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Priestly Society of the Holy Cross

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Priestly Society of the Holy Cross

The Priestly Society of the Holy Cross is an association of Catholic diocesan priests which is integrally united to the Prelature of Opus Dei.

Contents

Part of the society is made up of the clergy of the Opus Dei prelature—members of the priesthood who fall under the jurisdiction of the Opus Dei prelature are automatically members of the Priestly Society. Other members in the society are traditional diocesan priests--- clergy who remain under the jurisdiction of their diocesan bishop. Technically speaking, such diocesan priests have not "joined" Opus Dei membership, although they have joined a society that is closely affiliated with Opus Dei.

Foundation and mission

The Priestly Society of the Holy Cross was begun by St. Josemaría Escrivá on 14 February 1943, and received its first canonical approval a few months later. He was always concerned that his message of sanctification of ordinary work be transmitted also to the secular clergy. He even said that he was willing to leave Opus Dei, as Abraham offered up his son Isaac, to be able to help the clergy. But on February 14, 1943, he said he received an illumination from God on how to continue serving both the laity and the diocesan clergy.

During Mass at the women's center of Opus Dei, he was shown the seal of Opus Dei and of the Priestly Society of the Holy Cross: a cross embracing the world. He was also shown the juridical solution to put the two together. The priests would be part of a society united to Opus Dei, but the diocesan priests would continue to be priests of their dioceses, and thus there will be no conflict with the bishops.

The first priests of the Priestly Society were the numerary members of Opus Dei, who as such are automatically members of the Society. The first three priests ordained as members of the Society were: Álvaro del Portillo, José Luis Muzquiz and José María Hernández Garnica.

The need for this type of association has been explained in the following way:

As many priests can testify, loneliness can be the most difficult Cross to embrace. However, there are remedies for loneliness, and priests are free to seek for that help upon which their happiness largely relies. Diocesan priests can certainly establish their own support groups for prayer, socializing, exercise, and relaxation. But normally that is not enough. In #29 of the DLMP, the document, echoing the Second Vatican Council (Presbyterorum ordinis, #8) and the Code of Canon Law (C 550, n. 2), highly praises “those associations which support priestly fraternity, sanctity in the exercise of their ministry, and communion with the Bishop and with the entire Church”. [1]

Establishment by Pope John Paul II

According to the Apostolic Constitution Ut sit issued by John Paul II: “From its beginnings, this (Opus Dei) has in fact striven, not only to illuminate with new lights the mission of the laity in the Church and in society, but also to put it into practice; it has also endeavored to put into practice the teaching of the universal call to sanctity, and to promote at all levels of society the sanctification of ordinary work, and by means of ordinary work. Furthermore, through the Priestly Society of the Holy Cross, it has helped diocesan priests to live this teaching, in the exercise of their sacred ministry.”

Through this document, John Paul II, aside from erecting Opus Dei as a personal prelature, also erected the Priestly Society of the Holy Cross “as a priestly Association intrinsically united to the Prelature.” [2]

Composition

It is made up first of all of the clergy of the Prelature who are automatically members. Secondly, it is made up of diocesan priests, deacons, and bishops. Some Opus Dei members also serve as bishops in various dioceses throughout the world, including the United States, Europe, South America, Africa and China. The prelate of Opus Dei is the president of the society.

These diocesan clergy of the Priestly Society are not incardinated into the presbyterate of the Prelature. They depend solely on their bishop and receive spiritual help from the Society to fulfill their priestly duties well.

According to the Annuario Pontificio, there were 1996 priests of the Prelature in the year 2009. John Allen stated there were roughly two thousand diocesan priests who belonged to society who were not clergy of the prelature, thus the total membership of the society is around 4000 priests.

Formation

The priests are given the same formation as the lay faithful of Opus Dei. St. Josemaría always said that he has “the same cooking pot” for his children: classes on doctrine, ascetical formation, spiritual direction, recollections, retreats, etc.

Membership

There are around 4000 priests, bishops and deacons around the world who are members of the Priestly Society of the Holy Cross.

Here are some of the prominent members of the Society:

Founder:

  • Saint Josemaría Escrivá, founder of Opus Dei (died 1975)
  • Prelates of Opus Dei:

  • Blessed Álvaro del Portillo y Diez de Solano, (died 1994), Prelate of Opus Dei and Titular Bishop of Vita
  • Javier Echevarria Rodriguez, Prelate of Opus Dei and Titular Bishop of Cilibia
  • Cardinals:

  • Juan Luis Cipriani Thorne, Archbishop of Lima, former Archbishop of Ayacucho o Huamanga, Peru
  • Julián Herranz Casado, President emeritus of the Pontifical Council for Legislative Texts
  • Malcolm Ranjith, Archbishop of Colombo, Sri Lanka
  • Bishops:

  • Antonio Arregui Yarza, Archbishop of Guayaquil, Ecuador
  • Luis Gleisner Wobbe, Titular Bishop of Mididi, Auxiliary Bishop of Rancagua, Auxiliary Bishop of La Serena, Chile
  • Alfonso Delgado Evers, Bishop of San Juan de Cuyo, former Bishop of Santo Tomé, former Bishop of Posadas, Argentina
  • Antonio Augusto Dias Duarte, Titular Bishop of Tuscamia, Auxiliary Bishop of São Sebastião do Rio de Janeiro
  • Robert Finn, Bishop of Kansas City - Saint Joseph, Missouri
  • John Barres, Bishop of Allentown, Pennsylvania
  • Ricardo García García, Prelate of Yauyos, Peru
  • Ignacio González Errazúriz, Bishop of San Bernardo, Chile
  • Francisco de Guruceaga Iturriza, Bishop of Margarita, former Bishop of La Guaira, former Auxiliary Bishop of Ciudad Bolivar, Venezuela
  • Ignacio María de Orbegozo y Goicoechea, Bishop of Chiclayo, and former Prelate of Yauyos, Peru
  • José Horacio Gómez, S.T.D., Archbishop of Los Angeles, California; former Archbishop of San Antonio, Texas; and former auxiliary for the Archdiocese of Denver, Colorado, United States of America
  • Philippe Jean-Charles Jourdan, Apostolic Administrator of Estonia
  • Klaus Küng, Bishop of Sankt Pölten, former Bishop of Feldkirch, Austria
  • Juan Ignacio Larrea Holguín, Archbishop of Guayaquil, former Bishop of Quito, former Military Ordinary, former Auxiliary Bishop of Quito, Ecuador
  • Rogelio Ricardo Livieres Plano, Bishop emeritus of Ciudad del Este, Paraguay
  • Rafael Llano Cifuentes, Bishop of Nova Friburgo, Rio de Janeiro, former auxiliary Bishop of Archdiocese of São Sebastião do Rio de Janeiro in Brazil
  • Anthony Muheria, Bishop of Embu, Kenya
  • Francisco Polti Santillan, Bishop of Santo Tome, Argentina
  • Jaume Pujol Balcells, Archbishop of Tarragona, Spain
  • Ugo Eugenio Puccini Banfi, Bishop of Santa Marta, and former Auxiliary Bishop of Barranquilla, Colombia
  • Luis Sánchez-Moreno Lira, Archbishop of Arequipa, former Prelate of Yauyos, Peru
  • Fernando Saenz Lacalle, Archbishop Emeritus of San Salvador, former Apostolic Administrator of the Military of San Salvador
  • Juan Antonio Ugarte Perez, Archbishop of Cuzco, former Auxiliary Bishop of Abancay, and former Auxiliary Bishop of Yauyos, Peru
  • Adolfo Rodríguez Vidal, Bishop Emeritus of Los Angeles, Chile
  • John J. Myers, Archbishop of Newark, New Jersey, United States
  • Stephen Lee Bun-Sang, Bishop of Macau, Titular Bishop of Novae, formerly Auxiliary Bishop of Hong Kong, China
  • Lluís Clavell Ortiz-Repiso president of the Pontifical Academy of St. Thomas Aquinas, Rome
  • Jaime Rafael Fuentes Martin, Titular Bishop of Minas, Uruguay
  • References

    Priestly Society of the Holy Cross Wikipedia