On Aug. 28, Pope Francis will say Mass at the “chapter” of the Order
of Saint Augustine, a meeting of the group's leaders which will elect a
new head as well as set out their aims for the next six years.
The Pope will head the Eucharistic celebration at the Basilica of Saint
Augustine in Campo Marzio to launch the chapter, which takes place every
six years, lasts for about two to three weeks and will start this
Wednesday, the feast of St. Augustine.
“The Pope was very devoted to Santa Monica (St. Augustine's mother) and
often visited the tomb of Santa Monica to pray,” Cardinal Prospero
Grech, an Augustinian friar, said in an Aug. 26 statement.
Around one hundred Augustinians from all over the world will gather in
Rome to elect their new prior General marking their one hundred and
eighty fourth chapter.
The head of the order is expected to be chosen between seven to 10 days
after the launch of the chapter, during the first week of September.
Until he is chosen, the vicar General Father Michael Di Gregorio, who is
second in charge, will preside over the meetings.
The newly elected prior General will then lead more meetings for about
one or two weeks to decide on the Augustinians' new aims and initiatives
until their next term in 2019.
The current head, Father Robert F.
Prevost, has been serving for twelve years after he was re-elected in
2007.
“In the last one hundred years, the Prior General has never made three
consecutive terms, but the re-election of Fr. Prevost is not
impossible,” Antonello Sacchi of the Augustinian general curia's press
office told CNA.
The Augustinians are present in 50 countries across all five continents.
One of the reasons the chapter takes several weeks is because the
realities can differ greatly from country to country and the goals for
the next six years should be set accordingly.
“For example, the reality in Asia is very different to the reality in
the United States,” said Sacchi. “And in the United States, vocations to
the order are increasing tremendously.”
The Order of Saint Augustine was founded in 1244 aimed at living and
promoting the spirit of community as it was lived by the early Christian
communities.
It is based on the teachings of the Bishop of Hippo
Augustine, who lived during the fourth and fifth centuries.
The
Augustinians, who include both men and women, follow the rule of “living
together in harmony, with one soul and one heart on our way to God.”
According to Cardinal Grech, the number of vocations will not be a top
issue of discussion for the group since the order “consists of quality,
not quantity.”
“Let us start with this question, what does the Church need today in our
country, wherever we are?” he said in his statement. “We must give this
response as a community.”