Oblates of St. Frances of Rome

Oblates of St. Frances of Rome

The Oblates of St. Frances of Rome are a monastic community in Rome of women Oblates founded by St. Frances of Rome in 1425 to provide an outlet for a life of prayer and service among the wealthier women of the city. The group quickly developed a life in common, without monastic vows, committed to prayer and service to the poor of the city. They still continue today in this way of life here at their one and only monastery.

Contents

Origins

St. Frances (1378-1440) was a native and noblewoman of the city who had wanted to be a nun when she was a child. Nevertheless, her parents forced her into marriage with a wealthy and aristocratic member of the papal military forces. Despite their privileged position, the couple were not spared personal suffering, losing two young children to the various plagues which afflicted the city at that time. This was due, in large part, to the neglect it suffered during the period of the Great Schism within the Roman Catholic Church, as three separate cardinals established themselves as the legitimate Pope, two of whom were based in France. This tied up most of Western Europe in years of military conflict among the competing parties.

Through their losses, Frances became aware of the suffering of the general populace in the city. Already a pious and devout wife, she recruited other noble wives to join in caring for the poor and the sick. She and her sister-in-law would frequent the various hospitals of Rome, nursing the sick and distributing food to the hungry. Gradually, her longheld desire for monastic life developed into a desire to unite this with the service of the poor. Finally in 1425 she decided that she would henceforth live in celibacy, receiving the consent she needed from her husband for this step.

On August 15th, she and nine companions made monastic oblation to the Olivetan Monastery attached to the Church of Santa Maria Nuova. They did not cease to live with their families, and the other wives were not required to embrace celibacy the way Frances had done, but they did become a formal group, committed to both the contemplative life and a life of charity. Frances herself continued to live with her husband till his death in 1436.[1]

Monastery of Tor de' Specchi

Within a few years some of the women desired to live a life in common, where they could more easily practice spiritual exercises and be freer to commit themselves to the poor. This was already widespread in Rome for men and women who belonged to the Third Order of St. Francis and other new spiritual movements. To answer this need, Frances acquired a house near the Campidoglio, next to the Church of San Andrea dei Funari. This stood in the shade of the fortified tower built by the Specchi family, from which the name of the house comes (Italian: Torre degli Specchi). Those among the oblates so inclined could live a common life there, according to their Benedictine spirituality. Those who did enter this community, however, were not to be bound by monastic vows, as nuns would be. In this way, they would be free to pursue their service to the poor out in the streets and hospitals of the city.

This new religious congregation was formally established on March 25th, 1433, the Feast of the Annunciation. Through a mystical vision, St. Frances was inspired to have St. Paul, St. Benedict and St. Mary Magdalen as the patron saints of the new community. They continued to live without vows, but otherwise lived a typical monastic life of prayer and manual labor. The monastery received papal approval on July 4th of that same year. Thus they formed an innovative form of religious life for the period, neither cloistered nuns nor laity. St. Frances joined them upon the death of her husband in 1436, becoming the President of the community, a post she held till her death four years later.

The community still lives in this basic pattern established at their founding. They follow a basic monastic routine and offer a ministry of hospitality in the heart of the City of Rome. Instead of the standard three vows, they promise obedience to the President of the community, and not to depart, should they chose to do so, in a way which might disrupt the lives of the community. The Oblates were not formally recognized as Religious Sisters, however, until a special decree of Blessed Pope John XXIII in 1958, by which he commanded that the form of commitment taken by the Oblates was to be acknowledged as canonical vows.[2]

The Agnus Dei

By special privilege, the Sisters of Tor de' Specchi are the only one permitted to create an item of special Papal significance. It is a small wax image of Christ as the Lamb of God (Latin: Agnus Dei). This is presented by the Pope as a token of honor to those whom the Holy See wishes to recognize as having given notable service to the Church. They are blessed during Holy Week and distributed at Easter.

References

  1. ^ The Oblates of St. Frances of Rome "Her Life" [1]
  2. ^ The Oblates' website "History of the Monastery" [2]

External Sources

  • Tor de'Specci, Monastery of the Oblates of St. Frances of Rome (Italian) and a more limited version (English)

See also

  • St. Francis of Rome
  • Tor de' Specchi Monastery
  • Order of St. Benedict
  • Olivetans

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