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Other information about the Congregation of the Mission at this site:
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Vincent de Paul: What and How to Read About Him
The purpose of the Congregation of the Mission is to follow Christ evangelizing the poor. This purpose is achieved when faithful to St. Vincent, the members individually and collectively:
- make every effort to put on the spirit of Christ himself (Common Rules, 1, 3) in order to acquire a holiness appropriate to their vocation (Common Rules, XII, 13);
- work at evangelizing the poor, especially the more abandoned;
- help the clergy and laity in their formation and lead them to a fuller participation in the evangelizing the poor (Constitutions, art. 1).
The General Assembly of 1980 when it was stating this purpose, in view of the signs of the times and the realities of our day did not repeat what St. Vincent said in the Common Rules: "To preach the good news of salvation to poor people, especially in rural areas", but rather chose the words: "Work at evangelizing the poor, especially the more abandoned".
St. Vincent's words: "To help seminarians and priests to grow in knowledge and virtue, so that they can be effective in their ministry" were replaced with "Help the clergy and laity in their formation and lead them to a fuller participation in the evangelizing of the poor."
The Congregation should pay special attention to developing and living up to these five virtues so that they may be, as it were, the faculties of the soul of the whole Congregation, and that everything each one of us does may always be inspired by them. (Common Rules, 11, 14) (Constitutions, art. 7)
The Congregation of the Mission is a Society of Apostolic Life comprising priests and lay brothers. Our juridical status is defined by our Constitutions, within the framework of canons 731-746 of the Code of Canon Law. We take vows but we are not religious, following St. Vincent's intention who always wanted us to have the flexibility and mobility of an apostolic society which lives and works in close contact with the world.
In 1995 the Congregation had 3604 incorporated members: 30 bishops, 3224 priests, 216 lay brothers and 123 philosophy and theology students (who have already taken their vows).
We work in 80 countries, and we are organized into 3 vice Provinces: St. Justin De Jacobis (Eritrea), Mozambique and Costa Rica, and 45 Provinces: Madagascar, Ethiopia, Zaire (with Belgium as a region), Argentina, Brazil (Rio de Janeiro, Curitiba and Fortaleza), Central America, Chile, Colombia, Cuba, Ecuador, Mexico, Peru, Puerto Rico, United States (Dallas, Los Angeles, New England, Philadelphia, St. Louis), Venezuela, China, India, Indonesia, Orient, Philippines, - Austria, France (Paris, Toulouse), Germany, Holland, Hungary, Ireland, Italy (Naples, Rome, Turin), Poland, Portugal, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain (Barcelona, Madrid, Salamanca, Saragossa),-Australia. Some Provinces embrace different countries such as the Orient (Lebanon, Syria, Israel, Egypt), Central America (Guatemala, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Panama). Ireland also includes England, Scotland and Nigeria, and Argentina also includes Paraguay and Uruguay.
The following countries have the most vocations: Poland, Columbia, Indonesia,
India, Madagascar, Ecuador, the Philippines, Zaire, Mexico, Central America.
The average age of the confreres is very high in Hungary, Holland, China,
Paris, New England, Rome, Toulouse, Philadelphia, Rio de Janiero and Dallas
(over 60). THe Provinces which are the "youngest in personnel"
are the Phillipines, Zaire (not counting the confreres in Belgium), India,
Mexico. Poland, Madagascar, Ethipia, St. Justi De Jacobis (Erirea) and Chile
(under 49). Information about becoming a Vincentian priest or brother.
We evangelize the poor by means of popular missions (Constitutions, art. 14), nowadays especially in parishes (cf. Statute, 10); we have also many missions "ad Gentes" (Constitutions, art. 16), each Province trying to have a mission in a poor country or in those where the Church is not yet established in an adequate way (Statute, 5). For example, Germany has the vice-Province of Costa Rica; Naples has the newly established mission in Albania, having already established the vice Province of St. Justin De Jacobis (Eritrea), etc. Since the General Assembly of 1992 the Congregation has started new missions in Eastern Europe (Albania, and in the near future Ukraine, then Siberia, Lithuania), in Tanzania, the Solomon Islands, Bolivia; it has strengthened the Provinces of Cuba and China (missionaries for China are being prepared in Taiwan) and the vice-Province of Mozambique.
For popular missions or missions and Gentes we can often count on the collaboration of the Daughters of Charity and many lay volunteers animated by St. Vincent'sspirit. Several vocations for the Daughters of Charity and the Congregation of the Mission come from among these volunteers.
We still have seminaries for the formation of the clergy (Constitutions, art. 15), This work does not at present have its former prominence. The Superior General still receives many requests from bishops in missionary countries and from countries where there is a shortage of indigenous clergy. Many confreres are assigned to the spiritual help of the Daughters of Charity, as Provincial Directors, preachers of retreats, confessors or chaplains. "Since the Congregation and the Daughters of Charity share the same heritage, members should willingly give them assistance when asked, especially in the matter of retreats and spiritual direction. They should also show a brotherly spirit of cooperation in those works which have been undertaken together" (Constitutions, art. 17).
"Lay associations founded by St. Vincent and those which are inspired by his spirit should be of special concern to our members, since they have the right to our presence and to our support. Although all members should be willing to undertake this work, it is necessary for some to be more skilled in it. It is important that this animation have a spiritual, ecclesial, social, and civic dimension" (Statute, 7). We work in various countries with the International Association of Charities, the Society of St. Vincent de Paul, Marian Youth, the Miraculous Medal Association, and other less well-known groups.
In some countries schools are a very necessary part of the apostolate, with many confreres involved in them from primary level as in India up to university level as in the Philippines and the United States (cf. Statute,, 1 1).
There are confreres who work with those who live in the great rubbish dumps of cities (as in Payatas, in the Philippines). There are confreres who commit themselves to work with communities for healing, for drug addicts, for AIDS victims (in certain European countries with the Daughters of Charity and lay volunteers); with indigenous groups (in many Latin American countries), with the deaf (in Ireland), with gypsies, with prisoners, with street children, with the homeless, etc. There are specialized pastoral ministries such as that in Brazil (Curitiba) where confreres work with truck drivers always on the move.
There are confreres who set up basic Church communities and undertake
the formation of lay assistants who will ensure spiritual help in places
where there are no
priests. Other confreres work at forming "multipliers of our Vincentian
activity" by the animation of lay groups, in teaching inuniversities
for ecclesiastical studies, or at other educational levels. There are confreres
who take part in group meetings to reflect on the consecrated life, education
atheism, means of social communication, family ministry, psychological help,
etc., and devote part of their time to giving courses in institutions belonging
to dioceses, to Provinces of the Congregation, or to other Congregations.
In countries where there are two or more Provinces (Brazil, Spain, United States, France, Italy), the Provincials and their Councils meet regularly to coordinate the apostolates which can be undertaken and carried out together, and to ensure common works such as houses of formation for their candidates (Internal seminaries or novitiates, houses for philosophy or theology).
Other Provinces are grouped in continental conferences, such as those of Latin America (CLAPVI), and, more recently, those of Europe (CEVIM), Africa and Madagascar (COVIAM), Asia and the Pacific. The Latin American Conference of Vincentian Provinces (CLAPVI) has regular meetings and runs courses for the confreres in various works (those in formation, missioners, parish priests, those involved in lay movements). All these courses and meetings are also open nowadays to the Daughters of Charity and Vincentian laity.
There are also groups of Provinces which operate a joint coordination for Vincentian formation with the Daughters of Charity, as in Spain or Italy, etc. There are Provinces where the seminarists meet regularly for Vincentian formation, as the Europeans or Brazilians do. There are international Internal Seminaries, as in Argentine, Chile and Peru. There is a project for a common theologate for the Provinces and vice-Provinces of Africa (perhaps in Zaire).
There are programs which deserve special mention, such as the Salamanca Vincentian Study Weeks in Spain and the Fiches (booklets) of the Toulouse Vincentian Animation Group in France. Various countries have published books on St. Vincent and his charism, on Vincentian topics and persons linked with St. Vincent. A History of the Congregation is being written at the moment.
To encourage Vincentian studies an International Secretariat for Vincentian Studies was set up. It organized specialist "Vincentian Months" in Paris for confreres in general, for young confreres engaged in formation work, for Directors of the Daughters of Charity. There is also in Paris at present the "St. Vincent de Paul International Formation Centre." Provinces are obliged to send confreres between the ages of 35 and 50 to it for their Vincentian "re-cycling."
Mother House
95, rue de Sevres
75006 Paris - France
Phone: (33.1) 42-22-63-70
Fax: (33.1) 4549-97-88
International Formation Center
St. Vincent de Paul
95, rue de Sevres
75006 Paris- France
Phone: (33.1) 42-22-63-70
Fax: (33.1) 45 44-23-73
Other information about the Congregation of the Mission:
English | French | Spanish
Vincent de Paul: What and How to Read About Him
