T
TimothyH
Guest
What are they in relation to the Church? Are they a religious order? A Society of Apostolic Life? Something else entirely? Their website is unclear.
*2) What do we mean by saying that it is a religious order?
The Order was born as a monastic community inspired by St. John the Baptist. This community, which was created by Amalfitan Merchants around 1050, ran a hospice providing care and shelter for pilgrims to the Holy Land. In 1113 it received formal acknowledgement as a religious Order from Pope Paschal II. Before the loss of the island of Malta (1798) most of the knights were religious, having taken the three vows of poverty, chastity and obedience. Today, although some members of the Order are professed knights (having taken the three vows of poverty, chastity and obedience), others have pronounced only the promise of obedience. Most of the Order’s 13,500 knights and dames are lay members. *
The same FAQ says nothing about governance by the Church/Holy See but only Chapter General, Governing Council, their internal constitutions and such things.
I know someone who is in formation with them who said, “I never thought I would ever be a member of an order.” I wondered to myself if this really were the case, if this organization is an order? In the few dealings I have had with members, and the few talks I have heard by their members, and reading about them, their relationship to the Church Church remains a mystery to me.
-Tim-
*2) What do we mean by saying that it is a religious order?
The Order was born as a monastic community inspired by St. John the Baptist. This community, which was created by Amalfitan Merchants around 1050, ran a hospice providing care and shelter for pilgrims to the Holy Land. In 1113 it received formal acknowledgement as a religious Order from Pope Paschal II. Before the loss of the island of Malta (1798) most of the knights were religious, having taken the three vows of poverty, chastity and obedience. Today, although some members of the Order are professed knights (having taken the three vows of poverty, chastity and obedience), others have pronounced only the promise of obedience. Most of the Order’s 13,500 knights and dames are lay members. *
The same FAQ says nothing about governance by the Church/Holy See but only Chapter General, Governing Council, their internal constitutions and such things.
I know someone who is in formation with them who said, “I never thought I would ever be a member of an order.” I wondered to myself if this really were the case, if this organization is an order? In the few dealings I have had with members, and the few talks I have heard by their members, and reading about them, their relationship to the Church Church remains a mystery to me.
-Tim-