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Confraternity
of the Holy Rosary
In accordance with the conclusion of the article ROSARY no sufficient evidence is
forthcoming to establish the existence of any Rosary Confraternity before the last quarter
of the fifteenth century. Dominican guilds or fraternities there were, but we cannot
assume without proof that they were connected with the Rosary. We know, however, that
through the preaching of Alan de Rupe such associations began to be erected shortly before
1475; that established at Cologne in 1474 by Father James Sprenger is especially famous.
People from all parts of the world desired to be enrolled in it. A casual English example
occurs in the Plumpton Correspondence (Camden Society, p. 50), where a priest in London
writes in 1486 to his patron in Yorkshire: "I send a paper of the Rosary of our Ladye
of Coleyn and I have registered your name with both my Ladies names, as the paper
expresses, and ye be acopled as brother and sisters." Even at that time the entry of
the name of each associate on the register was an indispensable condition of membership,
and so it remains to this day. It was undoubtedly to this and similar confraternities,
which by degrees began to be erected in many other places under Dominican supervision,
that the great vogue of the Rosary as well as the acceptance of a more uniform system in
its recitation of the Rosary was mainly due. The recitation of the Rosary is alone
prescribed for the members -- at present they undertake to recite the fifteen mysteries at
least once in each week -- but even this does not in any way bind under sin. The
organization of these confraternities is entirely in the hands of the Dominican and no new
confraternity can be anywhere given without the sanction of the general. It is to the
members of the Rosary confraternities that the principal indulgences have been granted,
and there can be no need to lay stress upon the special advantages which the confraternity
offers by the union of prayer and devotional exercises as well as the participation of
merits in this which is probably the largest organization of the kind within the Catholic
church. Moreover, in the "patent of erection", which is issued for each new
confraternity by the General of the Dominicans, a clause is added granting to all members
enrolled therein "a participation in all the good works which by the grace of God are
performed throughout the world by the brethren and sisters of the said [Dominican]
Order." An important Apostolic Constitution on the Rosary Confraternity , which may
be regarded as a sort of new charter, was issued by Leo XIII on 2 October, 1898.
The Perpetual Rosary is an organization for securing the
continuous recitation of the Rosary by day and night among a number of associates who
perform their allotted share at stated times. This is a development of the Rosary
Confraternity, and dates from the seventeenth century.
The "Living Rosary" was began in 1826, an is
independent of the confraternity; it consists in a number of circles of fifteen members
who each agree to recite a single decade every day and who thus complete the whole Rosary
between them.
HERBERT THURSTON
Transcribed by Michael C. Tinkler
From the Catholic Encyclopedia, copyright © 1913 by the Encyclopedia Press, Inc.
Electronic version copyright © 1997 by New Advent, Inc.
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