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{{Short description|Male Roman Catholic religious congregation}}
{{no footnotes|date=November 2016}}

{{Infobox organization {{Infobox organization
|name = '''Oblates of St. Francis de Sales''' |name = '''Oblates of St. Francis de Sales'''
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|size = |size =
|abbreviation = O.S.F.S. |abbreviation = O.S.F.S.
|formation ={{Start date and age|df=yes|1875|12|21}}
|motto = ''Tenui Nec Dimittam''
|formation ={{Start date and years ago|df=yes|1875|12|21}}
|headquarters = Generalate |headquarters = Generalate
|location = ], ] |location = ], Italy
|coords = |coords =
|type = ] |type = ]
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|leader_name = Barry Strong, O.S.F.S. |leader_name = Barry Strong, O.S.F.S.
|main_organ = |main_organ =
|key_people = ]—founder<br>]—founder |key_people = ]—founder<br />]—founder
|website = |website =
|num_staff = |num_staff =
}} }}


The '''Oblates of St. Francis de Sales''' (]: ''Oblati Sancti Francisci Salesii'', O.S.F.S.) are a congregation of ] priests and brothers who follow the teachings of ] and ]. (The Oblate priests and brothers of St. Francis de Sales are affiliated with the ].) The '''Oblates of St. Francis de Sales''' (]: {{lang|la|Oblati Sancti Francisci Salesii}}, O.S.F.S.) are a congregation of ] priests and brothers who follow the teachings of ] and ]. The community was founded in ] in 1875 by ] and are affiliated with the ].


==Foundation== ==History==
===Foundation===
An order of ], the ], was founded by ] at the request of Saint Jane de Chantal in 1610. The establishment of ] at ], where Saint Francis served as the first Provost, was a preparatory step toward carrying out his design, the accomplishment of which was prevented by his death. With Saint Jane Frances de Chantal's encouragement and assistance, Raymond Bonal of Adge, in France, carried out his plan, but this congregation died out at the beginning of the 18th century. Two hundred years later it was revived by Mother ] (died 7 October 1875) and Abbé ], a professor in the Seminary of ]. In 1869, Fr Brisson established Saint Bernard Collège, near Troyes. In September 1871, Fr Gilbert (died 10 November 1909) joined him and ], received them and four companions into the ].
]
An order of cloistered ]s, the ], was founded by ] at the request of ] in 1610. The establishment of ] at ], where Francis served as the first Provost, was a preparatory step toward carrying out his design, the accomplishment of which was prevented by his death. With Chantal's encouragement and assistance, Raymond Bonal of Adge, in France, carried out his plan, but this congregation died out at the beginning of the 18th century. Two hundred years later it was revived by ] (died 7 October 1875) and ], a professor in the Seminary of ]. In 1869, Brisson established Saint Bernard Collège, near Troyes. In September 1871, a priest by the name of Gilbert (died 10 November 1909) joined him and ], received them and four companions into the ].<ref name=Catholic/>


] temporarily approved their constitutions on 21 December 1875. The first ] were made 27 August 1876. The definitive approbation of their constitution was given on 8 December 1897. ] temporarily approved their constitutions on 21 December 1875. The first ] were made 27 August 1876. The definitive approbation of their constitution was given on 8 December 1897.<ref name=Catholic/>


===Development===
Known formally as the DeSales-Oblates, the members of this religious order are of two states, ] and ]s. They engage in a wide variety of areas of service. Oblates are apostolates of education, parish work and foreign missions. They also work as teachers at religious and secular colleges and missionary areas as well as serving in military, campus, hospital, and convent chaplaincies and in inner-city social work.
The congregation gradually developed in France. It numbered seven colleges and five other educational houses when the Government closed them all, 31 July 1903. The founder retired to Plancy where he died 2 February 1908. The Generalate was transferred to Rome, and in 1909, the church of Sts. Celsus and Julian in was entrusted to them. Oblate refers to persons, especially in the Middle Ages, who offered themselves and their property to a monastery.


==Today==
The postulate period lasts from six to nine months and the novitiate period from one year to eighteen months. For the first three years following first vows, the Oblates renew their vows annually, and then, they profess their perpetual vows. The order is governed by a ] elected every six years; and five counsellors general elected by the ].
The members of this religious order are of two states, ] and ]s. Today the Oblates are located throughout the world, in Holland, Germany, Austria, France, Switzerland, Italy, India, South Africa, Namibia, Benin, Ivory Coast, Uruguay, Brazil, Ecuador, Mexico, Haiti and the United States.<ref></ref> The Generalate is located in Rome.


The order is governed by a ] elected every six years; and four counsellors general elected by the ]. Each province is administered by a ], appointed by the superior general and his council for four years. He is assisted by three counsellors elected at each provincial chapter, which meets every four years, at an interval of six years between the regular general chapters.<ref></ref>
The congregation gradually developed in France. It numbered seven colleges and five other educational houses when the Government closed them all, 31 July 1903. The founder retired to Plancy where he died 2 February 1908. The Generalate was transferred to Rome, and the congregation divided into three provinces, by language family: Latin (France, Belgium, Italy, Greece, and South America), German(ic) (Austria, the German Empire and the southern half of its South-west African colony), and English (England, United States and the north-western part of Cape Colony).


===Apostolate===
Each province is administered by a ], appointed by the superior general and his council for four years. He is assisted by three counsellors elected at each provincial chapter, which meets every four years, at an interval of six years between the regular general chapters.
Oblates engage in a wide variety of areas of service. Oblates are apostolates of education, parish work and foreign missions. They also work as teachers at religious and secular colleges and missionary areas as well as serving in military, campus, hospital, and convent chaplaincies and in inner-city social work.


===Formation===
In the early 20th century they had the following membership:
The Oblates of St. Francis de Sales offer an Associate Program, designed to help young men discern a possible call to religious life and priesthood during their college years. The Postulate period lasts for a year, during which the candidate with and participates in the life of an Oblate community, in order to smooth the transition from his present lifestyle to Oblate community living. The one-year Novitiate is taken up with studies, particularly Salesian spirituality. For the first three years following first vows, Oblate renew their vows annually, and then profess perpetual vows. Generally, a Ministerial Internship takes place after the novitiate. Candidates for ordination pursue further studies in academic, professional and pastoral education.<ref name=Wilmington/>


In the early 20th century they had the following membership:
The Latin province has a scholasticate at ]. In 1909, the church of Sts. Celsus and Julian in ] was entrusted to the Oblates. The novitiate for the Latin and German provinces is in ]. The Ecole Commerciale Ste Croix in ] (Greece) had about fifty pupils and the College St. Paul at ] (Athens) about two hundred. Four priests, stationed in ] (Uruguay) performed mission work, running a flourishing Young Men's Association; in Brazil, three Fathers had the district of ] do Sul, with an area of 28,000&nbsp;m² and a Catholic population of 20,000; the headquarters of the Uruguay-Brazil mission were at Montevideo, Uruguay. One Oblate was stationed in ], where before the ] the congregation had charge of the diocesan seminary of ], several colleges and parishes. In 1909, a school for the congregation was opened at ], Belgium.


In ] (Kent, England) they operated a ] for boys, the chaplaincy of the Visitation Convent and Academy of Roselands and a small parish in ]. To this province belonged the ].<ref name=Catholic>{{Catholic|wstitle=Oblates of Saint Francis de Sales|inline=1}}</ref>
The German(ic) province had a preparatory school of about forty students in the ] of ] and charge of St. Anne's (French) church in ], also the church of Our Lady of Dolours in ], Vienna, which is served by six Oblates. At ], the ] gave them charge of the parish, in 1907, and assisted them to build a school. With the consent of the German Government, ] entrusted the church of Marienburg in 1910. Several Fathers were engaged in mission work.


==In Africa==
In ] (Kent, England) they operated a ] for boys, the chaplaincy of the Visitation Convent and Academy of Roselands and a small parish in ]. To this province belonged the ].
When the Vicar Apostolic of Cape of Good Hope, John Leonard, heard that the Society of African Missions of Lyons had decided to recall its subjects from Namaqualand and the North Western Cape, he made a trip to Europe in 1880 in hopes of finding a Congregation willing to assume the responsibility of evangelizing these districts. In 1881, Brisson spoke with Pope Leo XIII and accepted a foreign mission to South Africa which put the governance of the Oblates under the Pope through the Propagation of the Faith.<ref name=nap></ref> Brisson sent five missionary priests in 1882, to fulfill Leonard's request. ] Missions were founded in ] in 1882,<ref>{{cite book |last1=Bishop Simon |first1=John Marie |title=Bishop for the Hottentots |date=1959 |publisher=Benzinger Brothers Inc , No. 2754 |location=USA}}</ref> Matjieskloof in 1885, ] in 1900, ] in 1904, and ] in 1904. ] Missions were founded in Heirachabies in 1896, ] in 1907, and Gabis in 1907.


==Oblates in Africa== ==In North America==
In 1893, the first Oblate priest arrived in the United States to serve as chaplain for the ], a religious community founded in 1886 in the Archdiocese of New York by Mary Dannat Starr and ]. In 1903, the first English speaking province was established in ], as was Salesianum School, a high school for boys.<ref></ref>
When the Vicar Apostolic of Cape of Good Hope, Bishop John Leonard, heard that the Society of African Missions of Lyons had decided to recall its subjects from Namaqualand and the North Western Cape, he made a trip to Europe in 1880 in hopes of finding a Congregation willing to assume the responsibility of evangelizing these districts. Fr. Brisson sent five missionary priests in 1882, to fulfill Bishop Leonard’s request.] Missions were founded in Matjieskloof in 1885, ] in 1900, ] in 1904, and ] in 1904. ] Missions were founded in Heirachabies in 1896, ] in 1907, and Gabis in 1907.


In 1906, the order expanded by purchasing a 210-acre farm, at the edge of Childs, a village in northeastern Maryland. On the rolling hillside near the B & O Railroad, they had convenient access to nearby Wilmington. Once the buildings went up and the "Novitiate of the Oblate Farthers of St. Francis de Sales" was dedicated on October 6, 1907, a local newspaper reported.<ref>{{Cite web |last=admin |date=2022-12-29 |title=Oblate Farthers of St. Francis de Sales Purchased Farm. |url=https://cecilcountyhistory.com/oblate-farthers-st-francis-de-sales/ |access-date=2023-01-05 |website=Window on Cecil County's Past |language=en-US}}</ref> Today, the property is used by the order as a retirement facility.<ref>{{Cite web |title=New Roof for Annecy Hall |url=https://www.oblates.org/updates/new-roof-for-retirement-community |access-date=2023-01-05 |website=Oblates of St. Francis de Sales |language=en-US}}</ref>
==Oblates in North America==
In 1893, the first Oblates priests arrived in the United States, serving chaplaincies in the ] area. In 1906, the first English speaking province was established in ]. After early years of modest expansion, the American Province flourished during the 1940s and 1950s with many vocations from schools it conducted in the Wilmington, ], ], ], and ] areas.


After early years of modest expansion, the American Province flourished during the 1940s and 1950s with many vocations from schools it conducted in the Wilmington, ], ], ], and ], areas. DeSales Spirituality Services is a web based ministry of the Wilmington-Philadelphia Province offering resources in spirituality.<ref name="Wilmington"></ref> As of 2017, there were 145 priests, brothers and seminarians in the Wilmington-Philadelphia Province.<ref></ref>
In 1966, the American Province was split into the Wilmington-Philadelphia Province, which encompassed the eastern and southern states, and the Toledo-Detroit Province, which encompassed the central and western states.


In 1966, the American Province was split into the Wilmington-Philadelphia Province, which encompassed the eastern and southern states, and the Toledo-Detroit Province, which encompassed the central and western states.<ref name=nap/>
===Child Abuse===


===Child abuse===
In 2011, the Oblates settled a lawsuit in Delaware, acknowledging that they had allowed child molestors and predators to victimize children.
''McCartney v. Oblates of St. Francis De Sales'' was a court case appealed to the Ohio Court of Appeals in which a former teacher at ] in Toledo, Ohio sued the principal and a student advisor for slander. In 1983, the teacher was convicted of contributing to the delinquency of a minor by providing alcohol to one of his students. Although his contract was subsequently not renewed, the teacher, a former yearbook advisor, remained in touch with the yearbook staff. On a subsequent yearbook "overnight", it was reported to the faculty advisor that his predecessor had been seen drinking beer in the school parking lot with two students and that they subsequently left the premises. The faculty adviser conveyed this information to the students' parents, along with information regarding the previous conviction. The former teacher sued the school for slander. The lower court found in favor of the school and the appellate affirmed court.<ref>McCartney v. Oblates of St. Francis De Sales, 609 N.E.2d 216 (Ohio Ct. App. 1992)</ref>


In 2015, James Roth, an Oblate priest, admitted that he perpetrated child sexual abuse in Ohio.<ref></ref>
The Oblates agreed to pay 23.6 million dollars to 154 victims of child abuse, and released the name of 12 priests who abused children:


], an Oblate priest, was convicted in 1999 in Oklahoma and 2016 in Michigan of child sexual abuse.<ref>{{cite news | first=Lois |last=Romano |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/2002/05/21/okla-archbishop-failed-to-oust-priest/1e6c9365-90b5-46fa-9def-eba27da633d6/ |title=Okla. Archbishop Failed to Oust Priest |newspaper=Washington Post |date=May 21, 2002 |access-date=April 21, 2022}}</ref>
Robert Drelich,
Richard N. Grant,
John X. Harvey,
John Heckle,
Harold Hermley,
Robert J. Hermley,
Dennis W. Killion,
Jack McDevitt,
Harold J. McGovern,
Francis L. Norris,
James W. O'Neill &
Henry Paul


==''Wilmington/Philadelphia Province''== ==Wilmington/Philadelphia Province==
* ] - Alexandria VA (formerly staffed by the Oblates of St. Francis de Sales) * ] Alexandria, Virginia (formerly staffed by the Oblates of St. Francis de Sales)
* ] – Fairfax, Virginia (formerly staffed by the Oblates of St. Francis de Sales)
* ] - Center Valley PA * ] Center Valley, Pennsylvania
* ] - Philadelphia PA (merged into Father Judge after 2010 school year)
* ] - Philadelphia PA * ] Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (merged into Father Judge after 2010 school year)
* ] – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania<ref>
* Nativity Preparatory School - Wilmington DE
</ref>
* ] - Wilmington DE
* Nativity Preparatory School Wilmington, Delaware
* Saint Francis de Sales K-8 - Salisbury MD
* ] Wilmington, Delaware


==''Toledo/Detroit Province''== ==Toledo/Detroit Province==
* ] - Salt Lake City UT (formerly staffed by the Oblates) * DeSales Catholic High School Lockport, New York (formerly staffed by the Oblates)
* ] - Jackson MI * ] Salt Lake City, Utah (formerly staffed by the Oblates)
* ] - Toledo OH * ] Jackson, Michigan
* ] - Stockton CA * ] Toledo, Ohio
* ] – Stockton, California


==References== ==References==
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==External links== ==External links==
* {{CathEncy|url=http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/11187a.htm|title=Oblates of St. Francis de Sales}}
*
* *
* *
Line 101: Line 97:
* *


{{Catholic|wstitle=Oblates of Saint Francis de Sales}}
{{catholic congregation}} {{catholic congregation}}
{{catholicism}} {{catholicism}}

Latest revision as of 21:02, 17 May 2024

Male Roman Catholic religious congregation
Oblates of St. Francis de Sales
AbbreviationO.S.F.S.
Formation21 December 1875; 149 years ago (1875-12-21)
TypeRoman Catholic religious order
HeadquartersGeneralate
Location
Superior GeneralBarry Strong, O.S.F.S.
Key peopleLouis Brisson—founder
Marie de Sales Chappuis—founder
Websitewww.desalesoblates.org

The Oblates of St. Francis de Sales (Latin: Oblati Sancti Francisci Salesii, O.S.F.S.) are a congregation of Catholic priests and brothers who follow the teachings of Francis de Sales and Jane Frances de Chantal. The community was founded in Troyes in 1875 by Louis Brisson and are affiliated with the Oblate Sisters of St. Francis de Sales.

History

Foundation

Louis Brisson

An order of cloistered nuns, the Order of the Visitation of Holy Mary, was founded by Francis de Sales at the request of Jane Frances de Chantal in 1610. The establishment of an Oratory at Thonon, where Francis served as the first Provost, was a preparatory step toward carrying out his design, the accomplishment of which was prevented by his death. With Chantal's encouragement and assistance, Raymond Bonal of Adge, in France, carried out his plan, but this congregation died out at the beginning of the 18th century. Two hundred years later it was revived by Marie de Sales Chappuis (died 7 October 1875) and Louis Brisson, a professor in the Seminary of Troyes. In 1869, Brisson established Saint Bernard Collège, near Troyes. In September 1871, a priest by the name of Gilbert (died 10 November 1909) joined him and Emmanuel-Jules Ravinet, Bishop of Troyes, received them and four companions into the novitiate.

Pope Pius IX temporarily approved their constitutions on 21 December 1875. The first vows were made 27 August 1876. The definitive approbation of their constitution was given on 8 December 1897.

Development

The congregation gradually developed in France. It numbered seven colleges and five other educational houses when the Government closed them all, 31 July 1903. The founder retired to Plancy where he died 2 February 1908. The Generalate was transferred to Rome, and in 1909, the church of Sts. Celsus and Julian in was entrusted to them. Oblate refers to persons, especially in the Middle Ages, who offered themselves and their property to a monastery.

Today

The members of this religious order are of two states, clerics and lay brothers. Today the Oblates are located throughout the world, in Holland, Germany, Austria, France, Switzerland, Italy, India, South Africa, Namibia, Benin, Ivory Coast, Uruguay, Brazil, Ecuador, Mexico, Haiti and the United States. The Generalate is located in Rome.

The order is governed by a superior general elected every six years; and four counsellors general elected by the general chapter. Each province is administered by a provincial superior, appointed by the superior general and his council for four years. He is assisted by three counsellors elected at each provincial chapter, which meets every four years, at an interval of six years between the regular general chapters.

Apostolate

Oblates engage in a wide variety of areas of service. Oblates are apostolates of education, parish work and foreign missions. They also work as teachers at religious and secular colleges and missionary areas as well as serving in military, campus, hospital, and convent chaplaincies and in inner-city social work.

Formation

The Oblates of St. Francis de Sales offer an Associate Program, designed to help young men discern a possible call to religious life and priesthood during their college years. The Postulate period lasts for a year, during which the candidate with and participates in the life of an Oblate community, in order to smooth the transition from his present lifestyle to Oblate community living. The one-year Novitiate is taken up with studies, particularly Salesian spirituality. For the first three years following first vows, Oblate renew their vows annually, and then profess perpetual vows. Generally, a Ministerial Internship takes place after the novitiate. Candidates for ordination pursue further studies in academic, professional and pastoral education.

In the early 20th century they had the following membership:

In Walmer (Kent, England) they operated a boarding school for boys, the chaplaincy of the Visitation Convent and Academy of Roselands and a small parish in Faversham. To this province belonged the Apostolic Vicariate of Orange River.

In Africa

When the Vicar Apostolic of Cape of Good Hope, John Leonard, heard that the Society of African Missions of Lyons had decided to recall its subjects from Namaqualand and the North Western Cape, he made a trip to Europe in 1880 in hopes of finding a Congregation willing to assume the responsibility of evangelizing these districts. In 1881, Brisson spoke with Pope Leo XIII and accepted a foreign mission to South Africa which put the governance of the Oblates under the Pope through the Propagation of the Faith. Brisson sent five missionary priests in 1882, to fulfill Leonard's request. South Africa Missions were founded in Pella in 1882, Matjieskloof in 1885, Nababeep in 1900, O'kiep in 1904, and Port Nolloth in 1904. Namibia Missions were founded in Heirachabies in 1896, Warmbad in 1907, and Gabis in 1907.

In North America

In 1893, the first Oblate priest arrived in the United States to serve as chaplain for the Sisters of the Divine Compassion, a religious community founded in 1886 in the Archdiocese of New York by Mary Dannat Starr and Thomas S. Preston. In 1903, the first English speaking province was established in Wilmington, Delaware, as was Salesianum School, a high school for boys.

In 1906, the order expanded by purchasing a 210-acre farm, at the edge of Childs, a village in northeastern Maryland. On the rolling hillside near the B & O Railroad, they had convenient access to nearby Wilmington. Once the buildings went up and the "Novitiate of the Oblate Farthers of St. Francis de Sales" was dedicated on October 6, 1907, a local newspaper reported. Today, the property is used by the order as a retirement facility.

After early years of modest expansion, the American Province flourished during the 1940s and 1950s with many vocations from schools it conducted in the Wilmington, Philadelphia, Toledo, Detroit, and Niagara Falls, New York, areas. DeSales Spirituality Services is a web based ministry of the Wilmington-Philadelphia Province offering resources in spirituality. As of 2017, there were 145 priests, brothers and seminarians in the Wilmington-Philadelphia Province.

In 1966, the American Province was split into the Wilmington-Philadelphia Province, which encompassed the eastern and southern states, and the Toledo-Detroit Province, which encompassed the central and western states.

Child abuse

McCartney v. Oblates of St. Francis De Sales was a court case appealed to the Ohio Court of Appeals in which a former teacher at St. Francis de Sales High School in Toledo, Ohio sued the principal and a student advisor for slander. In 1983, the teacher was convicted of contributing to the delinquency of a minor by providing alcohol to one of his students. Although his contract was subsequently not renewed, the teacher, a former yearbook advisor, remained in touch with the yearbook staff. On a subsequent yearbook "overnight", it was reported to the faculty advisor that his predecessor had been seen drinking beer in the school parking lot with two students and that they subsequently left the premises. The faculty adviser conveyed this information to the students' parents, along with information regarding the previous conviction. The former teacher sued the school for slander. The lower court found in favor of the school and the appellate affirmed court.

In 2015, James Roth, an Oblate priest, admitted that he perpetrated child sexual abuse in Ohio.

James Francis Rapp, an Oblate priest, was convicted in 1999 in Oklahoma and 2016 in Michigan of child sexual abuse.

Wilmington/Philadelphia Province

Toledo/Detroit Province

References

  1. ^  One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Oblates of Saint Francis de Sales". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  2. OSFS South African Region
  3. Owens, Joseph P. "Wilmington resident Father Barry Strong named to oversee Oblates in Rome", The Dialog, Roman Catholic Diocese of Wilmington, September 7, 2018
  4. ^ The Oblates of St. Francis de Sales Wilmington-Philadelphia Province
  5. ^ OSFS North American Provinces
  6. Bishop Simon, John Marie (1959). Bishop for the Hottentots. USA: Benzinger Brothers Inc , No. 2754.
  7. De Salle University
  8. admin (2022-12-29). "Oblate Farthers of St. Francis de Sales Purchased Farm". Window on Cecil County's Past. Retrieved 2023-01-05.
  9. "New Roof for Annecy Hall". Oblates of St. Francis de Sales. Retrieved 2023-01-05.
  10. Lang, Mike. "Oblate provincial to be president of DeSales University", The Dialog, 2 April 2017
  11. McCartney v. Oblates of St. Francis De Sales, 609 N.E.2d 216 (Ohio Ct. App. 1992)
  12. McKenna, Fr. Ken, Provincial of the Toledo-Detroit Province of the Oblates of St Francis de Sales, Statement on Allegations of Sexual Misconduct
  13. Romano, Lois (May 21, 2002). "Okla. Archbishop Failed to Oust Priest". Washington Post. Retrieved April 21, 2022.
  14. "About us", Father Judge High School

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