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Passionists

The Passionists, officially named Congregation of the Passion of Jesus Christ (Latin: Congregatio Passionis Iesu Christi), abbreviated CP,[3] is a Catholic clerical religious congregation of Pontifical Right for men, founded by Paul of the Cross in 1720 with a special emphasis on and devotion to the Passion of Jesus Christ. A known symbol of the congregation is the labeled emblem of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, surmounted by a cross and is often sewn into the attire of its congregants.

Congregation of the Passion of Jesus Christ
Latin: Congregatio Passionis Iesu Christi
AbbreviationCP
NicknamePassionists
Founded22 November 1720; 302 years ago (1720-11-22)
FounderPaul of the Cross[1]
Founded atCastellazzo, Italy
TypeClerical Religious Congregation of Pontifical Right for men
HeadquartersVia S. Giovanni Eudes 95, Rome, Italy
Membership
1,890 members (including 1,423 priests) as of 2020
Superior General
Fr. Joachim Xavier Rego, C.P.
Patroness:
Blessed Virgin Mary (under the title Our Lady of the Sorrows)
AffiliationsCatholic Church
Websitepassiochristi.org
Formerly called
The Poor of Jesus
(1720-1741)
[2]

History

Paul of the Cross who was born in 1694 in Ovada, wrote the rules of the Congregation between 22 November 1720 & 1 January 1721,[4] and in June 1725 Pope Benedict XIII granted Paul the permission to form his congregation. Paul and his brother, John Baptist Danei, were ordained by the pope on the same occasion (7 June).[3]

After serving for a time in the hospital of St. Gallicano, in 1737 they left Rome with permission of the Pope and went to Mount Argentario,[4] where they established the first house of the institute. They took up their abode in a small hermitage near the summit of the mount, to which was attached a chapel dedicated to Saint Anthony. They were soon joined by three companions, one of whom was a priest, and the observance of community life according to the rules began there and is continued there to the present day.[3] Paul of the Cross and his companions – they now totalled six priests and two brothers – began a retreat.

In 1769, Clement XIV granted full rights to the Passionists as enjoyed by the other religious institutes, making them not an order but a congregation. The congregation historically has had two primary goals: Preaching Missions and contemplative life, with an attempt to blend the two. Its founder had attempted to combine aspects of the contemplative orders, such as the Trappist monks, together with the dynamic orders, such as the Jesuits.

Both the members and the works of the congregation are entrusted to the protection of the Blessed Virgin Mary under the title of Our Lady of Sorrows, as patroness of the congregation, with Saint Michael and Saint Joseph as co patrons. Every Passionist religious is required to honour them, together with the founder, Paul of the Cross, and the other saints of the congregation, whose feasts they celebrate in community.

On June 11, 1741, they first affixed the emblem or "sign" of the Passion (Jesu XPI Passio) on their black tunics. The professed renewed their vows, and the new members pronounced their first vows.[5]

Charism

"We seek the unity of our lives and our apostolate in the Passion of Jesus." The Passionate express their participation in the Passion by a special vow, by which they bind themselves to keep alive the memory of the Passion of Christ. They strive to foster awareness of its meaning and value for each person and for the life of the world. They seek to incorporate this vow into our daily lives by living the evangelical counsels.[6]

Apostolate

 
The Roman Catholic Church of St Mungo's Church, Townhead, Glasgow is run by the Passionists of the Anglo Hibernian Province of St Patrick

Traditionally, their main apostolate has been preaching missions and retreats. According to Paul of the Cross, they were founded in order to "teach people how to pray", which they do through activities such as retreats and missions, spiritual direction, and prayer groups. Today they often also assist local churches in pastoral works, including saying masses, hearing confessions, and visiting the sick. Due to the continuing shortage of priests throughout the world, the Passionists today are sometimes designated as parish priests and curates of various parishes. The Passionists hold many retreat and conference centers around the world.

Unlike the La Sallians or the Gabrielites, Passionists do not usually open schools and universities, except seminaries for their own students wishing to become brothers and priests. There are some schools sponsored and run by the Passionists, like the St. Gemma Galgani School, (which includes primary, junior high and high school-level education) in Santiago (Chile), but these are more the exception than the rule. The Passionists are involved in social welfare projects and education mainly in the various mission territories assigned to them.

Though Passionists are not required to work in non-Christian areas as missionaries, their Rule allows its members to be posted to missionary work, such as mainland China (before the Communists took over in 1949), India, and Japan, and in many other nations in Africa, Asia, Latin America and elsewhere as dictated by the pope or at the invitation of a local Bishop.

There are 2,179 Passionists in 61 countries[6] on the five continents, led by a superior general who is elected every six years. He is assisted by six consultors in governing the congregation. The congregation is divided into provinces, vice-provinces and missions. The Congregation is also divided into groups of provinces, vice-provinces and missions called configurations. The presidents of the six configurations constitute the Extended General Council which meets with the Superior General and his consultors annually.[7]

 
Monastery of the Presentation in Monte Argentario, Tuscany.

There are six configurations in the world:[8]

  • MAPRES: The Configuration of Mary Presented In The Temple which includes Italy, France and Portugal and related mission territories.
  • CCH: The Configuration of Charles Houben which includes Ireland, England, Scotland, Wales, Germany, Poland, Belgium, the Czech Republic, Ukraine, Holland, Sweden and related mission territories;
  • CJC: The Configuration of Jesus Crucified which includes Mexico, Brazil, the United States, Argentina, Puerto Rico, the Dominican Republic, Haiti, Canada, Uruguay, Paraguay and related mission territories
  • PASPAC: The Configuration of the Passionists in Asia Pacific which includes Australia, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, the Philippines, Korea, Japan, Indonesia, India, China and Vietnam and related mission territories;
  • CPA: The Configuration of the Passionists of Africa, which includes Kenya, Tanzania, the Republic of the Congo, South Africa, Botswana, Zambia and related mission territories;
  • SCOR: The Configuration of the Sacred Heart which includes Spain, Peru, Colombia, Ecuador, Venezuela, Chile, Panama, Honduras, Guatemala, Cuba, El Salvador, Bolivia, Nicaragua and related mission territories.

The official name of the institute is "The Congregation of the Passion of Jesus Christ". The superior general resides in Rome (Piazza Ss. Giovanni e Paolo, 13, 00184 Roma; tel. 06 772711). The founder is buried in a chapel attached to the Basilica of Saints John and Paul, and the General Headquarters also hosts an international house of studies for Passionists from around the world.

Characteristics of the Congregation

 
Painting of Bl. Bernard Silvestrelli, 1911

Passionist monasteries are referred to as "retreats".[4] The members of the congregation are not allowed to possess land, and the congregation collectively can only own the community house and a bit of land attached to it. They rely completely on their own labor and on contributions from the faithful in order to maintain themselves financially. The habit worn by members is a rough wool tunic bearing the words "Jesu XPI Passio", meaning "Passion of Jesus Christ", and the congregation was historically discalced, wearing sandals rather than shoes.

With regard to Popular Piety, the Congregation is also known for promoting devotion to the Passion among the faithful by the use of "Black Scapular of the Passion" usually worn by aspirants to the Passionist way of life. Different devotional practices such as Devotion to the Five Wounds of Christ, The Seven Sorrows of The Blessed Virgin Mary, Stations of the Cross and various forms of the Office in honour of the Passion are still widely promoted among its members.

Confraternity of the Passion

The "Black Scapular of the Passion" is a Roman Catholic devotional scapular associated with the Passionists.[9] The tradition of the Passionists holds that in 1720 before Paul of the Cross founded the Congregation of the Passionists he had a Marian apparition during which was revealed the black habit of the order with the badge on chest. Pope Pius IX approved of this Scapular by a Brief dated June 24, 1864.[10] Thereafter, the Passionist Fathers established the "Confraternity of the Passion of Jesus Christ", and gave the faithful who wished to associate themselves more closely with their order a black scapular in honor of the Passion of Christ.[11] No special practice besides wearing the Scapular and leading a good Christian life is obligatory in order to participate in the privileges of the confraternity.

The small scapular has a replica of the badge of the Passionists. It is made of black cloth, having on the front the figure of a Heart surmounted by a White Cross and bears the words "Jesu XPI Passio sit semper in cordibus nostris" (May the passion of Jesus Christ always be in our hearts.)[12] The other portion of the scapular hanging at the back, may consist simply of a small segment of black cloth, but at times has an image of the Crucifixion of Christ. Various other indulgences for the faithful who wear this scapular, were approved by the Congregation for Indulgences in 1877.[12] The Superior-General of the Passionists communicates to other priests the faculty to bless and invest with the scapular.[13]

Saints and Blesseds of the Congregation of the Passion

Canonised members of the Congregation

Beatified members of the Congregation

In addition, the causes for the canonisation of Carl Schmitz, Ignatius Spencer, Theodore Foley and Elizabeth Prout have been opened.

Other notable members

  • John Moynihan Tettemer (Father Ildefonso), appointed consultor general of the order in 1914
  • Kieran Creagh is an Irish Passionist priest who was shot in South Africa
  • Martin J. Newell is an English Passionist priest, anti-war protester and climate activist
  • Brian D'Arcy is an Irish Passionist priest, a writer, newspaper columnist, broadcaster, and preacher.
  • Edward L. Beck is an American Passionist priest and CNN commentator.
  • Gabriele Amorth priest and exorcist of the Diocese of Rome who performed tens of thousands of exorcisms over his sixty plus years as a priest. As the appointed exorcist for the diocese of Rome, Amorth was the Chief Exorcist of the Vatican.
  • Thomas Berry cultural historian, teacher, Fordham University, author “Dream of the Earth”, “The Great Work”, “The Universe Story”.

Passionist Sisters

 
House of the Passionist Sisters in Colombo (Greater Curitiba), Paraná, Southern Brazil

The Passionist Sisters (the Sisters of the Cross and Passion) is an institute founded in 1852 by Father Gaudentius Rossi, an early Passionist priest, in collaboration with Elizabeth Prout. In its beginnings, it was called "Sisters of the Holy Family", and was later included under the Passionist family.

Due to their separate raisings guided by members of the congregation, Maria Goretti and Gemma Galgani are traditionally counted in the ranks of the Passionist Sisters, even though they died before they could formally enter the institute (Maria was murdered, Gemma died of tuberculosis).[citation needed]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Congregation of the Passion (C.P.)".
  2. ^ "Congregation of the Passion (C.P.)".
  3. ^ a b c "CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Passionists". Newadvent.org. Retrieved 12 November 2017.
  4. ^ a b c Pettinelli, Derek. "Five facts about the Passionists", Catholic Digest, 19 October 2017
  5. ^ "Passionist sign". THE PASSIONISTS OF HOLY CROSS PROVINCE.
  6. ^ a b . Passiochristi.org. Archived from the original on 5 March 2014. Retrieved 12 November 2017.
  7. ^ The Statistics of the Congregation of the Passion of Jesus Christ: Passionist International Bulletin, Rome, Spring 2014
  8. ^ The 2012 General Chapter of the Congregation of the Passion of Jesus Christ: Acts of the Chapter, Rome, 2013.
  9. ^ Catholic Encyclopedia
  10. ^ "Black Scapular of the Passion", The Catholic Telegraph, Volume 58, Number 9, 28 February 1889
  11. ^ Sullivan, John Francis. The Externals of the Catholic Church, P. J. Kenedy & sons, 1918, p. 200
  12. ^ a b "Black Scapular", Marian Library, University of Dayton
  13. ^ "Scapular of the Passion (Black)", New Catholic Dictionary, 1910

External links

  • International Website of the Passionists (English, Spanish, Italian)
  • Passionists Australia, New Zealand and Papua New Guinea
  • Passionists in the Philippines
  • Passionists in Chile (Spanish, under construction)
  • Passionists in France
  • Website of the Sisters of the Cross and Passion
  • Website of the Passionists of St. Paul of the Cross Province, North America
  • Website of the Passionists of Holy Cross Province, North America
  • Passionists in the U.K.

passionists, artistic, movement, passionism, officially, named, congregation, passion, jesus, christ, latin, congregatio, passionis, iesu, christi, abbreviated, catholic, clerical, religious, congregation, pontifical, right, founded, paul, cross, 1720, with, s. For the artistic movement see Passionism The Passionists officially named Congregation of the Passion of Jesus Christ Latin Congregatio Passionis Iesu Christi abbreviated CP 3 is a Catholic clerical religious congregation of Pontifical Right for men founded by Paul of the Cross in 1720 with a special emphasis on and devotion to the Passion of Jesus Christ A known symbol of the congregation is the labeled emblem of the Sacred Heart of Jesus surmounted by a cross and is often sewn into the attire of its congregants Congregation of the Passion of Jesus ChristLatin Congregatio Passionis Iesu ChristiAbbreviationCPNicknamePassionistsFounded22 November 1720 302 years ago 1720 11 22 FounderPaul of the Cross 1 Founded atCastellazzo ItalyTypeClerical Religious Congregation of Pontifical Right for menHeadquartersVia S Giovanni Eudes 95 Rome ItalyMembership1 890 members including 1 423 priests as of 2020Superior GeneralFr Joachim Xavier Rego C P Patroness Blessed Virgin Mary under the title Our Lady of the Sorrows AffiliationsCatholic ChurchWebsitepassiochristi wbr orgFormerly calledThe Poor of Jesus 1720 1741 2 Contents 1 History 2 Charism 3 Apostolate 4 Characteristics of the Congregation 4 1 Confraternity of the Passion 5 Saints and Blesseds of the Congregation of the Passion 6 Other notable members 7 Passionist Sisters 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory EditPaul of the Cross who was born in 1694 in Ovada wrote the rules of the Congregation between 22 November 1720 amp 1 January 1721 4 and in June 1725 Pope Benedict XIII granted Paul the permission to form his congregation Paul and his brother John Baptist Danei were ordained by the pope on the same occasion 7 June 3 After serving for a time in the hospital of St Gallicano in 1737 they left Rome with permission of the Pope and went to Mount Argentario 4 where they established the first house of the institute They took up their abode in a small hermitage near the summit of the mount to which was attached a chapel dedicated to Saint Anthony They were soon joined by three companions one of whom was a priest and the observance of community life according to the rules began there and is continued there to the present day 3 Paul of the Cross and his companions they now totalled six priests and two brothers began a retreat In 1769 Clement XIV granted full rights to the Passionists as enjoyed by the other religious institutes making them not an order but a congregation The congregation historically has had two primary goals Preaching Missions and contemplative life with an attempt to blend the two Its founder had attempted to combine aspects of the contemplative orders such as the Trappist monks together with the dynamic orders such as the Jesuits Both the members and the works of the congregation are entrusted to the protection of the Blessed Virgin Mary under the title of Our Lady of Sorrows as patroness of the congregation with Saint Michael and Saint Joseph as co patrons Every Passionist religious is required to honour them together with the founder Paul of the Cross and the other saints of the congregation whose feasts they celebrate in community On June 11 1741 they first affixed the emblem or sign of the Passion Jesu XPI Passio on their black tunics The professed renewed their vows and the new members pronounced their first vows 5 Charism Edit We seek the unity of our lives and our apostolate in the Passion of Jesus The Passionate express their participation in the Passion by a special vow by which they bind themselves to keep alive the memory of the Passion of Christ They strive to foster awareness of its meaning and value for each person and for the life of the world They seek to incorporate this vow into our daily lives by living the evangelical counsels 6 Apostolate Edit The Roman Catholic Church of St Mungo s Church Townhead Glasgow is run by the Passionists of the Anglo Hibernian Province of St Patrick Traditionally their main apostolate has been preaching missions and retreats According to Paul of the Cross they were founded in order to teach people how to pray which they do through activities such as retreats and missions spiritual direction and prayer groups Today they often also assist local churches in pastoral works including saying masses hearing confessions and visiting the sick Due to the continuing shortage of priests throughout the world the Passionists today are sometimes designated as parish priests and curates of various parishes The Passionists hold many retreat and conference centers around the world Unlike the La Sallians or the Gabrielites Passionists do not usually open schools and universities except seminaries for their own students wishing to become brothers and priests There are some schools sponsored and run by the Passionists like the St Gemma Galgani School which includes primary junior high and high school level education in Santiago Chile but these are more the exception than the rule The Passionists are involved in social welfare projects and education mainly in the various mission territories assigned to them Though Passionists are not required to work in non Christian areas as missionaries their Rule allows its members to be posted to missionary work such as mainland China before the Communists took over in 1949 India and Japan and in many other nations in Africa Asia Latin America and elsewhere as dictated by the pope or at the invitation of a local Bishop There are 2 179 Passionists in 61 countries 6 on the five continents led by a superior general who is elected every six years He is assisted by six consultors in governing the congregation The congregation is divided into provinces vice provinces and missions The Congregation is also divided into groups of provinces vice provinces and missions called configurations The presidents of the six configurations constitute the Extended General Council which meets with the Superior General and his consultors annually 7 Monastery of the Presentation in Monte Argentario Tuscany There are six configurations in the world 8 MAPRES The Configuration of Mary Presented In The Temple which includes Italy France and Portugal and related mission territories CCH The Configuration of Charles Houben which includes Ireland England Scotland Wales Germany Poland Belgium the Czech Republic Ukraine Holland Sweden and related mission territories CJC The Configuration of Jesus Crucified which includes Mexico Brazil the United States Argentina Puerto Rico the Dominican Republic Haiti Canada Uruguay Paraguay and related mission territories PASPAC The Configuration of the Passionists in Asia Pacific which includes Australia New Zealand Papua New Guinea the Philippines Korea Japan Indonesia India China and Vietnam and related mission territories CPA The Configuration of the Passionists of Africa which includes Kenya Tanzania the Republic of the Congo South Africa Botswana Zambia and related mission territories SCOR The Configuration of the Sacred Heart which includes Spain Peru Colombia Ecuador Venezuela Chile Panama Honduras Guatemala Cuba El Salvador Bolivia Nicaragua and related mission territories The official name of the institute is The Congregation of the Passion of Jesus Christ The superior general resides in Rome Piazza Ss Giovanni e Paolo 13 00184 Roma tel 06 772711 The founder is buried in a chapel attached to the Basilica of Saints John and Paul and the General Headquarters also hosts an international house of studies for Passionists from around the world Characteristics of the Congregation Edit Painting of Bl Bernard Silvestrelli 1911 Passionist monasteries are referred to as retreats 4 The members of the congregation are not allowed to possess land and the congregation collectively can only own the community house and a bit of land attached to it They rely completely on their own labor and on contributions from the faithful in order to maintain themselves financially The habit worn by members is a rough wool tunic bearing the words Jesu XPI Passio meaning Passion of Jesus Christ and the congregation was historically discalced wearing sandals rather than shoes With regard to Popular Piety the Congregation is also known for promoting devotion to the Passion among the faithful by the use of Black Scapular of the Passion usually worn by aspirants to the Passionist way of life Different devotional practices such as Devotion to the Five Wounds of Christ The Seven Sorrows of The Blessed Virgin Mary Stations of the Cross and various forms of the Office in honour of the Passion are still widely promoted among its members Confraternity of the Passion Edit The Black Scapular of the Passion is a Roman Catholic devotional scapular associated with the Passionists 9 The tradition of the Passionists holds that in 1720 before Paul of the Cross founded the Congregation of the Passionists he had a Marian apparition during which was revealed the black habit of the order with the badge on chest Pope Pius IX approved of this Scapular by a Brief dated June 24 1864 10 Thereafter the Passionist Fathers established the Confraternity of the Passion of Jesus Christ and gave the faithful who wished to associate themselves more closely with their order a black scapular in honor of the Passion of Christ 11 No special practice besides wearing the Scapular and leading a good Christian life is obligatory in order to participate in the privileges of the confraternity The small scapular has a replica of the badge of the Passionists It is made of black cloth having on the front the figure of a Heart surmounted by a White Cross and bears the words Jesu XPI Passio sit semper in cordibus nostris May the passion of Jesus Christ always be in our hearts 12 The other portion of the scapular hanging at the back may consist simply of a small segment of black cloth but at times has an image of the Crucifixion of Christ Various other indulgences for the faithful who wear this scapular were approved by the Congregation for Indulgences in 1877 12 The Superior General of the Passionists communicates to other priests the faculty to bless and invest with the scapular 13 Saints and Blesseds of the Congregation of the Passion EditCanonised members of the Congregation Paul of the Cross founder of the congregation Vincent Strambi proto bishop Gabriel of Our Lady of Sorrows student Gemma Galgani a lay Passionist aspirant Innocencio of Mary Immaculate a martyr of the Spanish Civil War Charles of Mount Argus a Dutchman who ministered and died in Co Dublin in Ireland Maria Goretti instructed by the Passionists in preparation for First Holy Communion also Postulators of her cause for sainthoodBeatified members of the Congregation Eugene Bossilkov Bulgarian Bishop and Martyr Lorenzo Maria of Saint Francis Xavier Missionary Isidore of Saint Joseph lay brother Dominic Barberi notable for having received John Henry Newman into the Catholic faith Bernard Mary of Jesus Superior General and Novitiate classmate of St Gabriel of Our Lady of Sorrows Grimoaldo of the Purification student Pius of Saint Aloysius student The twenty six Catholic Martyrs of DaimielIn addition the causes for the canonisation of Carl Schmitz Ignatius Spencer Theodore Foley and Elizabeth Prout have been opened Other notable members EditJohn Moynihan Tettemer Father Ildefonso appointed consultor general of the order in 1914 Kieran Creagh is an Irish Passionist priest who was shot in South Africa Martin J Newell is an English Passionist priest anti war protester and climate activist Brian D Arcy is an Irish Passionist priest a writer newspaper columnist broadcaster and preacher Edward L Beck is an American Passionist priest and CNN commentator Gabriele Amorth priest and exorcist of the Diocese of Rome who performed tens of thousands of exorcisms over his sixty plus years as a priest As the appointed exorcist for the diocese of Rome Amorth was the Chief Exorcist of the Vatican Thomas Berry cultural historian teacher Fordham University author Dream of the Earth The Great Work The Universe Story Passionist Sisters Edit House of the Passionist Sisters in Colombo Greater Curitiba Parana Southern Brazil The Passionist Sisters the Sisters of the Cross and Passion is an institute founded in 1852 by Father Gaudentius Rossi an early Passionist priest in collaboration with Elizabeth Prout In its beginnings it was called Sisters of the Holy Family and was later included under the Passionist family Due to their separate raisings guided by members of the congregation Maria Goretti and Gemma Galgani are traditionally counted in the ranks of the Passionist Sisters even though they died before they could formally enter the institute Maria was murdered Gemma died of tuberculosis citation needed See also EditChaplet of the Five WoundsReferences Edit Congregation of the Passion C P Congregation of the Passion C P a b c CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA Passionists Newadvent org Retrieved 12 November 2017 a b c Pettinelli Derek Five facts about the Passionists Catholic Digest 19 October 2017 Passionist sign THE PASSIONISTS OF HOLY CROSS PROVINCE a b Congregatio Passionis Jesu Christi Passiochristi org Archived from the original on 5 March 2014 Retrieved 12 November 2017 The Statistics of the Congregation of the Passion of Jesus Christ Passionist International Bulletin Rome Spring 2014 The 2012 General Chapter of the Congregation of the Passion of Jesus Christ Acts of the Chapter Rome 2013 Catholic Encyclopedia Black Scapular of the Passion The Catholic Telegraph Volume 58 Number 9 28 February 1889 Sullivan John Francis The Externals of the Catholic Church P J Kenedy amp sons 1918 p 200 a b Black Scapular Marian Library University of Dayton Scapular of the Passion Black New Catholic Dictionary 1910External links Edit Wikisource has the text of the 1905 New International Encyclopedia article Passionists Wikimedia Commons has media related to Passionists International Website of the Passionists English Spanish Italian Passionists Australia New Zealand and Papua New Guinea Passionists in the Philippines Passionists in Chile Spanish under construction Passionists in France Website of the Sisters of the Cross and Passion Website of the Passionists of St Paul of the Cross Province North America Website of the Passionists of Holy Cross Province North America Passionists in the U K Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Passionists amp oldid 1124013434, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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