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Josephites (Maryland)

The Society of Saint Joseph of the Sacred Heart (Latin: Societas Sodalium Sancti Joseph a Sacra Corde) abbreviated SSJ, also known as the Josephites is a society of apostolic Life of Pontifical Right for men (priests and brothers) headquartered in Baltimore, Maryland. They work specifically among African Americans.

Society of Saint Joseph of the Sacred Heart
Latin: Societas Sodalium Sancti Joseph a Sacra Corde
AbbreviationSSJ
NicknameJosephites
FormationMay 30, 1893; 129 years ago (1893-05-30)
FoundersJohn R. Slattery
Charles Uncles
John A. Deruyter
Dominic Manley
Lambert Welbers
Founded atBaltimore, United States
TypeSociety of Apostolic Life of Pontifical Right for men
Headquarters1130 N. Calvert Street, Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Members
68 members (58 priests) as of 2020
Superior General
John Huston Ricard, SSJ
Ministry
Sacramental, Educational and Pastoral
Parent organization
Catholic Church
Websitejosephites.org
[1]

They were formed in 1893 by a group of Mill Hill priests working with newly-freed Black people emancipated during the American Civil War.[2] The founders included Fr John R. Slattery, who led the group and would become the first Josephite superior general, and one of the nation's first black priests, Fr. Charles Uncles. With permission from the Mill Hill leaders as well as Archbishop of Baltimore Cardinal Gibbons, the group established the Josephites as a mission society independent from Mill Hill, based in America, and dedicated totally to the African-American cause.[3]

Since then, they have served in Black parishes, schools, and other ministries around the country, and played a major role in the Black Catholic Movement of the late 1960s through 1990s, in which Black Catholicism became a more obvious part of the Black church, liturgically and otherwise.[4] The Josephites were instrumental in the restoration of the permanent diaconate in the United States following the Second Vatican Council, and the Josephite bishop John Ricard helped found the National Black Catholic Congress in 1987.[5]

In 2011, the society elected its first African-American superior general, Fr William "Bill" Norvel, who established a vocations hub for the society in Nigeria.[4] The next two superiors since have also been African Americans, but as of September 2021, the society's leadership and new seminarians and priests are almost all Nigerians.

History

Background (1865-1869)

1865 ushered in the period of Southern Reconstruction, during which time, the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, outlawing slavery, was passed.[6] Ten former Confederate states were divided into five military districts. As a condition of readmission to the Union, the former Confederate states were required to ratify the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution, which granted citizenship to all people born in the U.S. regardless of race.[3]

It was against this backdrop that the U.S. Catholic bishops met for their tenth provincial council in Baltimore, Maryland in 1869. The fifth decree of this council exhorted the Council Fathers to provide missions and schools for all black Americans in their dioceses, as education was seen as a critical need by the community.[3]

Subsequently, the Council Fathers wrote a letter requesting clergy for that purpose to Father Herbert Vaughan, superior general of the Saint Joseph's Society for Foreign Missions in Mill Hill, London. He had founded the society in 1866, and in 1869 opened St Joseph's Foreign Missionary College in that area of London. Vaughan later became Archbishop of Westminster and a cardinal.[3]

American beginnings and independence (1870-1893)

Vaughan, with an additional commission for the work from Pope Pius IX, brought a group of his priests to Baltimore in 1871 to serve the freedmen. Bishops around the U.S. had varying constituencies of Black Catholics during this period, and often too few priests, parishes, and programs to serve them. While this didn't necessarily concern individual bishops, the larger bishops' group for the country did take up the cause, establishing a system of missionary work to the black apostolate that was most often filled by groups like the Mill Hill Fathers. As the need arose in a given diocese for black-focused ministry, they would be called in to pastor parishes, staff schools, and establish missionary posts to gain converts.[3]

In 1893, Fr John R. Slattery (a leader within the North American branch of the Mill Hill Fathers) petitioned that the Mill Hill priests in the U.S. reorganize to create a U.S.-based institution. The commitment to the African-American apostolate by the new society was to be the same as before: to teach the faith of the Catholic Church and to promote the Church’s teachings on social justice.[3] The plan was approved, and a small number of the US Mill Hill priests agreed to transfer and were received by Baltimore archbishop James Gibbons to form what would begin as a diocesan institute.

Initial struggles and Fr Uncles (1893-1933)

Among the small founding group of Josephite priests in 1893 was Fr. Charles R. Uncles, the first African-American priest ordained on US soil (and the first trained in the United States, though his initial studies were at a seminary in Quebec).[3]

Fr Uncles would go on to face unremitting opposition both within and outside the order, as ordaining a black priest and placing one were two entirely different matters. Racist laypeople, priests, and bishops alike soured the new venture, ensuring that black priests were not welcome in local parishes and communities—stifling Slattery's dreams of a booming black priestly class. Instead, black priests like Uncles were relegated to preaching tours in the Deep South, subservient parochial roles, and teaching posts at the Josephite seminary in DC. Meanwhile, the white Josephite priests pressed on, expanding their work across the country.[3]

John Henry Dorsey, SSJ, was ordained in the society on June 21, 1902, becoming just the second black priest ordained in America (after Uncles). He would go on to help found the Knights of Peter Claver in 1909 at Most Pure Heart of Mary Catholic Church in Mobile, Alabama. He would die tragically, however, in 1923 after being murdered by a student's father.[3]

Epiphany Apostolic College was opened in 1925 near Newburgh, New York and would serve as the society's minor seminary, educating students through high school and for two years of college studies.[3] That same year, the Josephites would help to found Xavier University of Louisiana, then the nations only Black Catholic university. Fr Edward Brunner, SSJ served as the institution's first and only priest president.[7] The Josephites were elevated to the status of a society of apostolic life of pontifical right in 1932.

On his part (and mostly due to the unrelenting racism he saw in the US Catholic Church), Slattery would eventually lose hope in the mission, in Catholicism, and in Christianity overall—leaving his post, the priesthood and eventually the faith. He then married and became a successful lawyer, leaving his fortune and papers to the New York Public Library upon his death the same year as Dorsey.[3]

Fr Uncles died an outcast within the order in 1933, frustrated by racist circumstances to the point that he no longer considered himself a Josephite at all.[3]

Growth and continued racism (1933-1950)

After the initial experiences with Uncles and a scant few others, subsequent Josephite superior generals were hesitant to accept black candidates to the order at all; they accepted a mulatto here and there, but largely stayed away from the question of black priests even as they continued to work with blacks.[3]

This reticence (and vocational dearth) was noticed by Black Catholics themselves, most notably Thomas Wyatt Turner and his Federated Colored Catholics organization. This pressure would not have much effect for many years, but the issue remained on the table as the Josephites continued to grow in both membership and parochial administration.[3]

Louis Pastorelli, the Josephite's longest-serving superior general, throughout the Interwar Period continued the society's policy of restricting black candidates, but cautiously supported other orders' black priesthood efforts—specifically the Divine Word order's plans for a black seminary in Mississippi, which quickly produced four new, well-received black priests.[3]

As more dioceses and orders began to accept black candidates into their priestly formation programs, the Josephites slowly became more open to receiving black candidates without restriction. During the 1940s, Josephite superior general Edward V Casserly instituted official policies allowing more freely for black applicants. During the same period, the order also added 20 parishes and 20 schools—including the all-black (and all-male) St Augustine High in New Orleans, formerly a diocesan school.[3]

Civil Rights and Black Power (1950-1971)

As the door flew open to black priests in the lead-up to the Civil Rights Movement, the Josephite order faced the possibility of changing color, causing consternation among not a few members. One higher-up from the old guard went so far as to institute an explicitly racist policy to prevent black applications from being assessed at all; Casserly quickly called a meeting of the leadership and quashed the overreach. Even so, Casserly's heavy-handed management style made for an abrupt end in 1948 to his tenure as superior general. His successor, Thomas P. McNamara (and McNamara's right-hand man, future superior general George F. O'Dea), would continue the expansion of Josephite activity and black vocations.[3]

After a few decades of positive signs and progress (including the notable saga of oft-arrested Josephite activist Philip Berrigan), the bloody end to the Civil Rights Movement proper presented a new challenge: black radicalism. The assassination of Martin Luther King Jr brought issues of racism to a head and fostered a newfound commitment to social justice and Black Power among many black clergy and religious. This began in earnest with the convening of the inaugural National Black Catholic Clergy Caucus (NBCCC), held in Detroit in April 1968, shortly after King's assassination and the resultant riots. It was the first-ever meeting of the nation's Black Catholic clergy and produced a statement that in its opening line called the Catholic Church in America "primarily a White, racist institution."[8]

This helped produce calls for more authentic black freedom and expression, as well as black oversight of black parishes and schools, causing tension across the Church—including at St Joseph's Seminary (the Josephite house) in Washington DC. Epiphany, the minor seminary in New York, rapidly lost numbers around the same time, and was merged with another society's minor seminary program in 1970; it would soon close altogether. Black laypeople protested at St Joseph's in summer 1971, and eventually a good number of seminarians would leave or be asked to leave altogether, causing the school to close for studies that same year.[3] (Josephite seminarians, retired Josephites and other priests, and outside renters continue to use the building for lodging, and it also houses the Josephite archives, Pastoral Center, library, and other publicly accessible spaces.)

Some of the demands made by laypeople during the period of rupture were in fact met, including the reestablishment of the permanent diaconate, an act which came largely at the behest of a Josephite priest and with a focus on the African-American community.

After the Black Power crisis, Josephite seminarians began to study at the now-closed Washington Theological Union. The society would later utilize Xavier University of Louisiana—which the Josephites helped to found—as a sort of minor seminary. The society eventually began sending its students successively to the Washington Theological Union, the Dominican House of Studies, Howard University, Catholic University of America, and/or other DC institutions.

Modern era

During the 1980s, the Fr William Norvel served as consultor general for the Josephites and as president of the NBCCC. He is credited with starting the Catholic gospel choir movement in Washington, D.C. and Los Angeles, implementing in a liturgical way some of the calls for black expression that came out of the Detroit meeting.[4] In 1987, the Josephites' Bishop John Ricard founded the National Black Catholic Congress, a revival of the Colored Catholic Congress movement of the late 19th century.[5]

In June 2011, some 130 years after their founding, the Josephites elected Norvel as their first black superior general.[9] Both of the following superior generals have also been black, including the sitting, Bishop Ricard.[3]

Nigeria

Norvel also established a Josephite house of spiritual formation in Nigeria, where he served for five years and which now produces most of the Josephite's vocations; the society's new seminarians and priests have been almost entirely Nigerian for some time. The society currently operates a minor seminary there, and in 2021 received roughly a dozen new students for the school.

Relocation of headquarters

St Joseph's Manor, which had been the residence of the superior general and other administrators, was sold in January 2019. They now reside nearby in a shared residential and office space, which has functioned as the Josephites headquarters since around 2016.[10]

Organization and membership

The society operates 34 parishes across 12 (arch)dioceses, as well as St. Augustine High School in New Orleans, Louisiana, a historically black high school, established by the society with the Archdiocese of New Orleans in 1951.

The headquarters is located in northern Baltimore and their seminarian and retiree residence, St. Joseph Seminary, is in Washington, DC.

In 2012, the society had 40 houses and 88 members, including 76 priests.

In late 2020, Vicar General Fr Thomas Frank reported that the order had 60 members.

The Josephite Harvest (magazine)

The Josephite Harvest is the official magazine of the society, and is the oldest extant Catholic missions magazine in the US. It first began in 1888, published under the name The Colored Harvest, before changing its name in 1960. During the 20th century, The Harvest chronicled the Josephites' efforts to build parishes and schools for African-Americans throughout the nation.[3]

Today, the magazine publishes quarterly in a physical format with a digital version also available.

St Joseph's Seminary

 
St. Joseph Seminary in Washington, D.C.

St Joseph's, the Josephite seminary, is located in Brookland Washington, D.C., It is one of the many vaunted Catholic institutions in the area, known today for its heavy Catholic influence and presence.

While the seminary closed for academic studies in 1971, it continues to house the Josephite seminarians during the school year, as well as retired Josephites (and other) priests and unaffiliated renters year-round.

Archives

Also found in this building are the Josephite archives, widely regarded as some of the most extensive records of African-American history in the entire country. They were most recently managed by Josephite priest, but after his passing were passed on to a lay archivist (who heavily updated their organization and availability for researchers).

Pastoral Center

The Josephite Pastoral Center (JPC}, also located in the seminary, remains one of the few providers of materials meant specifically for African-American Catholic ministry. The shop is open to the public and sells items ranging from calendars (including the annual Josephite African American history calendar) to artwork to books to music. The JPC was also once the main outpost for the distribution of the "Jesus Mafa" art series, which was originally licensed to the Josephites by its creator. The JPC also manages an online store for its merchandise.

Library

The St Joseph Seminary Library is also significant, housing a number of important artifacts and documents related to both African American and African-American Catholic history. Some of these exhibits are open to the public, while others are undeveloped and largely untouched.

Notable members

Superiors general

No. Name Took office Left office Birthplace
1 John R. Slattery
 
1893 1904 New York City
2 Thomas B. Donovan 1904 1908 Kentucky
3 Justin McCarthy 1908 1918 Ireland
4 Louis B. Pastorelli
 
1918 July 1942 Boston, Massachusetts
5 Edward V. Casserly
 
1942 1948 Ireland
6 Thomas P. McNamara 1948 1960 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
7 George F. O'Dea July 1960 October 1970 Brooklyn, New York City
8 Matthew J. O'Rourke
 
July 1971 Bronx, New York City
9 Eugene Patrick McManus 1988 1995
10 Robert Michael Kearns 1995 June 17, 2003 Boston, Massachusetts
11 Edward J. Chiffriller
 
June 17, 2003 June 15, 2011
12 William L. Norvel
 
June 15, 2011 June 19, 2015 Pascagoula, Mississippi
13 Michael Thompson
 
June 19, 2015 August 1, 2019 Port Arthur, Texas
14 Bishop John Ricard August 1, 2019 present Baton Rouge, Louisiana

Prelates from their ranks

Living
Deceased (by year of death)

See also

References

  1. ^ "Society of Saint Joseph of the Sacred Heart (S.S.J.)".
  2. ^ "OUR HISTORY | Society of St. Joseph of the Sacred Heart". Retrieved 2020-09-24.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t J., Ochs, Stephen (1993). Desegregating the altar : the Josephites and the struggle for Black priests, 1871-1960. Louisiana State University Press. ISBN 0-8071-1535-5. OCLC 1179433695.
  4. ^ a b c "Josephites elect first black leader". National Catholic Reporter. 2011-06-23. Retrieved 2021-06-13.
  5. ^ a b Rivera, John (1997-08-29). "National Black Catholic Congress returns to Baltimore Convention, was last here at end of 19th century". Baltimore Sun. Retrieved 2021-06-13.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  6. ^ 13th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution: Abolition of Slavery (1865)
  7. ^ Tinner, Nathaniel (2021-01-01). "The‌ ‌Josephites‌ ‌in‌ ‌the‌ ‌founding‌ ‌years‌ ‌of‌ ‌Xavier‌ ‌University‌ ‌of‌ ‌Louisiana‌ ‌". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  8. ^ Tinner-Williams, Nate (2020-05-30). "Statement of the Black Catholic Clergy Caucus, 1968". Where Peter Is. Retrieved 2020-09-24.
  9. ^ "Catholic News Service". Archived from the original on 2012-07-22. Retrieved 2011-06-24.
  10. ^ Kelly, Jacques (2019-02-02). "Kelly: If a Calvert Street mansion could talk, it wouldn't know where to begin". baltimoresun.com. Retrieved 2021-06-13.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)

External links

  • Official Website
  • Josephite Pastoral Center
  • GCatholic profile

josephites, maryland, society, saint, joseph, sacred, heart, latin, societas, sodalium, sancti, joseph, sacra, corde, abbreviated, also, known, josephites, society, apostolic, life, pontifical, right, priests, brothers, headquartered, baltimore, maryland, they. The Society of Saint Joseph of the Sacred Heart Latin Societas Sodalium Sancti Joseph a Sacra Corde abbreviated SSJ also known as the Josephites is a society of apostolic Life of Pontifical Right for men priests and brothers headquartered in Baltimore Maryland They work specifically among African Americans Society of Saint Joseph of the Sacred HeartLatin Societas Sodalium Sancti Joseph a Sacra CordeAbbreviationSSJNicknameJosephitesFormationMay 30 1893 129 years ago 1893 05 30 FoundersJohn R SlatteryCharles Uncles John A Deruyter Dominic ManleyLambert WelbersFounded atBaltimore United StatesTypeSociety of Apostolic Life of Pontifical Right for menHeadquarters1130 N Calvert Street Baltimore Maryland United StatesMembers68 members 58 priests as of 2020Superior GeneralJohn Huston Ricard SSJMinistrySacramental Educational and PastoralParent organizationCatholic ChurchWebsitejosephites wbr org 1 They were formed in 1893 by a group of Mill Hill priests working with newly freed Black people emancipated during the American Civil War 2 The founders included Fr John R Slattery who led the group and would become the first Josephite superior general and one of the nation s first black priests Fr Charles Uncles With permission from the Mill Hill leaders as well as Archbishop of Baltimore Cardinal Gibbons the group established the Josephites as a mission society independent from Mill Hill based in America and dedicated totally to the African American cause 3 Since then they have served in Black parishes schools and other ministries around the country and played a major role in the Black Catholic Movement of the late 1960s through 1990s in which Black Catholicism became a more obvious part of the Black church liturgically and otherwise 4 The Josephites were instrumental in the restoration of the permanent diaconate in the United States following the Second Vatican Council and the Josephite bishop John Ricard helped found the National Black Catholic Congress in 1987 5 In 2011 the society elected its first African American superior general Fr William Bill Norvel who established a vocations hub for the society in Nigeria 4 The next two superiors since have also been African Americans but as of September 2021 the society s leadership and new seminarians and priests are almost all Nigerians Contents 1 History 1 1 Background 1865 1869 1 2 American beginnings and independence 1870 1893 1 3 Initial struggles and Fr Uncles 1893 1933 1 4 Growth and continued racism 1933 1950 1 5 Civil Rights and Black Power 1950 1971 1 6 Modern era 1 6 1 Nigeria 1 6 2 Relocation of headquarters 2 Organization and membership 3 The Josephite Harvest magazine 4 St Joseph s Seminary 4 1 Archives 4 2 Pastoral Center 4 3 Library 5 Notable members 6 Superiors general 7 Prelates from their ranks 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory EditBackground 1865 1869 Edit 1865 ushered in the period of Southern Reconstruction during which time the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution outlawing slavery was passed 6 Ten former Confederate states were divided into five military districts As a condition of readmission to the Union the former Confederate states were required to ratify the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution which granted citizenship to all people born in the U S regardless of race 3 It was against this backdrop that the U S Catholic bishops met for their tenth provincial council in Baltimore Maryland in 1869 The fifth decree of this council exhorted the Council Fathers to provide missions and schools for all black Americans in their dioceses as education was seen as a critical need by the community 3 Subsequently the Council Fathers wrote a letter requesting clergy for that purpose to Father Herbert Vaughan superior general of the Saint Joseph s Society for Foreign Missions in Mill Hill London He had founded the society in 1866 and in 1869 opened St Joseph s Foreign Missionary College in that area of London Vaughan later became Archbishop of Westminster and a cardinal 3 American beginnings and independence 1870 1893 Edit Vaughan with an additional commission for the work from Pope Pius IX brought a group of his priests to Baltimore in 1871 to serve the freedmen Bishops around the U S had varying constituencies of Black Catholics during this period and often too few priests parishes and programs to serve them While this didn t necessarily concern individual bishops the larger bishops group for the country did take up the cause establishing a system of missionary work to the black apostolate that was most often filled by groups like the Mill Hill Fathers As the need arose in a given diocese for black focused ministry they would be called in to pastor parishes staff schools and establish missionary posts to gain converts 3 In 1893 Fr John R Slattery a leader within the North American branch of the Mill Hill Fathers petitioned that the Mill Hill priests in the U S reorganize to create a U S based institution The commitment to the African American apostolate by the new society was to be the same as before to teach the faith of the Catholic Church and to promote the Church s teachings on social justice 3 The plan was approved and a small number of the US Mill Hill priests agreed to transfer and were received by Baltimore archbishop James Gibbons to form what would begin as a diocesan institute Initial struggles and Fr Uncles 1893 1933 Edit Among the small founding group of Josephite priests in 1893 was Fr Charles R Uncles the first African American priest ordained on US soil and the first trained in the United States though his initial studies were at a seminary in Quebec 3 Fr Uncles would go on to face unremitting opposition both within and outside the order as ordaining a black priest and placing one were two entirely different matters Racist laypeople priests and bishops alike soured the new venture ensuring that black priests were not welcome in local parishes and communities stifling Slattery s dreams of a booming black priestly class Instead black priests like Uncles were relegated to preaching tours in the Deep South subservient parochial roles and teaching posts at the Josephite seminary in DC Meanwhile the white Josephite priests pressed on expanding their work across the country 3 John Henry Dorsey SSJ was ordained in the society on June 21 1902 becoming just the second black priest ordained in America after Uncles He would go on to help found the Knights of Peter Claver in 1909 at Most Pure Heart of Mary Catholic Church in Mobile Alabama He would die tragically however in 1923 after being murdered by a student s father 3 Epiphany Apostolic College was opened in 1925 near Newburgh New York and would serve as the society s minor seminary educating students through high school and for two years of college studies 3 That same year the Josephites would help to found Xavier University of Louisiana then the nations only Black Catholic university Fr Edward Brunner SSJ served as the institution s first and only priest president 7 The Josephites were elevated to the status of a society of apostolic life of pontifical right in 1932 On his part and mostly due to the unrelenting racism he saw in the US Catholic Church Slattery would eventually lose hope in the mission in Catholicism and in Christianity overall leaving his post the priesthood and eventually the faith He then married and became a successful lawyer leaving his fortune and papers to the New York Public Library upon his death the same year as Dorsey 3 Fr Uncles died an outcast within the order in 1933 frustrated by racist circumstances to the point that he no longer considered himself a Josephite at all 3 Growth and continued racism 1933 1950 Edit After the initial experiences with Uncles and a scant few others subsequent Josephite superior generals were hesitant to accept black candidates to the order at all they accepted a mulatto here and there but largely stayed away from the question of black priests even as they continued to work with blacks 3 This reticence and vocational dearth was noticed by Black Catholics themselves most notably Thomas Wyatt Turner and his Federated Colored Catholics organization This pressure would not have much effect for many years but the issue remained on the table as the Josephites continued to grow in both membership and parochial administration 3 Louis Pastorelli the Josephite s longest serving superior general throughout the Interwar Period continued the society s policy of restricting black candidates but cautiously supported other orders black priesthood efforts specifically the Divine Word order s plans for a black seminary in Mississippi which quickly produced four new well received black priests 3 As more dioceses and orders began to accept black candidates into their priestly formation programs the Josephites slowly became more open to receiving black candidates without restriction During the 1940s Josephite superior general Edward V Casserly instituted official policies allowing more freely for black applicants During the same period the order also added 20 parishes and 20 schools including the all black and all male St Augustine High in New Orleans formerly a diocesan school 3 Civil Rights and Black Power 1950 1971 Edit As the door flew open to black priests in the lead up to the Civil Rights Movement the Josephite order faced the possibility of changing color causing consternation among not a few members One higher up from the old guard went so far as to institute an explicitly racist policy to prevent black applications from being assessed at all Casserly quickly called a meeting of the leadership and quashed the overreach Even so Casserly s heavy handed management style made for an abrupt end in 1948 to his tenure as superior general His successor Thomas P McNamara and McNamara s right hand man future superior general George F O Dea would continue the expansion of Josephite activity and black vocations 3 After a few decades of positive signs and progress including the notable saga of oft arrested Josephite activist Philip Berrigan the bloody end to the Civil Rights Movement proper presented a new challenge black radicalism The assassination of Martin Luther King Jr brought issues of racism to a head and fostered a newfound commitment to social justice and Black Power among many black clergy and religious This began in earnest with the convening of the inaugural National Black Catholic Clergy Caucus NBCCC held in Detroit in April 1968 shortly after King s assassination and the resultant riots It was the first ever meeting of the nation s Black Catholic clergy and produced a statement that in its opening line called the Catholic Church in America primarily a White racist institution 8 This helped produce calls for more authentic black freedom and expression as well as black oversight of black parishes and schools causing tension across the Church including at St Joseph s Seminary the Josephite house in Washington DC Epiphany the minor seminary in New York rapidly lost numbers around the same time and was merged with another society s minor seminary program in 1970 it would soon close altogether Black laypeople protested at St Joseph s in summer 1971 and eventually a good number of seminarians would leave or be asked to leave altogether causing the school to close for studies that same year 3 Josephite seminarians retired Josephites and other priests and outside renters continue to use the building for lodging and it also houses the Josephite archives Pastoral Center library and other publicly accessible spaces Some of the demands made by laypeople during the period of rupture were in fact met including the reestablishment of the permanent diaconate an act which came largely at the behest of a Josephite priest and with a focus on the African American community After the Black Power crisis Josephite seminarians began to study at the now closed Washington Theological Union The society would later utilize Xavier University of Louisiana which the Josephites helped to found as a sort of minor seminary The society eventually began sending its students successively to the Washington Theological Union the Dominican House of Studies Howard University Catholic University of America and or other DC institutions Modern era Edit During the 1980s the Fr William Norvel served as consultor general for the Josephites and as president of the NBCCC He is credited with starting the Catholic gospel choir movement in Washington D C and Los Angeles implementing in a liturgical way some of the calls for black expression that came out of the Detroit meeting 4 In 1987 the Josephites Bishop John Ricard founded the National Black Catholic Congress a revival of the Colored Catholic Congress movement of the late 19th century 5 In June 2011 some 130 years after their founding the Josephites elected Norvel as their first black superior general 9 Both of the following superior generals have also been black including the sitting Bishop Ricard 3 Nigeria Edit Norvel also established a Josephite house of spiritual formation in Nigeria where he served for five years and which now produces most of the Josephite s vocations the society s new seminarians and priests have been almost entirely Nigerian for some time The society currently operates a minor seminary there and in 2021 received roughly a dozen new students for the school Relocation of headquarters Edit St Joseph s Manor which had been the residence of the superior general and other administrators was sold in January 2019 They now reside nearby in a shared residential and office space which has functioned as the Josephites headquarters since around 2016 10 Organization and membership EditThe society operates 34 parishes across 12 arch dioceses as well as St Augustine High School in New Orleans Louisiana a historically black high school established by the society with the Archdiocese of New Orleans in 1951 The headquarters is located in northern Baltimore and their seminarian and retiree residence St Joseph Seminary is in Washington DC In 2012 the society had 40 houses and 88 members including 76 priests In late 2020 Vicar General Fr Thomas Frank reported that the order had 60 members The Josephite Harvest magazine EditMain article Josephite Harvest The Josephite Harvest is the official magazine of the society and is the oldest extant Catholic missions magazine in the US It first began in 1888 published under the name The Colored Harvest before changing its name in 1960 During the 20th century The Harvest chronicled the Josephites efforts to build parishes and schools for African Americans throughout the nation 3 Today the magazine publishes quarterly in a physical format with a digital version also available St Joseph s Seminary EditMain article St Joseph s Seminary Washington DC St Joseph Seminary in Washington D C St Joseph s the Josephite seminary is located in Brookland Washington D C It is one of the many vaunted Catholic institutions in the area known today for its heavy Catholic influence and presence While the seminary closed for academic studies in 1971 it continues to house the Josephite seminarians during the school year as well as retired Josephites and other priests and unaffiliated renters year round Archives Edit Also found in this building are the Josephite archives widely regarded as some of the most extensive records of African American history in the entire country They were most recently managed by Josephite priest but after his passing were passed on to a lay archivist who heavily updated their organization and availability for researchers Pastoral Center Edit The Josephite Pastoral Center JPC also located in the seminary remains one of the few providers of materials meant specifically for African American Catholic ministry The shop is open to the public and sells items ranging from calendars including the annual Josephite African American history calendar to artwork to books to music The JPC was also once the main outpost for the distribution of the Jesus Mafa art series which was originally licensed to the Josephites by its creator The JPC also manages an online store for its merchandise Library Edit The St Joseph Seminary Library is also significant housing a number of important artifacts and documents related to both African American and African American Catholic history Some of these exhibits are open to the public while others are undeveloped and largely untouched Notable members EditCharles Uncles first African American Catholic priest ordained on US soil Edward Murphy famous playwright Philip Berrigan anti war activist Eugene Marino first African American archbishop in the Catholic Church Carl Fisher first and only African American Catholic bishop west of Texas John Ricard retired bishop and superior general elected in 2019Superiors general EditNo Name Took office Left office Birthplace1 John R Slattery 1893 1904 New York City2 Thomas B Donovan 1904 1908 Kentucky3 Justin McCarthy 1908 1918 Ireland4 Louis B Pastorelli 1918 July 1942 Boston Massachusetts5 Edward V Casserly 1942 1948 Ireland6 Thomas P McNamara 1948 1960 Philadelphia Pennsylvania7 George F O Dea July 1960 October 1970 Brooklyn New York City8 Matthew J O Rourke July 1971 Bronx New York City9 Eugene Patrick McManus 1988 199510 Robert Michael Kearns 1995 June 17 2003 Boston Massachusetts11 Edward J Chiffriller June 17 2003 June 15 201112 William L Norvel June 15 2011 June 19 2015 Pascagoula Mississippi13 Michael Thompson June 19 2015 August 1 2019 Port Arthur Texas14 Bishop John Ricard August 1 2019 present Baton Rouge LouisianaPrelates from their ranks EditLivingJohn Huston Ricard Bishop emeritus of Pensacola Tallahassee USA Deceased by year of death 1993 Carl Anthony Fisher Auxiliary Bishop of Los Angeles USA 2000 Eugene Antonio Marino Archbishop of Atlanta USA See also EditBlack Catholicism Black Catholic Movement Oblate Sisters of Providence Sisters of the Holy Family Louisiana Society of the Divine Word Institute of Mission Helpers of the Sacred HeartReferences Edit Society of Saint Joseph of the Sacred Heart S S J OUR HISTORY Society of St Joseph of the Sacred Heart Retrieved 2020 09 24 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t J Ochs Stephen 1993 Desegregating the altar the Josephites and the struggle for Black priests 1871 1960 Louisiana State University Press ISBN 0 8071 1535 5 OCLC 1179433695 a b c Josephites elect first black leader National Catholic Reporter 2011 06 23 Retrieved 2021 06 13 a b Rivera John 1997 08 29 National Black Catholic Congress returns to Baltimore Convention was last here at end of 19th century Baltimore Sun Retrieved 2021 06 13 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link 13th Amendment to the U S Constitution Abolition of Slavery 1865 Tinner Nathaniel 2021 01 01 The Josephites in the founding years of Xavier University of Louisiana a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Tinner Williams Nate 2020 05 30 Statement of the Black Catholic Clergy Caucus 1968 Where Peter Is Retrieved 2020 09 24 Catholic News Service Archived from the original on 2012 07 22 Retrieved 2011 06 24 Kelly Jacques 2019 02 02 Kelly If a Calvert Street mansion could talk it wouldn t know where to begin baltimoresun com Retrieved 2021 06 13 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link External links EditOfficial Website Josephite Pastoral Center GCatholic profile Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Josephites Maryland amp oldid 1132115450, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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