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Canons Regular of the Order of the Holy Cross

The Crosiers, formally known as the Canons Regular of the Order of the Holy Cross (Latin: Canonici Regulares Ordinis Sanctae Crucis), abbreviated OSC, is a Catholic religious order of canons regular of Pontifical Right for men.[3][4] It is one of the Church's oldest religious orders, and membership consists of priests and brothers who live together according to the Rule of St. Augustine.

Canons Regular of the Order of the Holy Cross
Latin: Canonici Regulares Ordinis Sanctae Crucis
Clairlieu convent in Huy, Belgium
AbbreviationOSC
NicknameCrosiers
FormationSept. 14, 1211; 811 years ago (Sept. 14, 1211)
FoundersTheodore De Celles]] and Dom Tello
Founded atClairlieu, Belgium
TypeReligious order of canons regular of pontifical right (for Men)
HeadquartersVia del Velabro 19, Rome, Italy
Membership
347 members (includes 227 priests) as of 2020
Master General
Laurentius Tarpin, OSC[1]
Patron saint
Saint Odilia of Cologne
Countries present
Websitewww.crosier.org/index.php/en/
[2]

Tradition

The Crosiers were founded by five men attached to the household of the prince-bishop of Liege, Rudolf of Zähringen, who accompanied the Emperor Frederick Barbarossa on the Third Crusade (1189–1191). Upon their return, the five, led by Theodorus de Cellis (1166–1236),[5] sought a new way of life, and shortly before his death, their bishop appointed them to be canons of his St. Lambert's Cathedral, Liège.

After efforts to renew the life and practice of the college of canons to which they belonged, the five withdrew from Liège and moved up the Meuse River to a place called Clairlieu, outside the city of Huy, and began a way of life more in keeping with their ideals. This settlement of the five at Huy was the beginning of their Order, and the house and small church dedicated to Saint Theobald that they established there became the Order's motherhouse. Pope Innocent III verbally approved their Order on the feast day of the Finding of the Holy Cross, 3 May 1210, and Pope Innocent IV granted them full and final approval on 3 May 1248 the Feast of the Finding of the Holy Cross.

History

 

In 1410, the Crosiers' general chapter ordered the destruction of its records and decisions from the time of its foundation. The reason for this radical act is recorded to have been a thorough reformation of some sort, but it left the Order's modern historians with only fragments and clues to their Order's first two centuries, and the tradition summarized above.

The principal source of information about the origin of the order is in the Chronicon Cruciferorum of Henricus Russelius, Prior of Suxy.[6] Their own sources, and mention of them in non-Crosier sources, usually call them "the Brethren of the Holy Cross," and the French and English words used for them, Croisiers and Crosiers, are derived from the French "croisé",[7] one of the words used for a crusader, and meaning "marked with a cross."

Only one of their five founders for whom they have a name is the group's leader, and that only in its Latin form, Theodoricus (or Diederick)[6] de Cellis, which first appears in a short history of the Order published in 1636. While Rusellius does not mention Theodore's parents, there are biographies from the 17th century that say he was the son of Walter de Beaufort and Oda de Celles, guardians of the abbatial church of Celles near Dinant during the latter half of the 12th century.[6]

There is no record of the presence of the Crosiers at Huy until the 1240s, and only in 1322 did Clairlieu become the site of a magnificent church dedicated to the Holy Cross instead of the small chapel of St. Theobald.

The new institution soon extended to France, the Netherlands, Germany, and also to England.[8] Because they were established in the early 13th century, they were contemporaries of the Dominicans and Franciscans, they were frequently misidentified as friars and were often confused with other religious orders known as Crosiers who identified themselves with the Holy Cross. So, for example, there was a very old tradition that Bishop Albert of Prague took several Crosiers with him to Livonia, but these were in fact members of the Bohemian order of the Holy Cross. In England, too, they and an Italian order of the Holy Cross were both identified as Crutched Friars, and so the location of their houses and their activities are often mistaken for each other.[citation needed]

One tradition claims that Theodorus de Cellis assisted St. Dominic in his preaching to the Albigenses of southern France;[8] a Crosier presence in that area is reliably recorded from early in their history. A similar tradition places Crosiers in the train of the French king St. Louis IX of France in 1248 during his crusade; he did enable the Crosiers to build their Paris monastery in 1254.[8]

 
Crosiers from Europe with Pope Pius XII during an audience in Vatican City

The Order flourished in the fifteenth and seventeenth centuries, and at its greatest extent had about ninety houses scattered across northern Europe. But those in England and in parts of the Netherlands and Germany were suppressed during the Protestant Reformation, and almost all of those that survived, notably in France and the Southern Netherlands, including the ancient motherhouse at Huy, were suppressed in the dissolution of monasteries and convents after the French Revolution.[9] In 1794, the area west of the Rhine river fell to France. Along with other abbeys in French controlled areas, the Crosier monasteries were abolished and the monks were forced to leave.[10]

By 1840, only two Crosier houses remained, both in North Brabant, the Netherlands: that of St. Agatha, outside Cuijk, and that in Uden. They seemed likewise doomed to extinction by the decree of King William I of the Netherlands, which forbade religious houses in his realm to admit novices. When King William II lifted his father's ban on 14 September 1840, only four elderly Crosiers remained: the youngest around sixty and the oldest, Father William Kantor, the only Crosier able to remember his Order as it had been before the Revolution. Thereafter the Order slowly began to recover. In second half of the 19th century, the Crosiers returned to their Belgian birthplace, and even made an effort to transplant the Order outside Europe to the United States when their Master General sent some members to Bay Settlement, Wisconsin, in 1857. That attempt failed, however, and it was not until the first decades of the 20th century that the Crosiers were able to establish themselves outside Europe, in the U.S., Brazil, Indonesia, and the Congo. There are still Crosiers in all these places, and the Order presently numbers about four hundred men.

In the United States today, the Crosiers have a conventual priory in Phoenix, Arizona and a filial priory in Onamia, Minnesota. In 2017, these two chapters of the order filed for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy after agreeing to pay $25.5 million in damages to people who were sexually abused by members of the order.[11][12][13]

Crosier Father Tom Enneking was elected in 2018 as the conventual provincial of the Crosiers in the United States.

Philosophy

 
Crosier Fathers from the Netherlands, in Campo Belo, Minas Gerais, Brazil

The Crosiers are an order of Canons Regular. The membership consists of priests and brothers, all of whom live together according to the Rule of St. Augustine.[7] Their way of life consists of three parts: life in a community setting, daily communal celebration of the Church's liturgy, and some form of active ministry. This ministry takes the form of preaching, directing retreats, parish work, education, prison ministry, immigration services and spiritual direction.

The primary feast of the Crosiers, the Exaltation of the Cross, reflects a spirituality focused on the triumphal cross of Christ.[7] Crosiers believe the resurrection of Jesus guarantees that in suffering and pain, there is hope and healing. Because of this, Crosiers emphasize the glorious, or triumphant, cross.

The Crosier habit is also canonical in form. They wear a white soutane or tunic, and over it a black pendant sash, a black scapular and an elbow-length black cape called a mozzetta. Unlike the mozzetta worn by diocesan canons, that of the Crosiers is left unbuttoned to reveal the cross on their scapular, which has the form of a Maltese cross with a red upright and white crosspiece.

The members of the Order usually reside in houses called priories, so called because they are under the governance and direction of a prior whom the members elect. The Order is divided into districts called provinces, which are under the governance and direction of a prior provincial, who is elected by the provincial chapter, the formal assembly of delegates from the priories in the province who have been elected by the members of these houses. At the time of this writing, the Order has provinces in Europe, the U.S., Indonesia, and Brazil. Two other parts of the Order, in the Congo and Irian Jaya (formerly the western part of the island of New Guinea) hold the status of "regions," i.e., have a certain independence from the provinces that supervise them, but have not yet achieved the status of provinces. The entire Order is under the governance and direction of its Master General, who is elected by the general chapter, the formal assembly of delegates from the Order's provinces and regions who have been elected by their members. Priors, priors provincial, and masters general of the Order are all elected for specific terms.

Catholic men who wish to enter the Order undergo a period of consideration and review, after which they may be accepted for a year of novitiate. Upon conclusion of his novitiate, a Crosier is admitted to a three-year period of temporary vows. Thereafter, a second period of temporary vows may follow or immediate admission to solemn profession, viz., vows taken for life.

The Crosiers venerate Odilia of Cologne, one of the martyr companions of St. Ursula, as their patroness. She is said to have appeared to a lay brother of the Order, John Novelan, in the Paris house in 1287 and to have instructed him to go to Cologne and exhume her relics from under a pear tree in the garden of one Arnulf, a prominent burger of that city. After some disbelief and resistance on the part of his superiors, Brother John fulfilled the saint's directions and brought her relics to the motherhouse at Huy on 18 July. The saint soon acquired a reputation as a miracle-worker, and continues to enjoy the veneration of both Crosiers and those outside the Order. There are always a number of pilgrims who come to various houses and churches of the Order on her feast day to ask for intercession, especially against blindness and diseases of the eyes. In response to requests, the Crosiers send small vials of water blessed with her relics all over the world. The National Shrine of Saint Odilia is located in Onamia, Minnesota.

In 2010, the Crosiers celebrated 800 years since their founding with Jubilee celebrations at St. Agatha Monastery near Cuijk, the Netherlands, where the Crosiers have lived continuously since 1371, as well as in the United States, Rome, Indonesia, Brazil and the Congo.

Crosier monasteries

See also

References

  1. ^ "Crosier Order elected Master General".
  2. ^ "Canons Regular of the Order of the Holy Cross (Institute of Consecrated Life – Men) [Catholic-Hierarchy]".
  3. ^ "Canons Regular of the Order of the Holy Cross (O.S.C.) Crosiers" GCatholic.org. Gabriel Chow. Retrieved 29 February 2016
  4. ^ "Canons Regular of the Order of the Holy Cross – Crosier Fathers (Institute of Consecrated Life)" Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved 29 February 2016
  5. ^ gerestaureerd_ 1_203419 "Klooster Ter Apel wordt gerestaureerd". Reformatorisch Dagblad. 20 February 2007. Retrieved 6 October 2010. {{cite news}}: Check |url= value (help)
  6. ^ a b c (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 August 2014. Retrieved 17 June 2013.
  7. ^ a b c Crosier Fathers and Brothers
  8. ^ a b c Yzermans, Henricus. "The Crosiers." The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 4. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1908. 17 Jun. 2013
  9. ^ See 1° R.P. EMILE FONTAINE O.S.C.translated by Michael Cotone O.S.C.in " Jacques Dubois, Crozier Prior General at Clairlieu 1778-1796" edited by Crozier Jubilee Publication 1996-ISBN 978-0-9799986-1-4. 2° FREDDY VAN DAELE writer-publisher in " Huy, 1795. Le Retour de l'Emigré" published in Hosdent-sur-Mehaigne in 2013 and relating that last General's trial by the Revolutionary Court.
  10. ^ Paul Fabianek: Following the Secularization of Cloisters in the Rhineland – Including the Schwarzenbroich Cloister and Kornelimünster, 2012, Verlag BoD, ISBN 978-3-8482-1795-3
  11. ^ "Decades after abuse, Crosiers agree to $25.5 million settlement with survivors, file bankruptcy". Star Tribune.
  12. ^ . Archived from the original on 14 August 2019. Retrieved 14 August 2019.
  13. ^ "Case number: 4:17-bk-41681 – Crosier Fathers and Brothers Province, Inc. – Minnesota Bankruptcy Court".
  • Father Michael Cotone, o.s.c., quondam archivist, historian, and translator for the U.S. Crosiers; August 2008
  • The Crosier Journey, 2009 Crosier Fathers and Brothers Province, Inc.

External links

  • Official website

canons, regular, order, holy, cross, similarly, named, catholic, orders, crosiers, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, . For similarly named Catholic orders see Crosiers 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 Canons Regular of the Order of the Holy Cross news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Crosiers formally known as the Canons Regular of the Order of the Holy Cross Latin Canonici Regulares Ordinis Sanctae Crucis abbreviated OSC is a Catholic religious order of canons regular of Pontifical Right for men 3 4 It is one of the Church s oldest religious orders and membership consists of priests and brothers who live together according to the Rule of St Augustine Canons Regular of the Order of the Holy CrossLatin Canonici Regulares Ordinis Sanctae CrucisClairlieu convent in Huy BelgiumAbbreviationOSCNicknameCrosiersFormationSept 14 1211 811 years ago Sept 14 1211 FoundersTheodore De Celles and Dom TelloFounded atClairlieu BelgiumTypeReligious order of canons regular of pontifical right for Men HeadquartersVia del Velabro 19 Rome ItalyMembership347 members includes 227 priests as of 2020Master GeneralLaurentius Tarpin OSC 1 Patron saintSaint Odilia of CologneCountries presentAustria Belgium Brazil Congo Germany Indonesia Netherlands United StatesWebsitewww wbr crosier wbr org wbr index wbr php wbr en wbr 2 Contents 1 Tradition 2 History 3 Philosophy 4 Crosier monasteries 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksTradition EditThe Crosiers were founded by five men attached to the household of the prince bishop of Liege Rudolf of Zahringen who accompanied the Emperor Frederick Barbarossa on the Third Crusade 1189 1191 Upon their return the five led by Theodorus de Cellis 1166 1236 5 sought a new way of life and shortly before his death their bishop appointed them to be canons of his St Lambert s Cathedral Liege After efforts to renew the life and practice of the college of canons to which they belonged the five withdrew from Liege and moved up the Meuse River to a place called Clairlieu outside the city of Huy and began a way of life more in keeping with their ideals This settlement of the five at Huy was the beginning of their Order and the house and small church dedicated to Saint Theobald that they established there became the Order s motherhouse Pope Innocent III verbally approved their Order on the feast day of the Finding of the Holy Cross 3 May 1210 and Pope Innocent IV granted them full and final approval on 3 May 1248 the Feast of the Finding of the Holy Cross History Edit In 1410 the Crosiers general chapter ordered the destruction of its records and decisions from the time of its foundation The reason for this radical act is recorded to have been a thorough reformation of some sort but it left the Order s modern historians with only fragments and clues to their Order s first two centuries and the tradition summarized above The principal source of information about the origin of the order is in the Chronicon Cruciferorum of Henricus Russelius Prior of Suxy 6 Their own sources and mention of them in non Crosier sources usually call them the Brethren of the Holy Cross and the French and English words used for them Croisiers and Crosiers are derived from the French croise 7 one of the words used for a crusader and meaning marked with a cross Only one of their five founders for whom they have a name is the group s leader and that only in its Latin form Theodoricus or Diederick 6 de Cellis which first appears in a short history of the Order published in 1636 While Rusellius does not mention Theodore s parents there are biographies from the 17th century that say he was the son of Walter de Beaufort and Oda de Celles guardians of the abbatial church of Celles near Dinant during the latter half of the 12th century 6 There is no record of the presence of the Crosiers at Huy until the 1240s and only in 1322 did Clairlieu become the site of a magnificent church dedicated to the Holy Cross instead of the small chapel of St Theobald The new institution soon extended to France the Netherlands Germany and also to England 8 Because they were established in the early 13th century they were contemporaries of the Dominicans and Franciscans they were frequently misidentified as friars and were often confused with other religious orders known as Crosiers who identified themselves with the Holy Cross So for example there was a very old tradition that Bishop Albert of Prague took several Crosiers with him to Livonia but these were in fact members of the Bohemian order of the Holy Cross In England too they and an Italian order of the Holy Cross were both identified as Crutched Friars and so the location of their houses and their activities are often mistaken for each other citation needed One tradition claims that Theodorus de Cellis assisted St Dominic in his preaching to the Albigenses of southern France 8 a Crosier presence in that area is reliably recorded from early in their history A similar tradition places Crosiers in the train of the French king St Louis IX of France in 1248 during his crusade he did enable the Crosiers to build their Paris monastery in 1254 8 Crosiers from Europe with Pope Pius XII during an audience in Vatican City The Order flourished in the fifteenth and seventeenth centuries and at its greatest extent had about ninety houses scattered across northern Europe But those in England and in parts of the Netherlands and Germany were suppressed during the Protestant Reformation and almost all of those that survived notably in France and the Southern Netherlands including the ancient motherhouse at Huy were suppressed in the dissolution of monasteries and convents after the French Revolution 9 In 1794 the area west of the Rhine river fell to France Along with other abbeys in French controlled areas the Crosier monasteries were abolished and the monks were forced to leave 10 By 1840 only two Crosier houses remained both in North Brabant the Netherlands that of St Agatha outside Cuijk and that in Uden They seemed likewise doomed to extinction by the decree of King William I of the Netherlands which forbade religious houses in his realm to admit novices When King William II lifted his father s ban on 14 September 1840 only four elderly Crosiers remained the youngest around sixty and the oldest Father William Kantor the only Crosier able to remember his Order as it had been before the Revolution Thereafter the Order slowly began to recover In second half of the 19th century the Crosiers returned to their Belgian birthplace and even made an effort to transplant the Order outside Europe to the United States when their Master General sent some members to Bay Settlement Wisconsin in 1857 That attempt failed however and it was not until the first decades of the 20th century that the Crosiers were able to establish themselves outside Europe in the U S Brazil Indonesia and the Congo There are still Crosiers in all these places and the Order presently numbers about four hundred men In the United States today the Crosiers have a conventual priory in Phoenix Arizona and a filial priory in Onamia Minnesota In 2017 these two chapters of the order filed for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy after agreeing to pay 25 5 million in damages to people who were sexually abused by members of the order 11 12 13 Crosier Father Tom Enneking was elected in 2018 as the conventual provincial of the Crosiers in the United States Philosophy Edit Crosier Fathers from the Netherlands in Campo Belo Minas Gerais Brazil The Crosiers are an order of Canons Regular The membership consists of priests and brothers all of whom live together according to the Rule of St Augustine 7 Their way of life consists of three parts life in a community setting daily communal celebration of the Church s liturgy and some form of active ministry This ministry takes the form of preaching directing retreats parish work education prison ministry immigration services and spiritual direction The primary feast of the Crosiers the Exaltation of the Cross reflects a spirituality focused on the triumphal cross of Christ 7 Crosiers believe the resurrection of Jesus guarantees that in suffering and pain there is hope and healing Because of this Crosiers emphasize the glorious or triumphant cross The Crosier habit is also canonical in form They wear a white soutane or tunic and over it a black pendant sash a black scapular and an elbow length black cape called a mozzetta Unlike the mozzetta worn by diocesan canons that of the Crosiers is left unbuttoned to reveal the cross on their scapular which has the form of a Maltese cross with a red upright and white crosspiece The members of the Order usually reside in houses called priories so called because they are under the governance and direction of a prior whom the members elect The Order is divided into districts called provinces which are under the governance and direction of a prior provincial who is elected by the provincial chapter the formal assembly of delegates from the priories in the province who have been elected by the members of these houses At the time of this writing the Order has provinces in Europe the U S Indonesia and Brazil Two other parts of the Order in the Congo and Irian Jaya formerly the western part of the island of New Guinea hold the status of regions i e have a certain independence from the provinces that supervise them but have not yet achieved the status of provinces The entire Order is under the governance and direction of its Master General who is elected by the general chapter the formal assembly of delegates from the Order s provinces and regions who have been elected by their members Priors priors provincial and masters general of the Order are all elected for specific terms Catholic men who wish to enter the Order undergo a period of consideration and review after which they may be accepted for a year of novitiate Upon conclusion of his novitiate a Crosier is admitted to a three year period of temporary vows Thereafter a second period of temporary vows may follow or immediate admission to solemn profession viz vows taken for life The Crosiers venerate Odilia of Cologne one of the martyr companions of St Ursula as their patroness She is said to have appeared to a lay brother of the Order John Novelan in the Paris house in 1287 and to have instructed him to go to Cologne and exhume her relics from under a pear tree in the garden of one Arnulf a prominent burger of that city After some disbelief and resistance on the part of his superiors Brother John fulfilled the saint s directions and brought her relics to the motherhouse at Huy on 18 July The saint soon acquired a reputation as a miracle worker and continues to enjoy the veneration of both Crosiers and those outside the Order There are always a number of pilgrims who come to various houses and churches of the Order on her feast day to ask for intercession especially against blindness and diseases of the eyes In response to requests the Crosiers send small vials of water blessed with her relics all over the world The National Shrine of Saint Odilia is located in Onamia Minnesota In 2010 the Crosiers celebrated 800 years since their founding with Jubilee celebrations at St Agatha Monastery near Cuijk the Netherlands where the Crosiers have lived continuously since 1371 as well as in the United States Rome Indonesia Brazil and the Congo Crosier monasteries EditCrosier Monastery Maastricht Ter Apel Monastery Groningen the Netherlands See also EditCanons Regular of the Holy Cross of CoimbraReferences Edit Crosier Order elected Master General Canons Regular of the Order of the Holy Cross Institute of Consecrated Life Men Catholic Hierarchy Canons Regular of the Order of the Holy Cross O S C Crosiers GCatholic org Gabriel Chow Retrieved 29 February 2016 Canons Regular of the Order of the Holy Cross Crosier Fathers Institute of Consecrated Life Catholic Hierarchy org David M Cheney Retrieved 29 February 2016 gerestaureerd 1 203419 Klooster Ter Apel wordt gerestaureerd Reformatorisch Dagblad 20 February 2007 Retrieved 6 October 2010 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a Check url value help a b c Vinken O S C M The Spirituality of the Crosier Fathers translated by Bernard Van Gils O S C Our Lady of the Lakes Seminary Press Syracuse Indiana 1958 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 1 August 2014 Retrieved 17 June 2013 a b c Crosier Fathers and Brothers a b c Yzermans Henricus The Crosiers The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 4 New York Robert Appleton Company 1908 17 Jun 2013 See 1 R P EMILE FONTAINE O S C translated by Michael Cotone O S C in Jacques Dubois Crozier Prior General at Clairlieu 1778 1796 edited by Crozier Jubilee Publication 1996 ISBN 978 0 9799986 1 4 2 FREDDY VAN DAELE writer publisher in Huy 1795 Le Retour de l Emigre published in Hosdent sur Mehaigne in 2013 and relating that last General s trial by the Revolutionary Court Paul Fabianek Following the Secularization of Cloisters in the Rhineland Including the Schwarzenbroich Cloister and Kornelimunster 2012 Verlag BoD ISBN 978 3 8482 1795 3 Decades after abuse Crosiers agree to 25 5 million settlement with survivors file bankruptcy Star Tribune Crosier Fathers and Brothers Crosiers emerge from Chapter 11 bankruptcy as court confirms reorganization plan Archived from the original on 14 August 2019 Retrieved 14 August 2019 Case number 4 17 bk 41681 Crosier Fathers and Brothers Province Inc Minnesota Bankruptcy Court Father Michael Cotone o s c quondam archivist historian and translator for the U S Crosiers August 2008 The Crosier Journey 2009 Crosier Fathers and Brothers Province Inc External links EditOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Canons Regular of the Order of the Holy Cross amp oldid 1124101610, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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