(Redirected from Sulpician Order)The 'Society of Saint-Sulpice' (
Latin: ''Societas Presbyterorum a S. Sulpitio'') is a
Catholic Society of Apostolic Life named for
Eglise Saint-Sulpice, Paris, in turn named for St.
Sulpitius the Pious. Typically, priests become members of the Society of St. Sulpice only after ordination and some years of pastoral work: The purpose of the society is mainly the education of priests and to some extent parish work.
It was founded in
Paris by
Jean-Jacques Olier(
September 20,
1608 –
April 2,
1657), an exemplar of the
French school of spirituality, then pastor of the
Church of Saint-Sulpice in Paris, in
1642 for the purpose of educating priests. The Sulpician seminaries, above all the one in Paris, were famed for their solid orthodox teaching and high moral tone. In the 18th century, they became fashionable, attracting the sons of the nobility, and producing a large percentage of the French Church's hierarchy.
In Canada
New France
The Sulpicians played a major role in the founding of the Canadian city of
Montréal, where they engaged in missionary activities, as well as in the training of priests. In
1657 Olier, shortly before his death, sent four priests (
Gabriel de Queylus, Sovart, d'Allet, and Galinier) to take over from the
Jesuit Fathers.
[1]
As the new feudal lords of Montreal, the order granted easy terms to settlers. They tried to encourage settlement of villages around the city as a first line of defense against attacks by native peoples.
[2]
In
1794, twelve Sulpicians fled persecution by the
National Convention and emigrated to
Montreal,
Quebec. According to the
Catholic Encyclopedia, the Sulpicians of Montreal would have become extinct had not the
English Government humanely opened
Canada to the priests persecuted during the
French Revolution. Under the previous
French Colonial government, the King of France had granted the Sulpician Order large parcels of land in Montreal. The ''Catholic Encyclopedia'' also records that after lengthy disputes, in 1840 the possessions of the Sulpician Order, coveted by the English business agents, were recognized by the British Crown and the Sullpicians were free to keep all their holdings and to continue undisturbed their work for the Church and society. Included in their vast land holdings was the property through which the
Lachine Canal was built in 1825. After convincing the government to designate the property on the banks of the canal as industrial zones, the Order began selling off parcels for industrial development at enormous profits that helped finance their good works.
In the USA
On
10 July,
1791 St. Mary’s Seminary in
Baltimore was established by four Sulpicians:
Francis Charles Nagot, Anthony Gamier, Michael Levadoux, and John Tessier who were fleeing the
French Revolution. They purchased the One Mile
Tavern on the edge of the city, dedicated the house to the
Blessed Virgin, and in October opened classes with five students whom they had brought from
France, becoming the first Sulpician Order in the
United States.
In March,
1792 three more priests arrived, Mr. Chicoisneau, Mr. John B. David and Mr.
Benedict Joseph Flaget. Two seminarians arrived with them,
Steven T. Badin and another named Barret. In June,
1792 Messrs. Ambrose Maréchal, Gabriel Richard and Francis Ciquard arrived. Many of these early priests were sent as missionaries to remote areas of the United States and its territories. Flaget and David founded the Roman Catholic Seminary of St. Thomas, at
Bardstown,
Kentucky. This was the first seminary West of the Appalacians. A church built there in
1816, St. Thomas, is the oldest standing brick church in Kentucky.
In
1796,
Louis William Valentine Dubourg arrived and became the president of
Georgetown University. He would later become the first bishop of the
Louisiana Territory.
In
1898, at the invitation of San Francisco archbishop Patrick William Riordan, the Sulpicians founded
Saint Patrick Seminary in
Menlo Park, California.
From the
1920s until about
1971, the Society operated
St. Edward Seminary in
Kenmore, Washington,
USA. The grounds now form
Saint Edward State Park and
Bastyr University.
Sulpicians today
According to the
Annuario Pontificio 330 priests were members of the society in 2004.
Notes
1. Francis Parkman, La Salle and the Discovery of the Great West, France and England in North America 3 Williamstown, MA: Corner House Publishers, 1980), 10.
2. Parkman, 11.
See also
★
Collège de Montréal
★
Jean-Jacques Olier
External links
★
Church and organ of St-Sulpice: (in French and English)
★
Entry in the Catholic Encyclopedia
★
Sulpicians in the United States - Article in the Catholic Encyclopedia