Monks and lay brothers

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I am struggling to find information on monks and lay brothers, I am looking to this as a possible life style. I am trying to learn as much as I can about each one, what they do, how they are similar and how they are different. Can you help me? any and all information welcome.

God bless.
 
Lay brother is a canonical term used for every male religious who is not ordained. A lay brother can be a monk, a friar, or belong to a congregation. Lay brothers all make vows of obedience, poverty and chastity. Normally, people simply call us brother, though the proper term is lay brother, because the ordained members of the community are clerical brothers.

Lay brothers engage in different ministries, depending on the charism of our community. The formation is different also. For example, I work in Respect Life Ministry. I give talks, preach retreats, do counseling, train counselors, teach priests what to do and say in the confessional when someone comes in with a life issue (abortion or euthanasia), I teach courses on the Gospel of Life to seminarians, lay people, religious, priests, deacons and catechists. I travel from parish to parish giving talks at masses to different people on the Gospel of Life. I raise funds for the ministry. Sometimes I babysit with the children of new parents who don’t have enough money to pay for childcare. This allows them to work or go to classes that we provide at our pregnancy centers. I also teach theology to seminarians, youth and religious.

Formation of a brother has two dimensions. The first part is to prepare you to be a religious. This is typical of all religious communities. You don’t join religious life to do a particular ministry. You can do ministry without being a religious. The idea is to prepare yourself to consecrate your life to Christ. You prepare yourself to offer your total obedience to God’s will by vowing obedience to the rule of your community and to your superior. During the years of formation you prepare yourself to consecrate your masculinity to Christ by surrendering your right to be a father to become a brother to every member of the Church. You become a brother as Christ was the first-born of many brothers and sisters. This is the vow of chastity. Finally, you give up ownership of all material things to focus completely on Christ and to be like him.

Normally formation has several stages: aspirant, postulant, novice, simple profession and solemn profession. We’re talking anywhere from 6 to 10 years of formation. During that time your study philosophy, theology, liturgy, scripture, the rule or constitutions of your community, its history, Church history, mysticism, prayer and you also work on your education to prepare for whatever ministry you will be doing. If you’re going to be a teacher, you go to teachers’ college. If you’re going to be a cook, you learn to cook. If you’re going into pastoral care you study theology. For example, my community wanted me to work in the area of Life Issues. I first went on to get a Doctorate in Theology and then was sent to school for a PhD in psychology. Your academic education is going to depend on the ministry that you are called to do.

Some communities have a very specific ministry. For example, the Christian Brothers are completely dedicated to education. Every brother gets at least a Master’s degree in some field related to education. Other religious communities do not have a specific ministry. They have diverse ministries. The brothers are trained according to their gifts and the needs of the community. Monastic brothers usually learn a trade. Their ministry is to support their community. They learn something technical such as baking, making wine, farming, art, communications and media.

The most important part of a brother’s life is not what we do, but who we are. We are brothers to each other and to the Church. Our life is centered on prayer. Several times a day, we stop what we’re doing and come together to pray the Liturgy of the Hours or for silent prayer. We spend time before the Blessed Sacrament and in lectio divina. Second, our community life is important to us. Therefore, no ministry is ever allowed to come between the brother and his community. Our community life is a foretaste of life in the Kingdom of God which awaits us. We come together every day for community recreation and community meals. We share the responsibilities of maintaining our houses, just like any other family. Loving our brothers is the most important ministry for us. Anything that we do outside of the house is an extension of our love for our brothers. We grow very close to each other and we watch over each other to make sure that every brother is growing spiritually.

When I say every brother, this means that the lay brother not only shares his life with other lay brothers, but also with the clerical brothers in his community. All the brothers make up the family. Some lay brothers serve their communities as the superior of the house, vocation director, formation director, spiritual director. It does not make a difference that he is a lay brother. Because he is a member of the religious community he has an obligation to take his turn serving his community. Sometimes, serving means governing. In my community we have superiors who are clerical brothers (priests) and others who are lay brothers. It makes no difference; we love them and obey them with the same respect as we would our Holy Father Francis. The superior is the successor of St. Francis.

There’s a lot more. But I can’t fit it into this post. You can feel free to go to our webpage or PM me.

Fraternally,

Br. JR, OSF 🙂
 
I am struggling to find information on monks and lay brothers, I am looking to this as a possible life style. I am trying to learn as much as I can about each one, what they do, how they are similar and how they are different. Can you help me? any and all information welcome.

God bless.
Try ‘Googling’ PARKMINSTER
 
The latest 31st annual edition of the Guide to Religious Ministries for Catholic Men and Women has just come out. It is only $10.00 from Catholic News Publishing Co

914-632-1220

email: info@religiousministries.com,

…and probably available through their website www.religiousministries.com, on which you can also search, using ‘brother’ as a search term–you can also search by location.

The book is a very good deal for the money, and is updated annually. In the front section, you will find promotional pages, which often also have postcards you can fill out and send in–some are prepaid, and you can get some postcard stamps for the others. As a warning, you will be swamped with information.

There is a huge need for religious brothers in the US–they have been harder hit than the religious sisters. There are institutes for brothers alone, or combined with priests–the latter includes the Jesuits, the Maryknoll Missioners and all of the Benedictines and Dominicans, as well as the Franciscans. Most orders of priests include brothers as well. The old social distinctions between the two are, by and large gone.
 
The latest 31st annual edition of the Guide to Religious Ministries for Catholic Men and Women has just come out. It is only $10.00 from Catholic News Publishing Co

914-632-1220

email: info@religiousministries.com,

…and probably available through their website www.religiousministries.com, on which you can also search, using ‘brother’ as a search term–you can also search by location.

The book is a very good deal for the money, and is updated annually. In the front section, you will find promotional pages, which often also have postcards you can fill out and send in–some are prepaid, and you can get some postcard stamps for the others. As a warning, you will be swamped with information.

There is a huge need for religious brothers in the US–they have been harder hit than the religious sisters. There are institutes for brothers alone, or combined with priests–the latter includes the Jesuits, the Maryknoll Missioners and all of the Benedictines and Dominicans, as well as the Franciscans. Most orders of priests include brothers as well. The old social distinctions between the two are, by and large gone.
The only diffference I know that still remains in place is that in clerical orders, only the ordained may hold the office of superior.

For example the Carmelites are a clerical order. Even though all are friars, the superior must always be an ordained friar. Most of the Franciscan branches are lay communities, even though we have many ordained friars. In those communities any friar who is in solemn vows may hold office.

Besides the orders, there are several congregations that have similar rules. I’m trying to remember as many as I can. But the following congregations are canonically lay congregations, even though they have ordained members and therefore the superior can be any perpetually professed member.

Marianists (only the brothers may be superiors)
Missionaries of the Poor (have priests, but lay and clerical may hold office)
Missionaries of Charity (have priests, but lay and clerical brothers can hold office)
Society of Our Lady of the Trinity (Fr. Corapi’s community. Have priests, but lay and cleric may hold office)

Then there are societies that are for priests only, even though they have brothers. It’s a very stange concept that the Vatican came up with at the end of the 19th century. In these communities, the members are not religious. They do not make vows. But they live in community and there can be two kinds of members, clerics and lay. But the society is for clerics only. The way that canon law gets around that is by calling their lay members coadjutor brothers, not lay brothers. Because lay brothers are equal members in a religious community.

Maryknoll
Missionhurst
SSPX (even though their priests are suspended until further notice) but they continue to be a Catholic society.
Vincentians (have a very different organization. They make a public profession, but they are not considered religious).

There is a very good site that has access to many orders, congregations, societies, dioceses and secular institutes. You can narrow your search by filtering out what you don’t want. The younger communities are not on it, because they have not joined it or the site has not been updated in about a year or two. But there is a lot to work with.

vocation-network.org/

I hope this site helps.

Fraternally,

Br. JR, OSF 🙂
 
For example the Carmelites are a clerical order. Even though all are friars, the superior must always be an ordained friar.
As I’m sure you know, brother (but just in case other readers don’t) it has happened on a few occasions, and arguably with increasing frequency, that lay friars serve as superiors within an individual house, including authority over ordained friars. They require a postulation or dispensation from the regional superior for this to happen, and cannot be made regional or general superiors.

Because like most de jure clerical institutes, the Carmelite orders are de facto mixed institutes, this may be an area that needs to be addressed further in the future.
 
As I’m sure you know, brother (but just in case other readers don’t) it has happened on a few occasions, and arguably with increasing frequency, that lay friars serve as superiors within an individual house, including authority over ordained friars. They require a postulation or dispensation from the regional superior for this to happen, and cannot be made regional or general superiors.

Because like most de jure clerical institutes, the Carmelite orders are de facto mixed institutes, this may be an area that needs to be addressed further in the future.
I wasn’t trying to cover every possible exception. I figured the seeker would find out about those as he inquires around. I was simply pointing out the orders and congregations that are canonically clerical and the ones that are canonically lay.

Fraternally,

Br. JR, OSF 🙂
 
As I’m sure you know, brother (but just in case other readers don’t) it has happened on a few occasions, and arguably with increasing frequency, that lay friars serve as superiors within an individual house, including authority over ordained friars. They require a postulation or dispensation from the regional superior for this to happen, and cannot be made regional or general superiors.

Because like most de jure clerical institutes, the Carmelite orders are de facto mixed institutes, this may be an area that needs to be addressed further in the future.
I believe lay friars may also serve on the council. At least that is what I recall from my novitiate presentation on the Governance of the Order from the Constitutions.
 
More information is available in the yearly FREE copy of VISION magazine, which can be obtained from:

VocationGuide.org

mail@VocationGuide.org

or at toll-free: 1-800-942-2811.

This magazine is sponsored by ads from hundreds of religious institutes. It contains articles and ads which include web addresses, email addresses and toll-free phone numbers. Many of these orders are men’s orders and include cleric/brother orders and orders for brothers.
 
I believe lay friars may also serve on the council. At least that is what I recall from my novitiate presentation on the Governance of the Order from the Constitutions.
Your provincial and general councils probably have a book of statutes. Almost all religious orders and congregations of men have it. It goes under different names. Ours is called the Modus Procedendi. These are separate from the Constitutions. They spell out the who, how, where and when for every rite and event of the order. In the chapter on elections ours goes into every detail: who may be elected, how to vote, what prayers must be said, when to stand and sit, how and when to observe silence, who may speak and who may not during an election, at what time of year you can have an electoral chapter, who has to approve the electoral chapter, how to get your election of superiors confirmed by the General Council, if the election is provincial and how to get it approved by the Holy See, if the election is General. There is a lot more in there on procedures. But these are the salient points regarding elections.

There are usually two levels of these statutes, regional and general. The statutes have to conform to the Constitutions, but they give specific guidance on these questions in a nice neat little reference manual. There probably is a copy in your conventual library or your prior may have it. Since these are not the Constitutions, they can be changed by the chapter without getting them approved by the Holy See. I don’t now if the Holy See has the same expectations of the Carmelites as it has of Franciscans and other religious. Some religous can only have a Constitutional Chapter with the permission of the Holy See and the Constitution has to be sent to the Holy See for confirmation. That’s why we have statutes. You can add and delete to them at any chapter as long as you don’t violate the constitutions and you don’t have to consult the Holy See on every detail. It saves a lot of time.

Fraternally,

Br. JR, OSF 🙂
 
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