Congregation of the Most Holy Redeemer
Abbreviation | C.Ss.R. |
---|---|
Motto |
Copiosa Apud Eum Redemptio (With Him is Plentiful Redemption) Psalms 130:7 |
Formation | 9 November 1732 |
Type | Institute of Consecrated Life |
Headquarters | Rome, Italy |
Michael Brehl, C.Ss.R. | |
Key people | Saint Alphonsus Liguori — founder |
Website | www.cssr.com |
The Congregation of the Most Holy Redeemer (Latin: Congregatio Sanctissimi Redemptoris – C.Ss.R).[1] is a Roman Catholic missionary congregation founded by Saint Alphonsus Liguori at Scala, near Amalfi, Italy, for the purpose of labouring among the neglected country people in the neighbourhood of Naples.
Members of the congregation, Catholic priests, and consecrated religious brothers, are known as Redemptorists, who are often associated with the image of Our Mother of Perpetual Help and globally minister in more than 77 countries around the world.
Foundation and development
Alphonsus Liguori was deeply moved by the plight of the poor living in Naples and the surrounding area and established his community with the aim of providing spiritual nourishment. Amongst his companions was Gerard Majella. In 1748 Alphonsus petitioned Pope Benedict XIV, to allow him to establish a congregation to minister to the poor in the area around Naples, who were:
"… the most in need of spiritual help, as frequently they have no one to administer to them the Holy Sacrament or the Word of God; their plight is such that many, for lack of (apostolic) labourers, reach death's door without knowing anything at all of the necessary truths of the faith. This is because the number of priests…is few."[2] Benedict agreed and the congregation was formed in 1749.
Within ten years of the foundation, communities had been established at Nocera, Ciorani, Iliceto, and Caposele. Due to political complications, there was an initial difficulty with the houses in the Papal States being separated from those in the Kingdom of Naples, but this was overcome in 1793 and the Congregation soon opened houses in Sicily and other parts of southern Italy.[3] The Congregation was soon to move beyond the borders of present-day Italy. In 1785 two Austrians, Clemens Maria Hofbauer and Thaddeus Hübl joined the Redemptorists. After their final profession and ordination to the presbyterate, they received permission to establish a house in their homeland but, due to the resistance of the Austrian government, no foundation took place. Father Hofbauer went to work for the Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples and was sent to Russia where he briefly ministered in Courland (now in Latvia). In 1786 he rejoined Father Hübl and went to Warsaw in Poland where the papal nuncio gave them responsibility for the parish of Saint Benno; their mission thrived until the community was expelled in 1808.
In 1793, Father Hofbauer turned his sights on establishing communities in Germanic lands. Soon houses were opened in the south at Jestetten, Triberg im Schwarzwald, and Babenhausen. In 1818, a house was established in Switzerland at the abandoned Carthusian monastery in La Valsainte.[3]
19th century
In 1826, at the request of the government of Austria, the Redemptorists established a community in Lisbon, Portugal, with the purpose of ministering to German speaking Catholics. Other houses quickly followed in German-speaking areas: Mautern an der Donau (1827), Innsbruck (1828), Marburg (1833), Eggenburg (1833) and Leoben (1834).
The Congregation also rapidly expanded into Belgium with communities at Tournai (1831), Sint-Truiden (1833), Liège (1833) and Brussels (1849). A community was even established in the, at the time somewhat anti-Catholic, Netherlands when a house was opened in Wittem in 1836.
The revolutions of 1848 which swept over Europe caused much upheaval, and the Redemptorists were expelled from Switzerland and Austria and were at risk elsewhere. The leader of the Redemptorists was feeble and, in order to provide the Congregation with stable governance, Pope Pius IX placed it under a new superior general who was to reside in Rome.
The Congregation thrived throughout the remainder of the 19th century; in 1852 there were four provinces and by 1890 this had increased to twelve with communities having been established in Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, England, Scotland, Spain and Suriname.[3] The 20th century saw the continuation of expansion to where the Congregation created new provinces, vice provinces and missions in every decade and established a network of lay associates and volunteers who work with the Redemptorists to bring the Gospel to the poor.
Mission
Redemptorists seek to put into action the command of Christ Jesus to "Love one another as I have loved you." (John 15:12). They are essentially a missionary society although their ministry is not confined to developing nations. According to their rule they are "to strive to imitate the virtues and examples of Jesus Christ, our Redeemer consecrating themselves especially to the preaching of the word of God to the poor". Their labours consist principally in missions, retreats, and similar exercises.
Preaching
Alphonsus Liguori wanted his companions to be itinerant preachers of the Word of God. Traditionally, this has been the mainstay of the Redemptorists as they are well known for conducting parish missions. The purpose of these parish missions and the homilies preached by the Redemptorists is to "…invite people to a deeper love for God and a fuller practice of the Christian life."[4] In accordance with the instructions of St. Alphonsus, preaching is to be down-to-earth and understandable to all who are listening.
Shrines, sanctuaries and retreat houses
In order to advance their mission and provide places of pilgrimage, the Redemptorists administer several shrines, which draw hundreds of thousands of people, the best-known being in Brazil, Canada, Colombia, the Philippines, Rome, and Singapore. The Congregation operates many retreat houses where people of all walks of life, Catholic or otherwise, can spend some time in reflection, either individually or in a group.[4]
Redemptorists are caretakers of the Byzantine icon of Our Mother of Perpetual Help, depicting the Blessed Virgin Mary with the Child Jesus and the instruments of the Passion, which was entrusted to them by Pope Pius IX. It is now enshrined in the Redemptorist Church of St. Alphonsus Liguori, Rome, and Redemptorists propagate devotion to Mary under this title.
Other ministry
As with most religious congregations, the Redemptorists are also involved in other forms of ministry such as parishes, education, youth and social communication. In recent years the Congregation has increasingly become concerned with matters of social justice; as the Generalate website states "Redemptorists believe that the saving love of God touches the whole person and calls for the transformation of social injustice into respect for the dignity of all men and women".[4]
The Redemptorists of the Cebu province in the Philippines have made a specific commitment in this regard: "Moved by the poverty and dehumanised condition of our people, and encouraged by their faith and desire for justice…We, the Redemptorists of the Province of Cebu, as an apostolic community dedicated through our vows, are called to respond to the urgent needs of our people, especially the most abandoned and the poor…".[5]
Religious formation
After the initial period of contact and discernment, the person seeking to enter the Redemptorists becomes a postulant and goes to live in one of the communities so that both sides might become better acquainted. This lasts between 6 months and one year.
Assuming that all goes well, the postulant then begins the period of novitiate, lasting a year, at the beginning of which is received the religious habit. The novitiate year is crucial, for it is then "…that the novices better understand their divine vocation, and indeed one which is proper to the institute, experience the manner of living of the institute, and form their mind and heart in its spirit, and so that their intention and suitability are tested."[6] Thus, the novices are given the opportunity for longer periods of prayer and spiritual reading as well as silence in order to reflect on the vocation God is offering and nature of their response. The spiritual development of the novice is of particular focus, especially through spiritual direction. During the novitiate the history and Constitutions of the Congregation are studied in depth.
A simple profession is made at the end of the novitiate and the person officially becomes a member of the Redemptorists for "By religious profession, members assume the observance of the three evangelical counsels by public vow, are consecrated to God through the ministry of the Church, and are incorporated into the institute with the rights and duties defined by law."[7] At this point it is normal to begin studying philosophy and theology at university level. During this time there is ample opportunity to experience a variety of ministries in which the Redemptorists are engaged both abroad and in the member’s country of birth.
At the end of this period of formation, which lasts for 9 years[8] perpetual profession (final vows) is made and ordination to the diaconate and presbyterate follows for those called to Holy Orders.[9]
Religious vows
As members of a religious congregation Redemptorists embrace the evangelical counsels, taking the three traditional religious vows of poverty, chastity and obedience. Poverty means that all possessions are held in common and that no member may accumulate wealth. Chastity means more than abstaining from sexual activity and its purpose is to make the religious totally available for service; it is also a sign that only God can completely fill the human heart. For a member of a religious congregation, obedience is not slavishly doing what one is told by the superior but being attentive to God’s will by prayerfully listening to the voice of the person in charge. For the Redemptorist, the three vows challenge those values presented as being important by modern-day society. Recognising that the living out of the three traditional vows can be truly challenging, each Redemptorist takes a fourth vow, that of perseverance.
Organization
The most fundamental unit of the Redemptorists is the local community in which members live together, combining their prayers, experiences, successes and failures, as well as any possessions for the service of the Gospel. Each community has a local superior who is chosen to exercise the ministry of leadership and the service of authority for the common good. The superior is assisted by a vicar and a group of advisors.
Local communities are organized into larger groups: provinces, vice-provinces, regions. A province is led by a provincial and his council, composed of elected members. In terms of governance, the members of each province elect representatives who gather in a Provincial Chapter. Vice-provinces usually look to a founding province to provide support in terms of personnel and finances until it is able to become self-sufficient. Otherwise, it enjoys the freedom and authority necessary to adjust matters to the particular needs of its mission.[10] Regions and Missions are normally communities established in new missionary areas and they depend on the founding province or vice-province.
The Superior General convokes the General Chapter every six years. The General Chapter is the primary governing and representative body of the Redemptorists, carefully examining the mission of the Congregation in accordance with the spirit of St. Alphonsus and its traditions. The day-to-day international affairs of the Congregation are handled by the General Council, which is composed of a superior general and six consultors. The General Council is both a directive and executive body.[10]
Regions and provinces
- South Europe: 6 provinces and 2 regions
- North Europe: 8 provinces, 2 vice-provinces, 2 regions and 1 mission,
- North America: 5 provinces, 1 vice-province and 4 regions.
- Latin America: 13 provinces, 11 vice-provinces, 4 regions and 2 missions.
- Africa: 1 province, 5 vice-provinces, 2 regions and 5 missions.
- Asia-Oceania: 6 provinces, 5 vice-provinces, 4 regions and 2 missions.[10]
Regional development
Africa
In 1899 the Belgian Fathers were requested by their government to take charge of a number of missions in the Congo State, at that time a Belgian colony: Kinkanda, Kionzo, Kimpese, Matadi, Sonagongo and Lake Tumba.
In 1987 the Denver Province established a mission in Nigeria which was so fruitful that it soon became a vice-province. The members of the vice-province have made concerted efforts to involve the laity in their work. The Redemptorists also minister in Angola (1967); Burkina Faso; Ghana; Ivory Coast (1993); Madagascar (1967); Niger; Zimbabwe (established by the British Redemptorists in 1960 and revitalised in 1989)[11]
In 1990 the Indian Redemptorists began a mission in Kenya where there are several professed members.
In South Africa Redemptorists administer parishes in Cape Town, Rustenburg and Howick. There is also a convent of Redemptoristines sisters in Merrivale, KwaZulu-Natal. For the Redemptorists of Southern Africa "…Justice and Peace is part and parcel of everything we are and do. In the South African context…we are called by the poor to a simple life-style and we cannot avoid the struggle of the outcasts and oppressed of the townships and the desperate plight of the poor."[12]
In May 2011 a number of allegations of child sexual abuse by a member of the institute in South Africa were revealed on the RTÉ programme Prime Time Investigates.[13][14]
Alan Shatter the Irish Minister for Justice, Equality and Defence has stated that
I have been in touch with the Garda Commissioner about this matter who, of course, shares my concern at the revelations in the programme. The Superintendent in charge of the Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault Investigation Unit is being appointed to examine the programme. In particular, he will examine whether any criminal behaviour was disclosed which can be pursued in this jurisdiction.[15]
Australia and New Zealand
A number of requests for Australian foundations had been made to the Redemptorists and in 1881, the English Province answered the call. A small team was formed to be the first Australian community and in January 1882, they were given a farewell dinner before they set sail; Cardinal Manning arrived with good wishes. The next day the group boarded the liner Sorata bound for Australia, bringing with them an icon of Our Lady of Perpetual Help, blessed by Pope Leo XIII. Eight weeks later, on their arrival in Sydney, the then Archbishop Roger Bede Vaughan, who welcomed them.[16]
The first house established was in Singleton, New South Wales but during the summer heat missions were conducted in the cooler climate of New Zealand’s dioceses. As Singleton was an unsuitable base, the community oversaw the building of a new monastery at Mount St Alphonsus, Waratah, New South Wales. It was opened on the founder’s feast, 1887, just five years after the Redemptorists’ arrival. In the first year at Waratah the community conducted 45 missions through New South Wales, Victoria and South Australia. A new house in Ballarat followed in 1888 and work began on a new monastery in the suburb of Wendouree. It was officially opened in September 1893.
With the south now being cared for by the Ballarat community, those in Waratah looked north to Queensland and the first missions were preached there in 1889. Missions began in Brisbane and its surrounds, with their success convincing the Archbishop to extend the programme to the far flung country parishes.
The first structure that was purpose-built for the Redemptorists in New Zealand was St Gerard's Church in Wellington in 1908.[17]
In 1927, the Province of Australasia, which included Australia and New Zealand, was created. New Zealand became an independent province in 1970 and from New Zealand, the Redemptorists went to Samoa in 1972.[18]
The years after World War II were a time of rapid expansion. As well as ongoing participation in the development of the vice-provinces in the Philippines and in Singapore and Malaysia, further houses were opened in New Town in Tasmania and Townsville and Miami in Queensland. There were also communities established in New South Wales: Campbell’s Hill, Concord, Fairfield West, Penrith and Yagoona. In Victoria, there were communities at Balwyn Box Hill, Brighton, Wongarra and Yarraville. In Melbourne, the Order also conducted a psychotherapy clinic and Training Institute, Hofbauer Centre, from 1977 until 1998.
Missionary activity continues to flourish across Australia. Through parish missions, preaching, retreats, adult education, teaching in universities, social justice work, counselling, accompaniment of indigenous communities, chaplaincies, devotions to Our Lady of Perpetual Help, working with people on the margins of society and promoting the family through the Majellan magazine, Redemptorists have sought to highlight that people matter greatly to God.[18] For the Australian Redemptorists, the issue of social justice "…matters to the Redemptorists for it is at the core of our mission in the world."[19]
Bavaria
The Upper German or Bavarian province, which was under the ban of the Kulturkampf, has recovered some of its lost ground. Since its readmittance, it has added another very important foundation. But the historic convent of Altötting has passed into other hands. In 1894 this province opened in Brazil a mission of two houses forming a vice-province.
Canada and Caribbean
In 1874 the Redemptorists were called to St. Patrick's Church, Quebec, Canada, the only church in that city for English-speaking Catholics. In 1878 they became the custodians of the shrine of Ste-Anne de Beaupré, near Quebec and then of St. Anne's, Montreal, a large parish in a very poor district of the city. Two other foundations were quickly established in Canada: Saint Patrick's, Toronto and Saint Peter's, New Brunswick in 1881 and 1884 respectively.
Canada was made a vice-province in 1894, where four more houses were opened. This province, initially depending on the Belgian province, numbers six houses. In the West Indies, which were also made a vice-province in 1904, there are now six houses. There is also a house at Mayagüez in Puerto Rico. Before the occupation of the island by the United States the Spanish Redemptorists had settled at San Juan. A parish comprising some 30,000 souls is confided to their care. Despite all their labours for the benefit of the natives their progress is very slow. On 26 July 1911, the Belgian houses of Canada were erected into a new province.
On 8/12/2014 a court in Quebec approved a settlement by which the Redemptorists will pay $20 million compensation to people who had been sexually assaulted by members of the order while school students in their care.[20]
The Yorkton Province is an Eastern Church branch of the worldwide Congregation of the Most Holy Redeemer, serving the Ukrainian Catholic Church in North America and is based in Saskatchewan and Manitoba, Canada.
India
Three Irish Redemptorists Frs. Mathew Hickey, Gerard McDonell and Leo O’Halloran from the Province of Dublin with great zeal and missionary dynamism set on a task to proclaim the Good News and arrived in the Island country of Sri Lanka in the year 1938. The long cherished dream of the Redemptorists to establish a foundation in India was actualised in the year 1940 when the first community was established in Bangalore in the year 1940.
It was Fr. Hugo Kerr, the Provincial Superior of the Province of Dublin who obtained permission from Monsignor Despartures, the Bishop of Mysore to establish a foundation in Bangalore. In the Lent of 1941 St. Gerard’s House at John Armstrong Road became the First Permanent residence of the Redemptorists. On the 1st October 1945 the Indian Redemptorist mission became a Vice-Province and Rev. Fr. Mathew Hickey was the first Vice-Provincial. And the next ten years (from 1945-1955) saw great structural developments with Mt. St. Alphonsus (MSA) being built which would be the permanent house of the Studentate (7 June 1951) and the much awaited Holy Ghost Parish[21] was opened for public worship on 24 May 1953. It was during this time St. Alphonsus School with the help of Sisters of St. Joseph of Tarbes, began in the Students’ wing of MSA. The school was later moved to Davis Road which stands till today catering to the education of the poor children who come from the vicinity of the area. In July 1964 Sadupadesa College on Hennur Road was built to house students who would study Philosophy. It is now turned into a Juvenate which is the first stage of formation (as of 2015). In July, 2010 Holy Redeemer Parish was erected in Sadupadesa.
The Vice-Province of Bangalore grew steadily facing all odds and overcoming all obstacles to become the Province of Bangalore on 15 August 1972 and also took a momentous initiative in the year 1990 by establishing a Redemptorist community in Kenya, Africa. Now the mission has 7 indigenous priests along with the members of the province serving in the mission. The Province of Bangalore has also given birth to two other units, the Liguori Province of Kerala and the Vice-province of Majella along the western coast of India.[22]
As of 2011 there were some 260 Redemptorists in India, belonging to two Provinces, one Region and one Mission. The Region of Alwaye was established in 1992 and became a Province (Province of Liguori) in 2008. The Region of Mumbai was established in 1999 and was raised to the status of a Vice-Province in 2011. The Mission of Kenya began in 1990 and there are several perpetually professed Kenyan members.
The Philippines
The first Redemptorists, belonging to the Irish province, arrived in Opon, Cebu on 30 June 1906, setting up missions in Compostela, San Francisco and on the Camotes Islands.[23][24]
From 1914 to 1928 further communities were established, the most prominent being: Luzon (where the Redemptorists preached the first mission completely in Tagalog), Lipa, Iloilo, Tacloban and Cagayan de Oro on Mindanao.
In 1928, the Philippines was divided into two vice provinces, each under a different province—the Cebu vice-province responsible for the Visayas and Mindanao under the Irish province; and the Manila vice-province responsible for Luzon under the Australian province, now headquartered at the National Shrine of Our Mother of Perpetual Help in Baclaran.
The Second Vatican Council (1962–1965) had a profound impact on the Redemptorist Congregation and this resulted in them pledging themselves more strongly to the poor and disadvantaged in imitation of St. Alphonsus. When the political and social upheavals came in the 1960s and 1970s the Filipino Redemptorists stood in solidarity with those seeking justice and equality for they were to "...embrace the mission to proclaim by word and action, the Gospel of justice so that the poor’s aspirations can be fully realised in Christ, the source of liberation."[25]
In 1996, the Cebu vice-province became an independent province, known as the Cebu Province.[23]
United Kingdom and Irish provinces
Redemptorists arrived from Belgium in 1843, and the new province owed its great progress to the Rev. Robert Aston Coffin, one of the band of converts associated with Blessed John Henry Newman, Cardinal Manning, and William Faber in the Oxford Movement. Father Coffin was engaged in missions until he was appointed first provincial in 1865. During his administration new houses were founded in various parts of the United Kingdom, the house at Perth being the first Scottish monastery opened since the Reformation. By 1910, the province had eight houses: Clapham, Bishop-Eton, Monkwearmouth, Bishop's Stortford, Kingswood, Edmonton and a total membership of one hundred and twenty-three.
Today the Redemptorists of Britain are engaged in a variety of ministries: the mission amongst the poor of Zimbabwe, renewal centres at Kinnoull and Hawkstone Hall where people can spend time in prayer and reflection and parishes in Edinburgh, Birmingham, Liverpool and London. Their goal is "to defend our joy in Jesus Christ and to bring to others Plentiful Redemption"[26]
In 1898 the houses in Ireland were constituted a separate province with the provincial house at Limerick. On 25 March 1901, the foundation of the a juvenate house at Limerick was laid. The province of Ireland then comprised four houses: Limerick, Dundalk, Belfast, and Esker. Today, the provincial house is located in Dublin with other communities being found in Belfast (Clonard Monastery and the parish of Saint Gerard), Cork, Dundalk, Athenry in Galway, Limerick and four houses are established. The Irish Redemporists are involved in parish ministry, youth work, Redemptorist publications and retreats. They also help staff the missions in Cebu in the Philippines[27]
United States
In 1828 Mgr Résé, Vicar-General of Cincinnati, visited Europe in search of priests. While at Vienna he secured three priests and three lay brothers; they arrived in New York on 20 June 1832 and began working amongst the people of northern Michigan. In 1839 they were called to Pittsburgh to assume charge of the German congregation and from this time the care of German congregations became a prominent element of the Redemptorists in North America.
The US province was erected in 1850 and one of the first tasks was the establishment of a seminary and the selection of a suitable place for a novitiate. Cumberland in Maryland, was chosen for the seminary and Baltimore for the novitiate. In 1868 the students were transferred to the new house of studies at Ilchester, Maryland and in 1907 the faculty and the students moved to Esopus, New York on the Hudson River where a more spacious building had been erected.
In 1882, the Congregation sent priests to the Archdiocese of Washington and eventually established five parishes. In 1861 they opened a community in Chicago, Illinois. Soon after, due to the many successful missions they had given in the Archdiocese of St. Louis a house was opened at St. Louis. In 1871 an important mission house was opened at Roxbury, Boston and was dedicated to Our Lady of Perpetual Help. When, in 1883, a new parish was formed, the Fathers of the mission church took charge. (In 2009, its later basilica, of the same name, hosted the nationally televised funeral of Massachusetts Senator Edward Kennedy, attended by President Barack Obama, three former U.S. presidents and first ladies, among other dignitaries.)
From 1883 onward, the Redemptorists spread throughout most of North America and are present in a variety of states such as California in the west, Michigan and Illinois in the midwest, Washington DC and Baltimore in the northeast and Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas in the south.
North American Redemptorists are divided into five provinces (Baltimore, Denver, Edmonton-Toronto, Yorkton for the Ukrainian Greek Catholics, and Mexico) and one vice-province (Richmond).[28] and are involved in giving parish missions, social justice, retreats, youth ministry, ministry to adults with special needs, bioethics, publication of religious materials and chaplaincy work[29] as well as outreach to the Hispanic community, ministry amongst the poor, and helping to staff missions in the Caribbean[30]
Famous Redemptorists
- Saint Alphonsus Maria de Liguori (1696–1787) Founder, Bishop and Doctor of the Church
- Saint Gerard Majella (1726–1755) Religious
- Saint Clement Hofbauer (1751–1888) Patron of Vienna and Warsaw
- Saint John Nepomucene Neumann (1811–1860) Bishop of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
- Blessed Peter Donders (1809–1887) Priest
- Blessed Kaspar Stanggassinger (1871–1899) Priest
- Blessed Gennaro Maria Sarnelli (1702–1744) Priest
- Blessed Nicholas Charnetsky (1884–1959) Bishop and Martyr
- Blessed Vasyl Velychkovsky (1903–1973) Bishop and Martyr
- Blessed Zynoviy Kovalyk (1903–1941) Priest and Martyr
- Blessed Dominick Trcka (1886–1954) Priest and Martyr
- Blessed Ivan Ziatyk (1899–1952) Priest and Martyr
- Blessed Francis Xavier Seelos (1819–1867) Priest
- Venerable Alfred Pampalon (1867–1896) Priest
- Venerable Antonio Maria Losito (1838-1917) Priest
- Cardinal Mar Varkey Vithayathil (1927–2011) Major Archbishop of Ernakulam-Angamaly for Syro-Malabars (India)
- Cardinal Julio Terrazas Sandoval (b. 1936) Archbishop of Santa Cruz de la Sierra (Bolivia)
- Cardinal Willem Marinus van Rossum (1854–1932) Cardinal Prefect of the Congregation for the Evangelization of the Peoples.
- Archbishop William Hickley Gross (1837–1898) Archbishop of Oregon City, Oregon, USA
- Archbishop Patrick Clune (1864–1935) First Archbishop of Perth, Australia
- Archbishop Joseph William Tobin (b. 1952) Cardinal-designate (to be elevated November 2016); former Superior General (1997–2009), Secretary of Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life, Archbishop of Indianapolis
- Bishop Hugh MacDonald, (1841–1898) Bishop of Aberdeen
- Bishop Aloysius Joseph Willinger (1886–1973) Bishop of Monterey-Fresno, California, USA
- Bishop William Tibertus McCarty (1889–1972) Bishop of Rapid City, South Dakota, USA
- Bishop Ralph Heskett (b. 1953) Bishop of Gibraltar
- Bishop Ireneo Amantillo (b. 1934)- Bishop Emeritus of Tandag
- Bishop Emmanuel Cabajar (b. 1942)- Bishop of Pagadian
- Father Charles Fehrenbach (1909–2006) author of the book Mary Day by Day
- Father Bernard Häring (1912–1998) influential theologian at the Second Vatican Council
- Father Tadeusz Rydzyk (b. 1945) founder and head of the Radio Maryja Family.
- Father Alec Reid (1931–2013), facilitator in the Northern Ireland peace process
- Father John Creagh (1870–1947) priest who delivered anti-Semitic sermons in Limerick in 1904.
- Father Joseph Owens (1908–2005)
- Father Liam Pilkington (1894–1977)
- Father Seán McManus
- Father Leo James English (1907–1997) Compiler and editor of an English-Tagalog Dictionary (1965) and a Tagalog-English Dictionary (1986)
- Father Joseph (Joe) Maier (b. 1939) co-founder of the HDF Mercy Centre in Bangkok.
- Father Raymond Brennan (1932–2003) founder of the Father Ray Foundation in Pattaya, Thailand
- Father Teofilo Vinteres (1932-2001)- Liturgical composer and former rector of the Baclaran Church.
- Father Amado Picardal- CBCP-BEC Executive Secretary, Web blogger and "biking priest"
- Father Marreddy Vatti (1956-2015).
- Brother Marcel Van (1928–1959), Servant of God, Vietnamese lay brother.
- Father Tony Flannery, Irish religious writer and dissident
See also
- The Alphonsian Academy – established by the Congregation.
- Radio Maryja is a radio station owned by the Congregation of the Most Holy Redeemer and run by Redemptorists.
- The teen magazine, Face Up
- Holy Redeemer College, housing for The Catholic University of America
- Sons of the Most Holy Redeemer, formerly the Transalpine Redemptorists
- Feast of the Most Holy Redeemer
References
- ↑ Annuario Pontificio per l'anno 2010. Città del Vaticano: Libreria Editrice Vaticana. 2010. p. 1441.
- ↑ "Supplex Libellus", Letter of Alphonsus to Benedict XIV
- 1 2 3 Wuest, Joseph. "Redemptorists." The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 12. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1911. 29 Aug. 2014
- 1 2 3 "Our Works" Redemptorist Generalate
- ↑ Redemptorist Cebu Province website: Vision
- ↑ Code of Canon Law 646
- ↑ Code of Canon Law 654
- ↑ Code of Canon Law 655
- ↑ Redemptorists London / Formation
- 1 2 3 "Structure", Redemptorists General Facts
- ↑ Ronald McAinsh, C.Ss.R., Ronald. Scala, Redemptorist Newsletter, May 16, 2010
- ↑ South African Redemptorists : Reds in SA Archived November 15, 2009, at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ "RTÉ News". Archived from the original on May 27, 2011.
- ↑ "RTÉ News".
- ↑ "Statement by Minister Shatter on Prime Time Investigates programme on clerical sex abuse in Africa", Merrion Sreet, May 24, 2011
- ↑ Boland, S.J., "Vaughan, Edmund (1827–1908)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University
- ↑ "St Gerard's Church". Register of Historic Places. Heritage New Zealand. Retrieved 27 May 2012.
- 1 2 Australian Redemptorist Website: Our History
- ↑ Australian Redemptorists:Justice
- ↑ "Religious order to pay record sexual abuse settlement". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 22 September 2014.
- ↑ "Holy Ghost Parish – Richard's Town". catholic churches.in. Retrieved 2016-02-26.
- ↑ "Redemptorist Province of Bangalore, India".
- 1 2 "The Origin and Growth of the Redemptorists in the Southern Philippines". redemptorists in southern philippines. Retrieved 4 December 2011.
- ↑ "Presence in the Philippines". Redemptorist Cebu Province. Retrieved 4 December 2011.
- ↑ Redemptorists Cebu Province: Presence
- ↑ British Redemptorists: Ministry
- ↑ Irish Redemptorist Website
- ↑ North American Redemptorist website:Vocations
- ↑ Canadian Redemptorists Website
- ↑ Baltimore Redemptorists: What we do
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Redemptorists. |
- Official website
- Pope John Paul II. "Address to the Members of the Congregation of the Most Holy Redeemer", December 15, 1997
- Pope John Paul II. "Address to the Congregation of the Most Holy Redeemer", October 3, 2003
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Redemptorists". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton.