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Religious brother

A religious brother is a member of a Christian religious institute or religious order who commits himself to following Christ in consecrated life of the Church, usually by the vows of poverty, chastity and obedience. He is a layman, in the sense of not being ordained as a deacon or priest, and usually lives in a religious community and works in a ministry appropriate to his capabilities.

A brother might practice any secular occupation. The term "brother" is used as he is expected to be as a brother to others. Brothers are members of a variety of religious communities, which may be contemplative, monastic, or apostolic in character. Some religious institutes are composed only of brothers; others are so-called "mixed" communities that are made up of brothers and clerics (priests or ministers, and seminarians).

It is also common in many Christian groups to refer to other members as "brother" or "sister".[1] In particular, the Christian Shakers use the title for all male adult members.[2]

History

As monasticism developed in the early days of Christianity, most monks remained laymen, as ordination to ministry was seen as a hindrance to the monks' vocation to a contemplative life. Guided by the Rule of St. Benedict, the main lifestyle they followed was either agricultural or that of a desert hermit. Various forces and trends through the Middle Ages led to the situation where monks were no longer following this manner of living. Instead, they were focusing primarily on the religious obligations of intercessory prayer, especially for donors to the monasteries. This was encouraged by a spiritual reliance among the general membership of the Catholic Church upon the prayers of monastics to achieve salvation.

One practical consequence of this situation was that the bulk of the physical work which needed to be done for the simple survival of the monastic community came to be done by men who volunteered their services on a full-time basis, and who followed a less severe regimen of prayer. Called donates or oblati, they were not considered to be monks, but they were nonetheless gradually accepted as members of the monastic community.

 
A church, a monk with lay brother & a praying man (from an illustrated medieval manuscript)

In other communities, a separate labor force of "lay brothers" or conversi was cultivated in order to handle the temporal business of the abbey. These men were professed members of the community but were restricted to ancillary roles of manual labor. A rigid class system emerged from this arrangement in which the clerics (priests and seminarians) exercised complete control over the lay brothers. In some cases, lay brothers received little or no formal education, could neither hold office nor vote within their communities, and were forbidden from passing from the lay to the clerical state. In its worst form, this class system resulted in a master-slave relationship between clerics and lay brothers.[citation needed] This inequality between two groups of vowed religious men was not addressed by the institutional leadership of the Catholic Church until the Second Vatican Council.[citation needed]

In the 17th century, education of the poorer classes began to be seen as a means of providing charity, which had always been a mandate of Christianity. A leading figure of this approach was St. Jean Baptiste de la Salle, a canon of Reims cathedral, who began to help the poor children of the city. As he was gradually drawn into education as a means for this purpose, he established a new congregation of men for this work, who were called the Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools. De la Salle had initially intended the Institute to be composed of both ordained and lay members, but the death of the candidates he sent to Rome for ordination while en route convinced him to keep the Institute composed only of laymen. Thus the establishment of a recognized status of "brother" as other than an agricultural laborer came to emerge in the Church.

The social devastations of the 18th and 19th centuries saw the gradual emergence of other similar congregations of men, dedicated primarily to education. Other examples of such congregations are the Marist Brothers, the Brothers of Holy Cross, the Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools (also known as the De La Salle Brothers), Brothers of Christian Instruction of St Gabriel (Gabrielites) and the Congregation of Christian Brothers.

Anglicanism

In the Anglican Communion, the term "brother" is also used to refer to non-ordained members of a religious order, such as the Little Brothers of Francis.[3]

Catholicism

Religious brothers today

The establishment of congregation of brothers started to boom during the 17th century such as the De La Salle Brothers.[4]

Since the Second Vatican Council (1962–1965) many brothers have moved toward professional and academic occupations, especially in the areas of nursing, education, peace, and justice. Brothers in communities with priests and seminarians often undertake advanced studies and enjoy equal standing with ordained members. Today, most brothers such as in the United States serve in some type of professional, technical, or academic ministry. Many serve as chaplains or teachers/faculty members at schools and universities run by their respective orders. In addition, most brothers undertake some studies in spirituality, religious studies, and theology.

Today there are more opportunities than ever for brothers in the Church. Brothers can be members of congregations that are made up only of brothers or they may belong to so-called "mixed" communities that include seminarians and priests. These congregations may be primarily contemplative or apostolic in nature; many try to balance both aspects of religious life. Brothers in the United States and elsewhere have access to an advanced education that is suited to their interests and talents. In mixed communities, brothers may collaborate with seminarians and priests or may minister independently of them. Brothers share equal status and rights with seminarians and priests in their communities with the exception that canon law currently requires that mixed communities elect an ordained minister as provincial; however, some dispensations to this rule have been granted. Brothers may be elected to provincial councils and other leadership positions.

The most acceptable term currently for the brother's vocation is "religious brother", and the vocational title is "Brother," sometimes abbreviated as "Bro." or "Br." The generic use of the term "brother" to describe fraternal or spiritual relationships between men in communities can sometimes lead to confusion about what it means to be a "brother" (religious). According to canon law, brothers are neither "lay nor clerical"[5] but instead belong to the religious state of life. Hence, the vocational title "brother" is generally not used by seminarians (other than in monastic or mendicant Orders) in order to avoid the impression that being a brother is a developmental phase of clerical formation. However, as equal members of the same community, both priests and brothers would consider themselves brothers in the fraternal, communal sense of the term.

The term "lay brother" is considered offensive by some brothers since the word "lay" was once interpreted in this context to mean "illiterate" or "uneducated".[citation needed] However, in canon law it simply means "not clerical" or "not ordained".

Religious brothers who have been proclaimed saints

Religious brothers who have been canonized as saints include:

Religious brothers who have been beatified

Lutheran

In Lutheran Churches, brothers are monastics or members of religious orders.[7]

Methodism

In the Methodist Church, those who are called "Brothers" (Br.) are male monastics (e.g. votarists of Saint Brigid of Kildare Methodist-Benedictine Monastery) or members of a Methodist religious order (e.g. Order of Saint Luke).

Other uses of the term

Shakerism

All male adult members of the Shakers use the title of "brother."[2] In the past, male Shakers in leadership positions of communities used the title "father."

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

In the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, popularly known as Mormons, adults female and male are often referred to sisters and brothers respectively. The use is similar to Mr. or Mrs, therefore using the terms is not common among young single adults. 'As Latter-day Saints united by common beliefs, the terms Brother and Sister best describe our relationship'.[8]

Jehovah's Witnesses

All baptized members of Jehovah's Witnesses refer to other members in good standing as "brothers" and "sisters".

See also

References

  1. ^ Lawless, Elaine J. (1988). God's Peculiar People. University Press of Kentucky. Pentecostals, like some other Christians, call each other Brother and Sister, but for Pentecostals this tradition has special meaning. Because they do feel they are literally a family, these terms are not mere titles but are imbued with a greater intensity of meaning: "The Pentecostal church as a whole is a very, is kind of a familial feel. We call each other brothers and sisters and we are brothers and sisters. There is definitely a feeling of kinship among each other."
  2. ^ a b Paterwic, Stephen J. (2009-09-28). The A to Z of the Shakers. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 9780810870567.
  3. ^ "Religion Stylebook". Religion Newswriters Association. 1999. Retrieved 18 April 2016. brother: A man who has taken vows in a Christian religious, particularly Catholic or Anglican, order but is not ordained. Also, a monk or friar who is in seminary preparing for priesthood is called brother if he has taken his vows. In many traditions, especially evangelical, brother is used as a generic, friendly title.
  4. ^ "Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life". The Holy See.
  5. ^ "Code of Canon Law, canon 588 § 1" (in Latin).
  6. ^ Wooden, Cindy (September 14, 2018). "Algerian martyrs to be beatified in Algeria Dec. 8". Catholic News Service. Retrieved September 15, 2018.
  7. ^ "Frequently Asked Questions". Order of Lutheran Franciscans. 2015. Retrieved 18 April 2016. For more information about how to become a brother or sister in the Order of Lutheran Franciscans, please visit our Vocations page. Following the General Rule, all sisters and brothers of this Order: make vows of Poverty, Chastity and Obedience, pray the Daily Office, are active in their congregations, have a spiritual director, receive Holy Communion weekly, make individual confession twice a year, attend annual Chapter and regional convocations whenever possible, and financially support the life and ministry of the Order.
  8. ^ "What is the appropriate way to address Church members?". www.churchofjesuschrist.org. Retrieved 9 May 2021.

Further reading

  • Blessed Ambiguity: Brothers in the Church. Landover: Christian Brothers, 1993. Michael Meister, F.S.C., ed. ISBN 1-884904-00-9
  • Sixteen questions about church vocations, VISION Catholic Religious Vocation Network, http://www.vocation-network.org/articles/show/131
  • The HarperCollins Encyclopedia of Catholicism, Richard P. McBrien, general ed. (Harper: San Francisco, 1995)
  • Who Are My Brothers?: Cleric-Lay Relationships in Men's Religious Communities. Philip Armstrong, C.S.C., ed. New York: Society of St Paul, 1988. ISBN 0-8189-0533-6

External links

  • Religious Brothers Conference The national organization for religious brothers which holds an annual convention and serves as an advocacy group for issues relating to the brother vocation.
  • VocationNetwork.org information and free resources about Catholic religious vocations and institutes of consecrated life.
  • DigitalVocationGuide.org digital edition of VISION, the annual Catholic religious vocation discernment guide.
  • Congregation of Brothers of the Poor of St. Francis of Assisi.

religious, brother, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, october. 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 Religious brother news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message A religious brother is a member of a Christian religious institute or religious order who commits himself to following Christ in consecrated life of the Church usually by the vows of poverty chastity and obedience He is a layman in the sense of not being ordained as a deacon or priest and usually lives in a religious community and works in a ministry appropriate to his capabilities A brother might practice any secular occupation The term brother is used as he is expected to be as a brother to others Brothers are members of a variety of religious communities which may be contemplative monastic or apostolic in character Some religious institutes are composed only of brothers others are so called mixed communities that are made up of brothers and clerics priests or ministers and seminarians It is also common in many Christian groups to refer to other members as brother or sister 1 In particular the Christian Shakers use the title for all male adult members 2 Contents 1 History 2 Anglicanism 3 Catholicism 3 1 Religious brothers today 3 2 Religious brothers who have been proclaimed saints 3 3 Religious brothers who have been beatified 4 Lutheran 5 Methodism 6 Other uses of the term 6 1 Shakerism 6 2 The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints 6 3 Jehovah s Witnesses 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory EditAs monasticism developed in the early days of Christianity most monks remained laymen as ordination to ministry was seen as a hindrance to the monks vocation to a contemplative life Guided by the Rule of St Benedict the main lifestyle they followed was either agricultural or that of a desert hermit Various forces and trends through the Middle Ages led to the situation where monks were no longer following this manner of living Instead they were focusing primarily on the religious obligations of intercessory prayer especially for donors to the monasteries This was encouraged by a spiritual reliance among the general membership of the Catholic Church upon the prayers of monastics to achieve salvation One practical consequence of this situation was that the bulk of the physical work which needed to be done for the simple survival of the monastic community came to be done by men who volunteered their services on a full time basis and who followed a less severe regimen of prayer Called donates or oblati they were not considered to be monks but they were nonetheless gradually accepted as members of the monastic community A church a monk with lay brother amp a praying man from an illustrated medieval manuscript In other communities a separate labor force of lay brothers or conversi was cultivated in order to handle the temporal business of the abbey These men were professed members of the community but were restricted to ancillary roles of manual labor A rigid class system emerged from this arrangement in which the clerics priests and seminarians exercised complete control over the lay brothers In some cases lay brothers received little or no formal education could neither hold office nor vote within their communities and were forbidden from passing from the lay to the clerical state In its worst form this class system resulted in a master slave relationship between clerics and lay brothers citation needed This inequality between two groups of vowed religious men was not addressed by the institutional leadership of the Catholic Church until the Second Vatican Council citation needed In the 17th century education of the poorer classes began to be seen as a means of providing charity which had always been a mandate of Christianity A leading figure of this approach was St Jean Baptiste de la Salle a canon of Reims cathedral who began to help the poor children of the city As he was gradually drawn into education as a means for this purpose he established a new congregation of men for this work who were called the Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools De la Salle had initially intended the Institute to be composed of both ordained and lay members but the death of the candidates he sent to Rome for ordination while en route convinced him to keep the Institute composed only of laymen Thus the establishment of a recognized status of brother as other than an agricultural laborer came to emerge in the Church The social devastations of the 18th and 19th centuries saw the gradual emergence of other similar congregations of men dedicated primarily to education Other examples of such congregations are the Marist Brothers the Brothers of Holy Cross the Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools also known as the De La Salle Brothers Brothers of Christian Instruction of St Gabriel Gabrielites and the Congregation of Christian Brothers Anglicanism EditIn the Anglican Communion the term brother is also used to refer to non ordained members of a religious order such as the Little Brothers of Francis 3 Catholicism 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 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Religious brothers today Edit The establishment of congregation of brothers started to boom during the 17th century such as the De La Salle Brothers 4 Since the Second Vatican Council 1962 1965 many brothers have moved toward professional and academic occupations especially in the areas of nursing education peace and justice Brothers in communities with priests and seminarians often undertake advanced studies and enjoy equal standing with ordained members Today most brothers such as in the United States serve in some type of professional technical or academic ministry Many serve as chaplains or teachers faculty members at schools and universities run by their respective orders In addition most brothers undertake some studies in spirituality religious studies and theology Today there are more opportunities than ever for brothers in the Church Brothers can be members of congregations that are made up only of brothers or they may belong to so called mixed communities that include seminarians and priests These congregations may be primarily contemplative or apostolic in nature many try to balance both aspects of religious life Brothers in the United States and elsewhere have access to an advanced education that is suited to their interests and talents In mixed communities brothers may collaborate with seminarians and priests or may minister independently of them Brothers share equal status and rights with seminarians and priests in their communities with the exception that canon law currently requires that mixed communities elect an ordained minister as provincial however some dispensations to this rule have been granted Brothers may be elected to provincial councils and other leadership positions The most acceptable term currently for the brother s vocation is religious brother and the vocational title is Brother sometimes abbreviated as Bro or Br The generic use of the term brother to describe fraternal or spiritual relationships between men in communities can sometimes lead to confusion about what it means to be a brother religious According to canon law brothers are neither lay nor clerical 5 but instead belong to the religious state of life Hence the vocational title brother is generally not used by seminarians other than in monastic or mendicant Orders in order to avoid the impression that being a brother is a developmental phase of clerical formation However as equal members of the same community both priests and brothers would consider themselves brothers in the fraternal communal sense of the term The term lay brother is considered offensive by some brothers since the word lay was once interpreted in this context to mean illiterate or uneducated citation needed However in canon law it simply means not clerical or not ordained Religious brothers who have been proclaimed saints Edit Religious brothers who have been canonized as saints include Alphonsus Rodriguez S J porter Bernard of Corleone O F M Cap Conrad of Parzham O F M Cap Crispin of Viterbo O F M Cap Didacus of Alcala Felix of Cantalice O F M Cap who was the first Capuchin friar to be canonized in the history of the Order Francis Mary of Camporosso O F M Cap Gerard Majella C Ss R Ignatius of Laconi O F M Cap St John of God Brothers Hospitallers of St John of God St Juan Macias Order of Preachers Richard Pampuri Brothers Hospitallers of St John of God Martin de Porres Order of Preachers Andre Bessette C S C Canadian founder of Saint Joseph s Oratory in Montreal Rene Goupil S J missionary and martyr saint Albert Chmielowski Polish founder of a congregation of brothers and another of religious sisters of the Third Order Regular of Saint Francis which both bear his name Benilde Romancon F S C a French educator who was the first member of his religious institute to be canonized Martyrs of Turon eight Spanish Brothers of the Christian Schools executed during the Spanish Civil War Jaime Hilario F S C executed during the Spanish Civil War Miguel Febres Cordero F S C an Ecuadorian educator Mutien Marie Wiaux F S C a Belgian educator Paschal Baylon O F M Religious brothers who have been beatified Edit Isidore De Loor Passionist a Belgian brother Edmund Ignatius Rice founder of the Congregation of Christian Brothers and Presentation Brothers Dominic Collins Society of Jesus Jose Olallo Brothers Hospitallers of St John of God Redemptus of the Cross Order of Discalced Carmelites Fra Angelico Order of Preachers Artemides Zatti Society of St Francis de Sales Istvan Sandor Society of St Francis de Sales Henri Verges Marist Brother 6 Lutheran EditIn Lutheran Churches brothers are monastics or members of religious orders 7 Methodism EditIn the Methodist Church those who are called Brothers Br are male monastics e g votarists of Saint Brigid of Kildare Methodist Benedictine Monastery or members of a Methodist religious order e g Order of Saint Luke Other uses of the term EditShakerism Edit All male adult members of the Shakers use the title of brother 2 In the past male Shakers in leadership positions of communities used the title father The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints Edit In the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints popularly known as Mormons adults female and male are often referred to sisters and brothers respectively The use is similar to Mr or Mrs therefore using the terms is not common among young single adults As Latter day Saints united by common beliefs the terms Brother and Sister best describe our relationship 8 Jehovah s Witnesses Edit All baptized members of Jehovah s Witnesses refer to other members in good standing as brothers and sisters See also EditConsecrated life Vocational Discernment in the Catholic ChurchReferences Edit Lawless Elaine J 1988 God s Peculiar People University Press of Kentucky Pentecostals like some other Christians call each other Brother and Sister but for Pentecostals this tradition has special meaning Because they do feel they are literally a family these terms are not mere titles but are imbued with a greater intensity of meaning The Pentecostal church as a whole is a very is kind of a familial feel We call each other brothers and sisters and we are brothers and sisters There is definitely a feeling of kinship among each other a b Paterwic Stephen J 2009 09 28 The A to Z of the Shakers Scarecrow Press ISBN 9780810870567 Religion Stylebook Religion Newswriters Association 1999 Retrieved 18 April 2016 brother A man who has taken vows in a Christian religious particularly Catholic or Anglican order but is not ordained Also a monk or friar who is in seminary preparing for priesthood is called brother if he has taken his vows In many traditions especially evangelical brother is used as a generic friendly title Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life The Holy See Code of Canon Law canon 588 1 in Latin Wooden Cindy September 14 2018 Algerian martyrs to be beatified in Algeria Dec 8 Catholic News Service Retrieved September 15 2018 Frequently Asked Questions Order of Lutheran Franciscans 2015 Retrieved 18 April 2016 For more information about how to become a brother or sister in the Order of Lutheran Franciscans please visit our Vocations page Following the General Rule all sisters and brothers of this Order make vows of Poverty Chastity and Obedience pray the Daily Office are active in their congregations have a spiritual director receive Holy Communion weekly make individual confession twice a year attend annual Chapter and regional convocations whenever possible and financially support the life and ministry of the Order What is the appropriate way to address Church members www churchofjesuschrist org Retrieved 9 May 2021 Further reading EditBlessed Ambiguity Brothers in the Church Landover Christian Brothers 1993 Michael Meister F S C ed ISBN 1 884904 00 9 Sixteen questions about church vocations VISION Catholic Religious Vocation Network http www vocation network org articles show 131 The HarperCollins Encyclopedia of Catholicism Richard P McBrien general ed Harper San Francisco 1995 Who Are My Brothers Cleric Lay Relationships in Men s Religious Communities Philip Armstrong C S C ed New York Society of St Paul 1988 ISBN 0 8189 0533 6External links EditReligious Brothers Conference The national organization for religious brothers which holds an annual convention and serves as an advocacy group for issues relating to the brother vocation VocationNetwork org information and free resources about Catholic religious vocations and institutes of consecrated life DigitalVocationGuide org digital edition of VISION the annual Catholic religious vocation discernment guide franciscan brothers net Congregation of Brothers of the Poor of St Francis of Assisi Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Religious brother amp oldid 1134485668, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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