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Site of Brotherly Love
Profile
BY Joseph Pronechen Staff writer
September 6-12, 2009 Issue |
Posted 8/28/09 at 7:00 PM
Religious
brotherhood seems like one of those easily neglected vocations. Many people
aren’t even sure what it is. That’s just one reason why the Institute of
Religious Life in Libertyville, Ill., is coming to the rescue with a new
website, Religious Brotherhood.com, launched just
after World Day of Consecrated Life on Feb. 2.
“Obviously, we promote the vocations
to the religious life and consecrated life,” explains Michael Wick, executive
director of the Institute on Religious Life. “What seemed to be lacking was
promotion of the religious brotherhood.”
Everything started coming into focus
when the institute (online at ReligiousLife.com)
presented its annual Pro Fidelitate et Virtute Award to Brother James Curran,
founder of the Little Brothers of St. Francis in Massachusetts, to highlight
his life and witness and also the vocation of religious brotherhood.
Wick recalls that, in making the
presentation, Bishop Thomas Doran of Rockford, Ill., the institute’s president,
talked about the sad fact that the vocation to religious brotherhood seems
forgotten — and that this humble, hidden vocation needs to be promoted with
greater effort.
“It seemed like marching orders from
our commander in chief,” says Wick. “That was when the idea for the website
sparked.” It continued to grow rapidly as the institute took a look at the
eye-opening statistics from The Official Catholic Directory.
In 1967 there were 12,539 religious
brothers in the United States. Forty years later, their numbers had dropped to
5,095. Statistics from the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate at
Georgetown University vary slightly, but their conclusions remain the same. In
fact, for 2008, the total is listed as only 5,001.
Everyone agrees there was a decline
in vocations after the Second Vatican Council, with the brotherhood being one
of the hardest-hit callings. The institute hopes the website will help with the
turnaround.
“When the website was being
developed, the whole community was excited because it uses modern technology to
make the vocation to brotherhood better known and, even more, to help people
know it exists,” says Brother Giles Michael Gilbert of the Little Brothers of
St. Francis in Boston. “The website has the opportunity to clarify a lot of
misconceptions that arise when people are discerning vocations, such as: ‘What is
religious brotherhood?’”
Identity and Clarity
Once a dispatcher for the Mundelein
(Ill.) Police Department and a student of Spanish literature, Brother Giles
made his solemn vows last summer with this small and relatively new community.
“An important part of our vocation,”
explains Brother Giles, “is to help restore the vocation to brotherhood and to
give witness to that vocation.” That’s precisely what the institute’s
ReligiousBrotherhood.com has in mind for all religious communities of brothers.
Wick outlines two of the major
goals. “We wanted to stress the identity of the religious brothers versus just
the function,” he says, “and also build upon that as to what they do, which is
the expression of their identity.”
It’s exactly in line with the
thinking of those like Conventual Franciscan Brother Paschal Kol-odziej,
assistant novice master at St. Francis of Assisi Novitiate in
Mishawaka, Ind. He explains their charism: to live in fraternity first and foremost,
out of which comes their work with runaway children and the poor in parishes as
well as retreats.
Wick points out that, in his 1996
apostolic letter Vita Consecrata (The
Consecrated Life), Pope John Paul II stated that “religious brothers provide
valuable services of various kinds, inside or outside the community,
participating in this way in the mission of proclaiming the Gospel and bearing
witness to it with charity in everyday life.”
The institute-inspired website
highlights key elements of the religious brotherhood vocation and what makes it
unique in the Church and different from the priesthood. Wick, who points out
the funding came through a grant from Our Sunday Visitor Foundation, stresses
that the website has lots of images of brothers in action, in community and
prayer.
ReligiousBrotherhood.com not only
makes clear what a religious brother is and the many areas a religious brother
works in as he reflects the love of Christ, but it also answers frequently
asked questions about the vocation.
Brother Tom Osorio, vocation director
for the Hospitaller Brothers of St. John of God and head of the Religious
Brotherhood Conference, believes the site will bring understanding to men.
“Out of all the vocations in the
Church, the vocation of brother is the most misunderstood and not very clear,”
says Brother Tom. “This site is going to shed a light on brothers. We’re men
called to a different way of life. We obviously attend Mass every day, but we
are not called for the sacramental ministry; we are called to the apostolic
ministry. Our life is of service to the people, while the priest’s main
vocation is sacramental life.”
Brother Tom points out that the
website highlights the possible ministries brothers can get involved in and
outlines many current ministries brothers work in. Contrary to popular
perception, brothers have many ministries aside from teaching.
Stories Speak
ReligiousBrother.com includes several
sections. One presents a spectrum of saints and blesseds who are special
patrons of brothers, with an explanation of who they are and why they’re
patrons. The spectrum goes from the Church’s beginnings to the present and
includes such saints as Joseph, Francis of Assisi, Gerard Majella and Martin De
Porres, along with such blesseds as Fra Angelico and Brother André Bessette.
The site includes brothers sharing
their testimonies on being called to this vocation. In someone else’s story, a
visitor may hear his own story, reasons Wick. “Some element will stick out and
very much speak to them,” he adds, “encouraging them to embrace the grace of
the vocation.”
While it’s too early to tell if
anyone has already decided to further pursue the vocation of religious
brotherhood because of the website, everyone involved sees great hope in this
site.
“Young people now are so into modern
technology,” says Brother Paschal, “that for anyone who might be considering a
vocation, probably one of the first places to go to, before a parish priest,
would be to the Internet. It’s so crucial to the vocation of brotherhood
today.”
Staff
writer Joseph Pronechen is based in Trumbull, Connecticut.
INFORMATION ReligiousBrotherhood.com (847) 573-8975
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