The
Augustinians, named after
Saint Augustine of Hippo (354–430),
are several
Christian monastic
orders and congregations of both men and women living according
to a guide to religious life known as the
Rule of Saint Augustine.
Prominent Augustinians include the only English
Pope Adrian IVSources quoted in the
[22292] New Advent Encyclopaedia, cf.
Cardinal
Boso's life, published by Muratori (SS. Rer. Ital. III, I 441–446)
and reprinted in Migne (Patrologia Latina, CLXXXVIII,
135–160), also edited by Watterich (Vitae Pontificum II,
323–374), cf. also Duchesne's edition of the
Liber Pontificalis (II, 388–397; cf.
proleg XXXVII-XLV), Italian
Pope Eugene
IV, mystic
Thomas à Kempis,
Dutch Christian humanist
Desiderius
Erasmus, the German Reformer
Martin
Luther, the Spanish navigator
Andrés de Urdaneta, Italian composer
Vittoria Aleotti, German mystic
Anne Catherine Emmerich and
the Austrian geneticist
Gregor Mendel.
The order has made a very significant
missionary contribution to Christianity as well
as establishing educational and charitable institutions throughout
the world.
The main branches of the order internationally
The Augustinian family worldwide is made up of two main kinds:
These are further made up of five main branches:
- The Order of Saint
Augustine; the friars subject to the jurisdiction of
the Prior General (International leader)
- Augustinian nuns or sisters of
contemplative life (enclosed nuns)
- other Augustinian orders not under the jurisdiction of the
Prior General such as the Ursulines and
the Recollects
- religious congregations of apostolic life (active congregations
of men or women)
- lay fraternities and societies established under the name and
teaching of Saint Augustine (such as the Secular Augustinian
Recollects.)
Some of the most visible contemporary groups of Augustinians
include:
Order of Saint Augustine
The
O.S.A., formerly called
Augustinian
Hermits, but today known as
Augustinian
Friars or Austin Friars, are a
mendicant order. Being friars, they
pray the
Liturgy of the Hours
throughout every day. This
Latin Rite
branch is active in society (i.e. not
enclosed). It is headed by the
international Prior-General in Rome, and while spiritually and
historically connected is now canonically separate from the other
Independent
Augustinian Communities such as the
Canons Regular,
Discalced Augustinians,
Augustinian nuns,
Premontres,
Canons
Regular of the Immaculate Conception,
Augustinian Recollects and
the Dominicans.
History of the Grand Union
The year 1256 is usually quoted as the date of the Grand Union that
brought the modern order into existence, but there is some
scholarly discussion over the exact date of the formal constitution
of the Augustinian order, as it occurred in stages. By the
11th century there had appeared historically
identifiable groups of clerics in various parts of Europe who
renounced private property and lived together in community
following the Rule of St. Augustine described above. The
consolidation of this movement can be connected to the changes
proposed by the
Gregorian Reform.
In 1243 the decree,
Incumbit Nobis was issued by Pope
Innocent IV, and it called together a number of monastic
communities in Tuscany. The Augustinians owed their formal
existence to the policy of
Popes Innocent IV (
1241–
1254) and
Pope Alexander IV (
1254–
1261), who wished to
counterbalance the influence of the powerful
Franciscans and
Dominicans by means of a similar order under
more direct papal authority and devoted to papal interests.
The Augustinian Hermits (who are generally meant by the name
"Augustinians", one notable member was
Martin Luther) became the last of the great
mendicant orders to be formally constituted in the
thirteenth century. It is
historically verifiable that Innocent IV, by the bull issued
16 December,
1243
united a number of small hermit societies with Augustinian rule,
especially the
Williamites, the
John-Bonites, and the
Brictinans.
Alexander
IV (admonished, it was said, by an appearance of Saint Augustine)
called a general assembly of the members of the new united order
under the presidency of Cardinal Richard of Saint Angeli at the monastery of Santa Maria del
Popolo
in Rome
in March,
1256, when the head of the John-Bonites,
Lanfranc Septala, of Milan
, was chosen
general prior of the united orders. Alexander's bull
Licet ecclesiae catholicaeLicet ecclesiae catholicae
Bullarium Taurinense, 3rd ed., 635 sq. issued on 4
May, 1256, confirmed this choice. The new order was thus finally
constituted with Italian, Hungarian, French, English, Belgian,
Spanish, Portuguese, Swiss, Austrian and German Augustinian friars
united into one international order. Pope Alexander IV afterward
allowed some houses of the Williamites, who were dissatisfied with
the new arrangement, to withdraw from the union, and they adopted
the Benedictine rule.
Several general chapters in the thirteenth century (
1287 and
1290) and toward the end
of the
sixteenth (
1575 and
1580), after the severe
crisis occasioned by Luther's reformation, developed the statutes
to their present form (text in Holstenius-Brockie, ut sup., iv,
227–357; cf. Kolde, 17–38), which was confirmed by
Pope Gregory XIII. A bull of Pius V in
1567 had already assigned to the Hermits of
Saint Augustine the place next to the last (between Carmelites and
Servites) among the five chief mendicant orders.
Organization of the Order
The Augustinian Hermits, while following the rule known as that of
St. Augustine, are also subject to the Constitutions, first drawn
up by
Augustinus Novellus (d.
1309), prior general of the order from 1298 to 1300, and by
Clement of Osimo.
The Rule and
Constitutions were approved at the general chapter held at Florence
in 1287 and
at Ratisbon
in
1290. A revision was made at Rome in 1895. The Constitutions
have frequently been printed: at Rome, in 1581, and, with the
commentary of
Girolamo Seripando,
at Venice, in 1549, and at Rome, in 1553. The Constitutions were
revised again and published at Rome in 1895, with additions in 1901
and 1907. Today, the Order follows the Constitutions approved in
the Ordinary General Chapter of 2007.
The government of the order is as follows: At the head is the
prior general, elected every six years
by the
general chapter. The prior
general is aided by six assistants and a secretary, also elected by
the general chapter. These form the
Curia Generalitia.
Each
province is governed by a provincial, each commissariate by a
commissary general, each of the
two congregations by a vicar-general,
and every monastery by a prior (only the Czech
monastery of Alt-Brunn
, in Moravia, is under an abbot) and every college by a rector. The
members of the order number both priests and lay brothers. The
Augustinians, like most religious orders, have a
cardinal protector. The choir and outdoor
dress of the friars is of black woolen material, with long, wide
sleeves, a black leather girdle and a long pointed cowl reaching to
the girdle. The indoor dress consists of a black
tunic with
scapular. In many
monasteries white was formerly the color worn in areas where there
were no Dominicans. Shoes and (out of doors) a black hat complete
the attire.
Augustinian lay societies
The lay societies are voluntary groups, generally made up of people
who are either married or single and have sympathy with, and
interest in, the Augustinian approach to life. These lay people do
not take the monastic vows, but offer support to the work of the
Augustinian order through voluntary work, gifts of money and goods,
and the study and promotion of Augustine and Augustinian teaching.
The
Brotherhood of the Virgin Mary of the Belt in
Italy, the
Friends of Augustine in the Philippines, the
Augustinian Lay community, the
Augustinian Friends in Australia and the
Secular Augustinian Recollects are some
examples of Augustinian lay societies.
Aggregated communities
Other orders and groups belong within the Augustinian family either
because they follow the Rule of Augustine or have been formally
aggregated through their constitutions into the worldwide
Augustinian Order. These are not counted comprehensively in this
article only because the Catholic Church's system of governance and
accounting makes only the numbers of ordained
priests relatively accessible and verifiable. Some
of these include:
- The
Hieronymites, the Sisters of St Rita, the Ursulines, the Augustinian Sisters of
Mercy of Jesus (South Africa), the Augustinians of the
Assumption (which includes Byzantine
Rite congregations), The Alexian
Brothers (located in the USA, Europe, England, Ireland the
Philippines and India), the Brothers of the Assumption (in
the Congo), the Sisters of Our Lady of
Consolation (Philippines), the Congregation of Our
Lady of the Missions, the Hospitallers of the Mercy of
Jesus (Canada), the Sisters of Charity of
the Incarnate Wordc.f. The Rule of Saint Augustine and
the Constitutions of the Order of the Incarnate Word and Blessed
Sacrament New York: Schwartz, Kirwin, and Fauss, 1893, pp.
33–35. (who established the University of
the Incarnate Word
in Texas), and the Sisters of St Joan of
Arc (in Quebec, United States, and Rome) are just some of
the Augustinian family of orders. Historically like the
Benedictines, the Augustinain Order was by nature an order for
laymen and women, the Canons Regular
represent the clerical aspect of male religious life, as it was
used to organize communities of clerics, as had Augustine
himself--hence the official name of the Order being the Canons Regular of St. Augustine. The Canons Regular of the New
Jerusalem are a newly founded Tridentine rite congregation.
The
Discalced Augustinians
have their own constitutions, differing from those of the other
Augustinians. Their fasts are more rigid, and their other ascetic
exercises stricter. They wear sandals, not shoes. As an apparent
survival of the hermit life, the Discalced Augustinians practise
strict silence and have in every province a house of recollection
situated in some retired place, to which monks striving after
greater perfection can retire in order to practise severe
penance, living only on water, bread, fruits, olive
oil and wine.
The Augustinian Rule
The ancient Rule of life formally constituted for the hermits
around 1243, had its origins established soon after St. Augustine
was converted by
Ambrose in Milan around the
year 384 AD.
He and some friends returned to his native
Thagaste
in North Africa, gave away their possessions and
began a life of prayer and study. Probably, Augustine didn't
compose a formal monastic rule despite the extant Augustinian Rule
Augustine of Hippo
The Rule of St Augustine
Constitutiones Ordinis Fratrum S. Augustini (Rome 1968) .
Augustine's hortatory letter to the nuns at Hippo Regius
(
Epist., ccxi,
Benedictine ed.)
is not considered a formal Monastic rule by some scholars c.f
Schaff Herzog Encyclopaedia on which the beginnings of
this article are based. However, the present rule has strong
consonance with the existing writings and teaching of Augustine of
Hippo.
Three sets
of the "Augustinian Rule" have been attributed to Augustine's
authorship (texts in Holstenius-Brockie, Codex regularum monasticarum, ii,
Augsburg
, 1759, 121–127), the longest of which, a medieval
compilation from certain pseudo-Augustinian sermons in 45 chapters,
is the one commonly known as the regula Augustini, and
served as the constitution of the Augustinian Canons and
many societies imitating them, as, for example, the Dominican and Arrouaisians
.
The extant Augustinian orders claim lineage from the communities
founded by Augustine of Hippo, and while the history of ideas is
evident, historic continuity is not conclusively proven according
to the standards of contemporary historical method. The most likely
process of transmission occurred between the years 430 and 570 as
the Roman empire collapsed - rapidly in Roman North Africa.
Augustine's style of communal living was carried into Europe by
monks and clergy fleeing the onslaught of the
Vandal tribes under
Geiseric.
Around 440
Quodvultdeus of Carthage
established communities in Naples. St.
Fulgentius of Ruspe arrived in Sardinia
by 502 and introduced Augustinian teaching there. The 5th century
Donatus and his monks probably brought a
form of it to Southern Spain around the year 570 when he
established the
Monasterium Servitanum c.f
New
Advent Encyclopaedia references to this exist in the
later writings of
St. Isidore,
St.Ildephonsus and
Eutropius. The Third Rule, a form of
Augustine's Rule, was later used as a basis for the reform of
monasteries and cathedral chapters during the 11th century. The
Monastery of
Saint Clare of
Montefalco was one of the first to adopt the
formally-constituted Augustinian rule in
1291.
The rule
was also adopted by various congregrations of canons regular, such as those of the Abbey of St. Victor in Marseilles
(before its suppression), the Abbey of St Victor, Paris
(a precursor to the University of Paris
), the Premonstratensians, and the Canons Regular of the Lateran
and the Dominicans.
The Augustinian ethos
The teaching and writing of Augustine, the
Augustinian Rule, and the
lives and experiences of Augustinians over 16 centuries help define
the ethos of the order, sometimes "honoured in the breach".
As well as telling his disciples to be "of one mind and heart on
the way towards God"Augustine of Hippo
The Rule of St
Augustine Constitutiones Ordinis Fratrum S. Augustini (Rome
1968) Chapter I Augustine of Hippo taught that "Nothing conquers
except truth and the victory of truth is love" (
Victoria
veritatis est caritas)Augustine of Hippo
Sermons
358,1 "Victoria veritatis est caritas", and the pursuit of
truth through learning is key to the Augustinian ethos, balanced by
the injunction to behave with love towards one another. It does not
unduly single out the exceptional, especially favour the gifted,
nor exclude the poor or marginalised. Love is not earned through
human merit, but received and given freely by God's free gift of
grace, totally undeserved yet generously given. These same
imperatives of affection and fairness have driven the order in its
international missionary outreach. This balanced pursuit of love
and learning has energised the various branches of the order into
building communities founded on mutual affection and intellectual
advancement. The Augustinian ideal is inclusive.
Augustine spoke passionately of God's "beauty so ancient and so
new" Augustine of Hippo
Confessions 10, 27, and his
fascination with beauty extended to music. He taught that "to sing
once is to pray twice" (
Qui cantat, bis orat) Augustine of
Hippo
Sermons 336, 1 PL 38, 1472 , and music is also a
key part of the Augustinian ethos.
Contemporary Augustinian musical
foundations include the famous Augustinerkirche
in Vienna where Orchestral Masses by Mozart and Schubert are performed every week, as well as
the boys' choir at Sankt Florian
in Austria, a school conducted by Augustinian
Canons, a choir now over 1,000 years old.
See also
References
Bibliography
- Bibliography for the Augustinian official website
- Augustine of Hippo, The Rule of St Augustine
Constitutiones Ordinis Fratrum S.
Augustini (Rome 1968)
- Orbis Augustinianus sive conventuum O.
Erem. S. A. chorographica et topographica
descriptio Augustino Lubin, Paris, 1659, 1671, 1672.
- Regle de S. Augustin pour lei
religieuses de son .ordre; et Constitutions de la Congregation des
Religieuses du Verbe-Incarne et du Saint-Sacrament (Lyon:
Chez Pierre Guillimin, 1662), pp. 28–29. Cf. later edition
published at Lyon (Chez Briday, Libraire,1962), pp. 22–24.
English edition, The Rule of Saint Augustine and the
Constitutions of the Order of the Incarnate Word and Blessed
Sacrament (New York: Schwartz, Kirwin, and Fauss, 1893),
pp. 33–35.
External links