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Young_Thinker
Guest
Usually, but there are also non-religious orders(O.F.S. or S.F.O., C.O., O.C.D.S., etc.).Of course it is easy to tell if he has letters after his name, SJ, OFM, TOR, OP, and so on…
Usually, but there are also non-religious orders(O.F.S. or S.F.O., C.O., O.C.D.S., etc.).Of course it is easy to tell if he has letters after his name, SJ, OFM, TOR, OP, and so on…
Those orders are religious, but they are lay religious.Usually, but there are also non-religious orders(O.F.S. or S.F.O., C.O., O.C.D.S., etc.).
Yes.Those orders are religious, but they are lay religious.
Priests, by definition aren’t laymen, and therefore would not be part of those orders, at least as I understand it.Yes.
Thank you; forgive me for writing that confusingly. However, with the exception of, say, the Oratorians(who, I believe, are technically an institute of apostolic life), secular orders are normally open to laymen and the ordained. For instance, there have been a no. of Popes who were Secular Franciscans.Priests, by definition aren’t laymen, and therefore would not be part of those orders, at least as I understand it.
Forgive me if I have gotten this wrong. I am new to Catholicism, and lets just say it is much more nuanced than my previous faith traditionsThank you; forgive me for writing that confusingly. However, with the exception of, say, the Oratorians, secular orders are always open to laymen as well.
Actually, no, They are secular institutes, or secular affiliates of religious institutes. Secular (diocesan) priests can be members of secular institutes, and frequently are. This is not the same as belonging to a religious institute (an order, congregation or federation/confederation) because no public vows are taken.Those orders are religious, but they are lay religious.
It is all right, so I am (I just happen to read obsessively).Forgive me if I have gotten this wrong. I am new to Catholicism, and lets just say it is much more nuanced than my previous faith traditions
Lumen Gentium has a chapter each on clergy, lay, and religious, if you haven’t read it alreadyIt is all right, so I am (I just happen to read obsessively).
Thank you, Mr. Betts. Currently, I am reading a fascinating book, The Big Book of Women Saints by Sarah Gellack.Lumen Gentium has a chapter each on clergy, lay, and religious, if you haven’t read it already
The other way around. They are secular, but not lay. They brothers and sisters in secular orders can be lay, deacons, priests, and bishops.Those orders are religious, but they are lay religious.
Not all of them. Some are canonical order, even though they are secular and they make public profession of obedience.Actually, no, They are secular institutes, or secular affiliates of religious institutes. Secular (diocesan) priests can be members of secular institutes, and frequently are. This is not the same as belonging to a religious institute (an order, congregation or federation/confederation) because no public vows are taken.
Not true at all.I don’t get it. Being called to a vocation means forgoing any other vocation.
Thank you for the explanation, though I am still trying to figure it out.The other way around. They are secular, but not lay. They brothers and sisters in secular orders can be lay, deacons, priests, and bishops.
Pope Leo XIII, Pius X, Pius XII, John XXIII were Secular Franciscans. There are true Franciscans, but they are secular. However, they are not lay, because they are clerics.
Paul VI was a Secular Dominican. He was a true Dominican, but not a lay man. However, Martin De Porres, Rose of Lima and Catherine of Siena were also Secular Dominicans, but they were lay, because they were not ordained.
Secular means not a member of a religious community. Lay means not ordained.
Secular Orders cannot be lay, unless they limit admission to lay people. All secular orders admit clerics.
Among religious there are some religious orders that are lay, but not secular. The Capuchin Franciscans, the Franciscans of the Renewal, own community Franciscans Brothers of Penance. We all have priests, but they are kept in a minority. By controlling the number of men that we allow to be ordained and keeping the number of the lay brothers higher, we can retain our lay status in the Church. But we are not secular. We are consecrated religious in Solemn Vows. I believe that the Dominicans are going in the same direction. I have no formal evidence of that, except that their general council recently changed all of their titles from Father to Brother. We did that in my community too. Everyone is now Brother. You don’t now if any of us are priests until you see one of our brothers presiding at mass. The idea is to reinforce upon the laity the value of religious life and to avoid taking away from the religius life by confussing it with the priesthood. Because the priesthood is accidental to most religious communities, except those that were founded as communities of priests.
The Secular Orders were founded as communities of seculars, but these include ordained men. If you see a priest named Br. John Doe, OSF, he is a Franciscan religoius. If you meet Fr. John Doe, SFO, he is a Secular Franciscan.
Fraternally,
Br. JR, OSF![]()
I hate to confuse you more I’m afraid it can’t be helped. A secular institute and a secular order are not the same thing. Memebers of a secular institute can make private vows, usually live together, and united for the purpose of a specific mission or ministry. They are not canonical orders. They can be either lay or clerical. For example, the FSSP is a secular clerical institute. The SSPX also. The Maryknoll, the Daughters of Charity, the Society of Christ the King are a secular clerical institute. Secular Institutes are only for celibate men and women.Thank you for the explanation, though I am still trying to figure it out.I am attracted to Franciscan spirituality, although I don’t feel the call to religious life. The distinction between religious orders and secular institutes are still somewhat of a mystery to me, but I am trying to read and learn more.