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Extract
In the Beginning
Perhaps I should begin by saying that the origin of this paper lies in the discussion of the North European diffinitors when they met last year to begin thinking about this General Chapter. We met in Edinburgh, one of the most northerly houses of the Order in Europe, in October as the all-enveloping darkness of a Scottish Winter began to make itself felt, and in a city known for its particularly gloomy Calvinist establishment. So perhaps there was a certain inevitability about our finding this topic. What I want to say is partly drawn from our conversations in Edinburgh, and from our correspondence with each other since then, and partly from the depths of my own sense of mortality.
I suppose we should also take into consideration the fact that one of the provinces represented at that meeting, Flanders, doesn’t have a single novice or brother in formation at present, and has had no ordination for two years. Only two men have been professed there in the last 25 years. Houses are closing, projects are dying. The Dutch province also has its difficulties: having had 600 members in 1957, it now has about 190, and most of these are old men. One novice was professed three years ago, and now they are asking themselves whether they can receive any more. They have had to sell the Albertinum, one of their major historical projects. It’s hardly surprising that the Dutch diffinitor, Ben, asks “Are we coming to the end of religious life?” This is certainly the impression given in some parts of the world.
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- Copyright © 1996 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers
References
1 Fergus Kerr OP, 25‐6‐95.
2 Remember that moving house is high on the list of psycho‐pathogenic factors, along with bereavement and divorce.
3 Genesis 1:28.
4 R‐18, p. 4. “It is particularly important (except where the Order is at the stage of implantatio Ordinis) to create the conditions for renouncing parishes and once the conditions are present to act on them.”
5 R‐7, p. 3.
6 Letter to Oskar Poilak, 27 January 1904.