The Oratory
Under this head are included
the Italian, Spanish, English, and other communities, which follow
the rule of St. Philip Neri. The revolt of the sixteenth century,
though apparently threatening in its spread and strength the very
life of the Church, evoked a marvellous display of its Divine
fecundity.
That century saw the origin of the Society of Jesus,
founded by St. Ignatius Loyola; the Theatines, by St. Cajetan;
the Barnabites, by St. A. M. Zaccaria; the Brothers Hospitallers,
by St. John of God; the Oratory of St. Philip. The foundation of
the last was laid at S. Girolamo, Rome, where his disciples
gathered for spiritual instruction.
Gradually these conferences
took definite shape, and St. Philip, now a priest, constructed an
oratory over the aisle of S. Girolamo, where they might be held;
from this probably the congregation was named. In 1564 he took
charge of the church of the Florentines, where his disciples who
were priests said Mass and preached four sermons daily,
interspersed by hymns and popular devotions.
Eleven years' work at
St. John's proved to the growing community the necessity of having
a church of their own and of living under a definite rule. They
obtained from the pope the church of S. Maria in Vallicella,
rebuilt and now known as the Chiesa Nuova, where the congregation
was erected by Gregory XII, 15 July, 1575.
The new community was
to be a congregation of secular priests living under obedience but
bound by no vows. So particular was St. Philip on this point that
he ruled, that even if the majority wished to bind themselves by
vows, the minority who did not were to possess the property of the
community. "Habeant possideant", were St. Philip's words.
Another
characteristic of the institute was the fact that each house was
independent, and when it was represented to him, that while one
house might have but a handful of members and another a surplus,
both would benefit by a transference of subjects from the more
numerous community, he replied, "Let each house live by its own
vitality, or perish of its own decrepitude." His motive probably
was to exclude the possibility of any community lingering in a
state of decay.
The rule, an embodiment of St. Philip's mode of
governing, was not drawn up till seventeen years after his death,
and was finally approved by Paul V in 1612. The provost is elected
for three years by a majority of all the decennial Fathers, i. e.,
those who have been ten years in the congregation. To assist him in
the government of the congregation four deputies are elected. All
matters of grave importance are decided by the general
congregation, only the decennial Fathers voting.
Admission to the
congregation is also by election and the candidate must be "natus ad
institutum", between the ages of eighteen and forty, and possessed
of sufficient income to maintain himself. The novitiate lasts
three years, and was probably thus extended to test thoroughly the
vocation to an institute not bound by vows. At the conclusion of
the three years the novice if approved becomes a triennial Father
and a member of the congregation, but he has no elective vote till
his ten years are complete, when by election he becomes a
decennial.
Expulsion is effected by a majority of two-thirds of the
voters. No member is allowed to take any ecclesiastical dignity.
Regulations for the clothing, mode of life in the community, and for
the refectory are also laid down. The object of the institute is
threefold: prayer, preaching, and the sacraments. "prayer"
includes special care in carrying out the liturgical Offices, the
Fathers being present in choir at the principal feasts, as well as
assisting at the daily popular devotions.
The "Sacraments" imply
their frequent reception, which had fallen into disuse at the
foundation of the Oratory. For this purpose one of the Fathers is
to sit daily in the confessional, and all are to be present in
their confessionals on the eve of feasts. The mode of direction as
taught by St. Philip is to be gentle rather than severe, and abuses
are to be attacked indirectly. "Once let a little love find
entrance to their hearts," said St. Philip, "and the rest will
follow."
"Preaching" included, as has been said four sermons in
succession daily, an almost impossible strain upon the hearers as
it would now appear, but the discourses at the Oratory had an
attraction of their own.
Savonarola had already compared the
inability of the preachers of his day to awaken dead souls with
their subtle arguments and their rhetorical periods, to the
impotent efforts of the flute-players to revivify by their mournful
music the corpse of Jairus's daughter, and Bembo in St. Philip's
day reiterated this reproach. "What can I hear in sermons !", he
says, "but Doctor Subtilis striving with Doctor Angelicus, and
Aristotle coming in as a third to decide the quarrel."
The sermons
at the Oratory were free from these defects. They were simple and
familiar discourses; the first an exposition on some point of the
spiritual reading which preceded them, and therefore impromptu;
the next would be on some text of Holy Scripture; the third on
ecclesiastical history, and the fourth on the lives of the saints.
Each sermon lasted half an hour, when a bell was rung and the
preacher at once ceased speaking. The music though popular, was of
a high order. Palestrina, a penitent of the saint, composed many of
the Laudi which were sung. Their excellence excited the admiration
of foreigners. John Evelyn in his diary, 8 November, 1644, speaks
of himself as ravished with the entertainment of the sermon by a
boy and the musical services at the Roman Oratory. Animuccia,
choir master at St. Peter's, attended constantly to lead the
singing.
In close connexion with the Oratory is the Brotherhood of
the Little Oratory, a confraternity of clerics and laymen, first
formed from the disciples of St. Philip who assembled in his room
for mental prayer and Mass on Sundays, visited in turn a hospital
daily, and took the discipline at the exercises of the Passion on
Friday. They made together the pilgrimage of the seven churches,
especially at carnival time, and their devout and recollected
demeanour converted many.
The "exercises", as the Oratory services
were called, aroused bitter opposition. The preachers were
denounced as teaching extravagant and unsound doctrine, the
processions were forbidden, and St. Philip himself was suspended
from preaching. He submitted at once and forbade any action being
taken in his favour.
At length Paul IV, having made due
investigation, sent for him and bade him go on with his good work.
Baronius says of these exercises that they seemed to recall the
simplicity of the Apostolic times; Bacci testifies to the holiness
of many under St. Philip's care.
Among the most celebrated members
were Baronius, author of the "Ecclesiastical Annals", and the
"Martyrology", to prepare him for which work St. Philip obliged him
to preach the history of the Church for thirty years in the
Oratory; Bozio Tommaso, author of many learned works; B.
Giovenale Ancina, Superior of the Oratory at Naples, and later
Bishop of Saluzzo, a close friend of St. Francis de Sales; B.
Antonio Grassi of the Oratory of Fermo; B. Sebastian Valfré, the
"Apostle of Turin", and founder of the Oratory, there. The Oratory
Library of S. Maria in Vallicella is celebrated for the number and
quality of its contents, among them the well-known Codex
Vallicensis.
Up to 1800 the Oratory continued to spread through
Italy Sicily, Spain, Portugal, Poland, and other European
countries; in South America, Brazil, India, Ceylon, the founder of
which was the celebrated missioner Giuseppe de Vaz. Under Napoleon
I the Oratory was in various places despoiled and suppressed, but
the congregation recovered and, after a second suppression in 1869,
again revived; many of its houses still exist.
ORATORIANS, ENGLISH
The Oratory was founded in England by Cardinal Newman
in 1847. Converted in 1845, he went to Rome in 1846 and with the
advice of Pius selected the Oratory of St. Philip Neri as best
adapted for his future work. After a short novitiate at Santa Croce
he returned in 1847 with a Brief from Pius IX for founding the
Oratory. He established himself at Maryvale, Old Oscott, where in
1848 he was joined by Father Faber and his Wilfridian community.
After a temporary sojourn at St. Wilfrid's, Staffordshire. and
Alcester St., Birmingham, the community found a permanent home at
Edgbaston, a suburb of that town in 1854.
The institute of the
English congregation is substantially that of the Roman. The
Fathers live under St. Philip's Rule and carry out his work. In
compliance with a widely expressed wish of English Catholics,
Cardinal Newman founded at Edgbaston a still flourishing higher
class school for boys. A Brotherhood of the Little Oratory is also
attached to the community and the exercises are a focus of
spiritual life.
Among the best known writers of the English
Oratory are, besides its illustrious head, Father Caswell, a poet,
Father Ignatius Ryder, a controversialist and essayist, and Father
Pope. A Newman memorial church in the classical style was opened
in 1910. The library contains among many valuable works Cardinal
Newman's series of the Fathers.
The London Oratory
In 1849
Cardinal Newman sent a detachment of his community to found a house
in London. Premises were secured at 24 and 25 King William St.,
Strand, a chapel was speedily arranged and on 31 May, Cardinal
Wiseman assisted pontifically and preached at the high Mass, Father
Newman delivered at Vespers the sermon on the "Prospects of the
Catholic Missioner", now published in his "Discourses to Mixed
Congregations".
The Catholic Directory of l849 shows that the
Oratory at King William St. was the first public church served by a
religious community to be opened in the diocese. The exercises of
the Oratory, accompanied as they were with hymns composed by Father
Faber and the Roman devotions and processions, then strange to
England, seemed to many a hazardous innovation.
Time proved the
popularity of the exercises, and Father Faber's preaching attracted
large crowds. His spiritual works published year by year increased
the interest in his Oratory, while the lives of the saints edited
by him, forty-two in number, in spite of their literary defects,
did a great work in setting forth the highest examples of Christian
holiness. The community removed to their present site in South
Kensington in 1854, and in 1884 their new church was opened in the
presence of the bishops of England.
Among the writers of the
London Oratory may be named, after Father Faber, Father Dalgairns
(q. v.) Father Stanton, "Menology of England and Wales" (London,
l887); Father Hutchison, "Loreto and Nazareth" (London, 1863);
Father Knox, "The Douai Diary" (London, l878), and "Life of
Cardinal Allen" (London, 1882); Father Philpin de Rivière, "The Holy
Places", and other works; Father John Bowden "Life of Fr. Faber"
(London, 1869); Father Morris "Life of St. Patrick"; and Father
Antrobus, translator of Pastor's "Popes" (vols. I - VI, St. Louis,
1902) and the "Pregi dell' Oratorio".
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There are currently 69 Oratories in the world. - And growing. All or them have their individual mission and style. To find out where they are the best source would be: www.oratorio.org.mx
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