As the Order of Preachers, better known as the Dominicans, celebrate
the 800th anniversary of their founding, they gather in Rome from around
the world to reflect on their history, their charism of preaching, and
how they can continue to put this charism at the service of the Church
today.
The International Congress for the Mission of the Order comes at the close of the order’s celebration of a Jubilee
Year, which marks the 800th anniversary of their founding by St.
Dominic.
One purpose of the congress, Dominican Brother Vivian Boland told
CNA, is as a chance for the order “to thank God for the graces of the
past year, but also to try to re-own the mission of the order in the
Church and to give it a fresh energy, a fresh impulse…”
The charism of the Dominicans, Br. Boland said, can sometimes be
difficult to pick out, because it’s a charism “that’s at the very heart
of the Church and Christianity, preaching the Gospel.”
“We’re not the only ones that preach the Gospel,” he noted. “But I
think the year of celebration has been a chance for us to think about
what it means to be the Order of Preachers in the Church and on behalf
of the Church, and that our first task should be to help the Church in
its preaching of the Gospel.”
This mission can sound simplistic, he acknowledged, but there are
many challenges to that mission today, and the Dominicans should be a
leader “in helping the Church to think about these challenges,” which
can be found in everything from philosophy, to science, to culture, and
changes in society.
One thing they can be working on is “what are the difficulties, what
are the possibilities, for preaching the Gospel of Jesus today. To be
helping the Church with that task,” he said.
Being part of such an old and established order, Br. Boland said, is a
bit like the well-known phrase, “all of human life is there.”
“You know, by the time an organization is 800 years old, that in
itself is remarkable, there are very few things which remain for 800
years,” he said.
Referencing a video the order made for the Jubilee which says “we
have 130 saints, and a multitude of sinners,” Br. Boland said “we have
to acknowledge the humanity of the order, its mistakes, at times.”
“But also, there’s a certain pride, I hope in a good sense, in
remembering who our brothers and sisters are” – St. Thomas Aquinas, St.
Catherine of Siena and the like. “Remarkable people, who we can call our
brothers and sisters.”
The international congress takes place over five days and includes
prayer, talks, and workshops. It includes both lay members and men and
women religious.
The congresses, which the order holds about every 12 or 13 years,
provide a chance to put people in contact, he said. For example, “people
who might be working with indigenous people in Taiwan with people who
are working with indigenous people in Guatemala, who might otherwise not
know about each other.”
Overall, the congress is a way, he said, “to bring together
Dominicans from all parts of the world, who are working in particular
ministries or perhaps have special projects that they’ve developed, just
to be together and to hear what the order is doing in different parts
of the world.”