Canons
Regular of the Order of the Holy Cross
The Order was founded
in the year 1210 by Blessed Theodore de Celles and his companions.
The name Crosier is derived from the French croises; that is,
those signed with the cross. In medieval England Crosiers were
known as the Crutched (crossed) Friars. The designation, of course,
refers to the cross and the spirituality of the Order. The primary
feast of the Crosiers, the Triumph of the Cross, reflects a spirituality
focused on the triumphal cross of Christ and the glorified Lord.
One of the distinctive marks of the Crosiers is the red and white
crusaders' cross worn on the scapular of their religious habit.
The Order's history may be divided
into three periods. The first or medieval period was one of astonishing
growth. Blessed Theodore and four companions came from Liegé
in Belgium and formed a community at a place near the city of
Huy called Clairlieu. They had little idea of establishing a
religious order. Their mission was a life of liturgical prayer
and pastoral work following the canonical tradition rather than
the strictly monastic. They adopted the Rule of St. Augustine.
Soon other communities were established, serving many great churches
throughout Europe. At one time as many as ninety Crosier communities
could be counted. They were also much involved in the running
of hospices for travelers and those in pilgrimage. While the
motherhouse remained at Huy for much of the Order's history,
other prominent priories were founded in France (Paris and Toulouse),
in the Rhineland (Cologne), and in England (London), as well
as the Low Countries.
The second period of the Order's history was
ushered in by a reform initiated at the General Chapter of 1410.
This reform, influenced by a spiritual movement called the Devotio Moderna, was spearheaded by the priory of St. Agatha in the Netherlands
and was typified by a very personal devotional spirituality.
While the house at Huy remained the motherhouse, St. Agatha became
the spiritual center of a reformed and revitalizd Order.
The heart of the Order in the Rhineland and
the Low Countries was deeply affected by the Protestant Reformation.
Many of the priories and churches of the Crosiers were swept
away by the Protestant Reform. Under Henry VIII, all the houses
in England were surpressed. Later, at the end of the eigtheenth
century, the French Revolution and the subsequent Napoleonic
reforms further reduced the number of Crosiers. In the early
1800's, only two priories remained, St. Agatha's and another
in Uden, also in the Netherlands. By 1840, four elderly Crosiers
were all that remained. Secular authorities had forbidden them
to accept new members.
The modern era begins in 1840 when the law
forbidding new members was repealed and surprising numbers joined
the Order, some of them diocesan priests who believed all along
that they had a call to religious life. Henricus van de Wijmelenberg
was one joined at this time. Soon this new Crosier was appointed
as the superior, and then, in 1841, as Commissary General of
the revitalized Order. He began to reestablish houses in Belgium
and the Netherlands and even in the missionary lands. In 1850
he sent priests and brothers to Wisconsin in the USA. In all,
nine Crosiers worked among Dutch and Belgian immigrants, especially
in the Green Bay area and along the Fox River. Father Edward
Daems made an attempt to establish a priory, but with the onset
of the Civil War, the attempt was abandoned.
A second attempt to establish an American
presence by the Crosiers was made in 1910 under Master General Hollman. This time priests and brothers were sent to northern
Minnesota. In 1922, a priory and school were established in the
small village of Onamia, ninety miles north of Minneapolis.
At this same time, Master General Hollman
successfully undertook mission ventures in other parts of the
world. In 1920, he sent Crosiers to the Belgian Congo (now Congo).
In 1926 he sent Crosiers to the island of Java in Indonesia.
In 1934, Master General van Dinter sent missionaries to Brazil. Since 1958, Crosiers have worked in the Diocese of Agats-Asmat (Irian
Jaya region of Indonesia). In 1996, that region became a pro-province,
a status reflecting its remarkable growth in recent years.
Today, the worldwide Order of the Holy Cross
includes foundations in Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Congo,
Germany, Indonesia, the Netherlands, and the United States. There
are approximately 500 Crosiers throughout the world.
The residence (Generalate) of the Master General
and his staff is found in Rome, at the Church of San Giorgio al Velabro. The Order has cared for this seventh century church
since 1939.