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The Dominican Family is
today an 800 years old tree with many robust branches...
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Dominican
Laity
Until
recent times, by a pious belief going back to the fourteenth
century, St. Dominic was credited with organizing
a Third Order of Laity, as if instinctively it seemed desirable
to include the whole People of God in his apostolic intuition.
In the last century Lacordaire wrote in his Life of St. Dominic
(chap. XVI) :
"The militia of
Jesus Christ was the third Order instituted by St. Dominic, or
rather, the third branch of a single Order,
embracing in its wide scope men and women religious and the laity
.... Dominic brought religious life to the family hearth, to the
marriage bed. The world was filled with young girls, widows, married
people, men in every walk of life, who publicly wore the insignia
of a religious Order and bound themselves to its practices in the
privacy of their homes."
The description would be valid for the end of the thirteenth century,
the period to which historians ascribe groups of lay people who
truly could be called Dominicans.
Actually, the Order
of Preachers was linked with the laity from its very inception,
in a quite natural way, by reason of its establishment
in cities. It always made room for them. We find many instances
of this in accounts of the early days of the Order: at Cologne,
for example, where Brother Henry was Prior (The Beginnings, 79
85), or again at Bologna in the neighborhood of the monastery of
St. Agnes. Jordan in one of his letters greets Diana d'Andalo "and
the ladies and friends of the community". 16
Pursuing its apostolic thrust, the Order of Preachers was bound
to encounter the evangelical movement of the laity who, in Italy,
had organized themselves into an Order of Penance. These lay groups,
divided into local fraternities, addressed their spiritual needs
to the new, contemporary mendicant orders. According to their affinities
and the orientation of their spirituality, members would wear a
gray mantle if associated with the Friars Minor, black if they
frequented the Dominicans.
It was not until 1285
that the Master General of the Preachers, Munio of Zamora, invited
the "black" penitents to place
themselves under his jurisdiction. They were given a Rule and a
Dominican director, and confraternities had their own priors. "The
Order wished to take the responsibility for this lay branch so
as to realize the great hope of lay movements, heretofore always
disappointed: evangelical proselytism."17
With this in view the
penitents, who up until then, through humility and as an example,
had followed the life style of repentant sinners
and had devoted themselves to works of charity, were to bear witness
to a love of truth proper to the Order of Preachers in the thirteenth
century. Munio of Zamora's rule makes this clear in unequivocal
terms: "Let them excel in virtue and guard their reputation.
Let them in no way leave themselves open to suspicion of heresy,
but on the contrary be true sons of St. Dominic in the Lord, filled
to the utmost with strong and ardent zeal for Catholic truth, in
ways in keeping with their own life."18
The laity were here
being given an ecclesiastical mission, were being placed at the
service of the preaching of truth "in
accordance with their own life". Their activities would vary
greatly through the centuries; they would be called confraternities,
militia or societies. Some communities would live under a rule
without being bound to enclosure. Such would be the case with the
mystical mantellata, Catherine Benincasa. The Third Order Regulars
would gradually learn how to share in the Dominican grace of preaching
through works of charity and also, in a privileged way, through
teaching.
We have no difficulty
in admitting that, in his lifetime, Dominic could not have foreseen
all the forms of life that would flow from
his intuition in the founding of the Order of Preachers. No ancestor
can imagine his progeny. Dominic's friend Gregory IX, in the Bull
of Canonization for Dominic, indeed foresaw that like the Orders
of Citeaux and Flora under St. Bernard, the Friars Minor and the
Preachers would draw after them "legions of brethren".
Preaching the gospel of Christ, wholly devoted to the Word of God, "Dominic
engendered a great number of sons" (1 Cor 4:15).'9
The fruitfulness of
the grace of preaching gave birth to innumerable branches through
the course of history, all of them dependent,
by reason of their service to the apostolic mission, upon the center,
the Church. With his brothers, his nuns, and the laity, the Dominican
family, whose name is declined in the plural, responds to the broad
invitation of the Apostle: "We ought to support such men,
that we may be fellow workers in the truth" (1 Jn 8).
(Source : Bedouelle, Guy. Saint Dominic. The Grace of the Word.
Ignatius. 1987.)
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