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Marianists at the University of Dayton
 

Celebrate May Feast Days:  May 12 - Mary, Mother of Grace, Pius IX approves the Society of Mary; May 25 - Mary, Help of Christians, Anniversary of the Foundation of the Marianist Sisters in 1816
 


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Marianist Mission, Charism, and Ministries 


Charism
Ministries

Our mission is to lead others through community to faith in Jesus Christ. Using Mary as our model, we fulfill this mission within the Church, utilizing our Marianist Charism through a variety of ministries. Father Chaminade strongly resisted all attempts to define the mission of Marianists in terms of specific ministries. The notion of universal service keeps Marianists and Marianist communities open to any need in our Church.

The Society of Mary originated within lay communities of faith. An essential part of our Marianist life is our collaboration with lay communities in a common mission for the Church. The role of religious communities within the larger Marianist Family is one of animation, support, and mutual service. Together, religious and lay Marianists understand our mission to be for the Church and to witness gospel faith lived out in community.

Our style of Marianist ministry involves the realization that faith is best communicated through personal relationships and is nurtured through lived experiences of community and service.

The quality and depth of our own common life together has always been seen by Marianists as the primary grounding and support for all our ministry; what Marianist do as ministry is never quite as important as how they do it. The hallmarks of Marianist ministry are a concern for promoting and developing faith communities among those we serve, and among those with whom we serve; a belief that faith formation is a life-long process of growth and development, "from the cradle to the grave"; and the hope that faith and community formation will energize all aspects of each person's baptismal commitment.

Traditionally, Marianists have understood education in schools to be a profound opportunity for building communities of faith. Many communities surround a school: the communities of students, of students' families, of staff and faculty, and alumni. To draw these "communities of circumstance" toward the development of faith communities has always been a privileged emphasis of Marianist ministry.

In recent years, the Church has called religious to hear and respond in new ways to the needs of God's people. Marianists have responded by bringing our gifts of community formation to new arenas beyond the schools: the parish, family ministry, and the arts, among others. A deeper sensitivity to the economically poor, the marginalized, and the disenfranchised has marked our decisions about where we choose to minister for the sake of the Gospel.

Our Founder, William Joseph Chaminade, was fond of the Latin expression "Nova Bella Elegit Dominus" (The Lord has chosen new wars). Despite the militaristic language of Father Chaminade's nineteenth century, he expresses in this phrase the openness to communal discernment, courageous adaptation, and decisive response which characterizes our Marianist mission of service to God's people.



 


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