the Assumptionists absorbed the English branch of the Fathers of St Edmund also known as the Oblates of the Sacred Heart of Jesus and of the Immaculate Heart of Mary founded in 1843 by Dom Muard On 11 November 1952 at the central prison of Sofia Bulgaria three Assumptionist priests Augustinians of the Assumption Kamen Vitchev Pavel Djidjov and Josaphat Chichov were executed by firing squad by the Communist regime All three have since been beatified as martyrs for the faith 6 Present day editThe current Rule of Life of the congregation draws its inspiration from that of Augustine of Hippo This international congregation is present in nearly 30 countries throughout the world with the most recent foundations being established in 2006 in the Philippines Vietnam and Togo The congregation has long been involved in education the press ecumenism pilgrimages and the missions At the General Chapter of 2011 a French priest Benoit Griere was elected on 11 May to succeed Father Richard Lamoureaux who had served the maximum of two successive six year terms as the 10th superior general The religious institute s new superior general a physician theologian and ethicist was born in 1958 in Chauny France He studied medicine in Reims France and simultaneously began his formation as a candidate for the Assumptionist priesthood in seminary studying philosophy and sacred theology He entered the Assumptionists in 1991 and was ordained to the priesthood in 1995 According to the 2012 Annuario Pontificio the Augustinians of the Assumption number 882 religious of whom 541 are priests in 125 communities The Assumption family editThere are thirteen religious congregations which in one capacity or another trace their roots either directly to the three major founding figures Theodore Combalot 1797 1873 Marie Eugenie de Jesus Milleret de Brou 1817 1898 and Emmanuel d Alzon 1810 1880 or indirectly under the inspiration Members are present in over 60 countries throughout the world In addition to the Assumptionists a number of other congregations belong to the larger Assumption Family The Religious Sisters of the Assumption the Oblates Missionary Sisters of the Assumption the Little Sisters of the Assumption the Orantes of the Assumption the Sisters of St Joan of Arc the Brothers of the Assumption the Little Sisters of the Presentation of Our Lady the Missionary Sisters of the Assumption and the Sisters of the Cross Original Assumptionist congregations edit Of the six original congregations of the Assumption five originated in France and are made up of men only The Religious Sisters of the Assumption edit nbsp Marie Eugenie de Jesus Milleret de Brou The Congregatiion of the Religious of the Assumption was founded in Paris Seine Ferou Street in 1839 The foundress Mother Marie Eugenie de Jesus Marie Eugenie Milleret de Brou was born in Metz on August 25 1817 After being received into the Church in 1836 she met Theodore Combalot in 1837 Under his inspiration she founded with four other women a religious congregation after having trained with the Benedictines of the Blessed Sacrament in Paris and with the Visitation Sisters of Mt St Andrew Isere 7 At the age of 22 in 1839 she was elected superior of the new congregation In 1841 d Alzon became her spiritual guide She made her final vows at Christmas 1844 and resigned as superior general in 1894 The mother house was located in the Auteuil mansion from 1857 till their expulsion in 1900 when they moved to Val Notre Dame in Belgium The generalate is located in Paris Missionary Sisters of the Assumption The Missionary Sisters of the Assumption M S A were founded in 1849 in Grahamstown South Africa as a result of a split with the Religious of the Assumption The original mother house was located in Grahamstown but was later transferred to Johannesburg citation needed The first superior general was Mother Marie Gertrude Henningsen 1822 1904 The current superior general is Sr Barbara Standing There are approximately 70 religious in 10 communities Augustinians of the Assumption edit The Augustinians of the Assumption known as the Assumptionists A A founded by Emmanuel d Alzon at Nimes France Assumption Oblate Sisters edit The Oblates of the Assumption O A were founded in May 1865 in Rochebelle du Vigan Gard by d Alzon and Marie Correnson known in religion as Mother Emmanuel Marie de la Compassion 1842 1900 as the women s branch of the Augustinians of the Assumption From a middle class Nimes family Correnson was born in Paris on July 28 1842 D Alzon chose her to be the first superior general The congregation focused on Christian unity 8 Little Sisters of the Assumption edit Main article Little Sisters of the Assumption Little Sisters of the Assumption L S A were founded in Paris Seine in July 1865 by Etienne Pernet 1824 1899 and Antoinette Fage known in the convent as Mother Marie de Jesus 1824 1883 The congregation from its foundation has been dedicated to the home care of the sick poor They were first recognized in 1875 by Cardinal Guibert the Archbishop of Paris and by Rome in 1897 and 1901 The Sisters of Charity of the Assumption S C A were founded as a result of a split with the Little Sisters of the Assumption in Italy in 1993 They are associated with the Comunione e Liberazione Movement The Orantes of the Assumption edit The Orantes of the Assumption Or A were founded by Francois Picard 1831 1903 and Isabelle de Clermont Tonnerre known in religion as Mother Isabelle of Gethsemani 9 It has remained a modest sized congregation In 1941 it incorporated the Sacramentine Sisters of Marseille founded in 1639 by Antoine Le Quien citation needed In a booklet entitled Origins of the Religious Families of the Assumption Pierre Touveneraud 1926 1979 former general archivist of the congregation summarized in 1972 the common patrimony of the six original branches of the Assumption which while fully respecting their particular vocations their autonomous governing structures and their apostolic works bears witness to their common history strengthened by spiritual friendship apostolic support and fraternal collaboration Some of the traits they share are an Augustinian spirituality Christocentrism special emphasis on the mystical Incarnation and the Kingdom of God love of the Church and the centrality of the Eucharist love of Mary strong common life common prayer the role of study He also points out some of the difficulties tensions trials and misunderstandings that occurred over the years among the various members of the Family citation needed There are other aspects as well which they share the similarities of their rules of life a missionary commitment an insistence on certain human virtues openness simplicity warmth a balance of the three constitutive elements of religious life prayer community and apostolate emphasis on co responsibility in governance collaboration with the laity and the importance of belonging to an international family Twentieth century foundations editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2019 Learn how and when to remove this message Other foundations of the Assumption Family took place in the 20th century and not all of them bear the name Assumption even if they owe their origin to an Assumptionist The Sisters of St Joan of Arc S J A were founded in 1914 in Worcester Massachusetts US by Marie Clement Staub and Sr Jeanne du Sacre Coeur born Celina Benoit 1876 1936 The mother house was established in Sillery Quebec in 1917 The Servas Obreras Catequistas S O C were founded in Argentina by Joseph Marie Moreau 1897 1947 in 1934 The Sisters of the Cross were founded in Athens in 1939 Their mother house is located on Ipirou Street Agia Paraskevi This congregation was founded by Elpide Iannis Stephanou 1896 1978 The Brothers of the Assumption were founded in 1951 in Beni Democratic Republic of the Congo by Bishop Henri Pierard 1893 1975 as a lay diocesan institute for the diocese of Beni Butembo It has remained a small congregation The Little Sisters of the Presentation of Our Lady were founded in 1948 also by Bishop Pierard as a diocesan institute Its mother house is now located in Butembo North Kivu DRC The Little Missionaries of the Cross were founded in Bogota in 1955 They later became and remain a secular institute with no particular link to the Assumptionists Especially since the 1970s the various congregations of the Assumption Family have highlighted in a more visible way their common origins and their similarities of spirit and life These efforts have led to greater exchanges and shared programs inter novitiates assemblies get togethers of young members of the Assumption Family colloquia annual meetings of the general councils of the congregations joint foundations collaboration on a provincial level and the joint preparation of two magazines Assomption et ses oeuvres and Itineraires Augustiniens Assumptionist spirituality editIn 1993 a series of articles gathered under the title The Spirit of Assumption according to Emmanuel d Alzon described Assumptionist spirituality Augustinian edit Augustinian scholar Fulbert Cayre 1884 1971 who holds to an Augustinian definition of the charism the Assumption was born of Augustinian inspiration as evidenced among other things by its name its rule the institute it founded Les Etudes augustiniennes the number of references to Augustine in the founder s writings he once wrote that The City of God should be for the Assumption a kind of second revelation and the many Assumptionist authors in the Augustinian tradition Cayre Edgar Bourque Marcel Neusch Goulven Madec Ernest Fortin George Folliet Remi Munsch etc citation needed Christocentrism edit Athanase Sage 1896 1971 analyzed d Alzon s writings comprehensively and edited the Ecrits spirituels a compendium of the basic writings of the founder Sage focuses on the thought of the founder and using themes constitutive of his thinking of his spiritual life and his apostolic work Kingdom Mystical Incarnation Christocentrism the Augustinian tradition and the influence of the French school of spirituality Berulle Bossuet Olier etc which d Alzon shared with Mother Marie Eugenie citation needed Trinitarian edit Assumptionist systematic theologian George Tavard 1922 2007 a Frenchman living in the United States places the emphasis on the deeply Trinitarian inspiration of d Alzon s writings articulated around themes and actions which champion the rights of God citation needed References edit Congregation of the Augustinians of the Assumption A A GCatholic Retrieved 2021 12 12 Judson Mather The Assumptionist Response to Secularisation 1870 1900 in Robert J Bezucha ed Modern European Social History pp 59 89 a b c Taaffe Thomas Augustinians of the Assumption The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 2 New York Robert Appleton Company 1907 28 August 2019 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain La Croix 2 February 1898 p 1 Retrieved 5 March 2022 Harris Ruth The Assumptionists and the Dreyfus affair Past amp Present 2007 194 1 pp 175 211 full article on JSTOR archived preview in Web Archive The Assumptionist Bulgarian Martyrs Archived from the original on 2021 03 06 Retrieved 2019 08 29 Our History Assumption Sisters Oblates of the Assumption Assumptionists North American Province Archived from the original on 2019 08 28 Retrieved 2019 08 28 The Orantes of the Assumption Assumptionists Archived from the original on 2021 03 03 Retrieved 2019 08 29 Further reading editMather Judson Irving La Croix and the Assumptionist response to secularization in France 1870 1900 PhD Dissertation University of Michigan 1971 External links editOfficial website Augustinians of the Assumption U S Region North American Province Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Assumptionists amp oldid 1175351222, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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