| St. Dominic de Guzman and the Order of Friars Preachers (Dominicans) |
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The Lord Jesus Christ entrusted the mission of preaching to the twelve apostles. St. Dominic de Guzman restored the preaching ideal of Jesus Christ and his twelve apostles by establishing the first apostolic Order in the Church. This Order would provide a new dimension to ministry by making preaching frequent within the Church. It would give new direction to monasticism by combining contemplation with an active apostolate to serve the Church in a specific purpose.
Dominic's response was to provide the Church with a group of preachers who would be learned, disciplined, and poor. He adopted traditional customs and practices in the Church and formed them into a specific way of life: Through the profession of vows, the friars would embrace the community life of the early Church. They would imitate the first apostles who left behind their possessions and property to dedicate themselves to prayer and the Word of God (Acts of the Apostles 4:32-35). The friars would be learned and educated through study as a basis for fruitful preaching. They would observe liturgical prayer sung in community like monks and would draw from it their active ministry. With the approval of the Pope Honorius III in 1216, the friars would carry out the task entrusted by Christ to the Apostles: To preach. Until this time the tasks of preaching and teaching were reserved to the bishops as the successors of the apostles. The preaching done by priests was infrequent and elementary. This new Order would provide assistance to the bishops and would move about according to the needs of the Church. The Friars Preachers have been associated with universities as teachers, preachers, and campus ministers, throughout the almost 800 year history of the Order. Universities were the places St. Dominic sent his first friars to preach, teach, and to begin what is known today as campus ministry. St. Dominic died on August 6, 1221, at Bologna. Pope Gregory IX placed him in the roll of the saints in 1234. His feast day is celebrated on August 8. Today, as in its early days and for almost 800 years, the Order is dedicated to the proclamation of the Word of God for the salvation of souls. The Dominican way of life consists of the evangelical counsels of poverty, chastity, and obedience, study as the basis for preaching, and the communal celebration of the public prayer of the Church. By these means a life of contemplation is fostered and the apostolate of preaching and teaching advanced. As the great Dominican teacher, St. Thomas Aquinas expressed it, the goal of the Dominican is "to contemplate and to give to others the fruits of contemplation." In the nearly eight centuries since its origin, the Order has numbered among its members theologians, mystics, Doctors of the Church, workers among the poor, popes, saints, and innumerable men and women who have left less tangible traces of their work
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