Who We Are
Oklahoma City Chapter of Lay Dominicans
We are a group of ordinary men and women who want to live extraordinary lives to the glory of God and by the grace and for the sake of our Lord Jesus Christ. We are mothers, dads, college students, doctors, school teachers, lawyers, and all walks of life who are Catholics and seek to discipline our lives to conform to the image of Christ by following the teachings, prayer life, and spiritual life of Saint Dominic in all we do.
The Lay Dominican Story
The earliest third order or tertiary dates back to the twelfth century, when many devout Christians were zealously moved by the Holy Spirit to radically reform Christendom by preaching. Some of these Christians gradually organized themselves into distinct groups, such as the Waldensians and the Humiliati. However, with much sincerity, but without teaching or oversight, their sermons and doctrine deteriorated into outright heresy, which forced the Church to restrict their preaching activities. This led many of them to become priests. Others were gathered into a cloister and took up religious life. And others remained outside, living a rule of life within the world, yet spiritually dependent on the one of the priestly orders and now for the first time in history called a Third Order or Tertiary.
In the early 1200′s, Saint Dominic was a priest who radiated a life of simplicity, purity, and love for God that resonated with such fervor that people wondered if Christ had been born again. At this time, he happened to be assigned the direction of a community of nine Catholic women in Prouille who had separated from the Albegensians.* He cared for their earthly needs and directed their spiritual formation and formed them into a community of nuns, who were the first church-sanctioned Dominicans. In a short time, a large body of laity who were living a life of piety found themselves attracted to St. Dominic and grouped themselves around his rising Order of Preachers and, constituted on their own, a “third order.” The priests were referred to as the first order, and the cloistered nuns, the second order. But throughout their history, third order Dominicans shared, with the first and second, in the same spirituality, the same superiors, and even aspects of the same habit such as the scapular.
From the fifteenth century on, the third order of Dominicans consists of men or women and can be divided into two categories, regulars and seculars. Regulars live in community, wear the habit externally, and take a vow to live according to the Dominican Rule. Seculars, whether married or single, cleric or lay, live in the world but privately follow the Dominican Rule, pray part of the Divine Office, wear some symbol of the Dominican habit, and make a solemn promise to live according to the Dominican Rule adapted to their life as Lay Dominicans.
In 1968 the Second Vatican Council further defined and enhanced the role of the lay vocation, stating clearly that primary role of laity is transformation of the world. Vatican II caused the various third orders to revise their Rules and Statutes, so the new Rules and Statues are steeped in the doctrine of Vatican II.
Blessed Pope John Paul II stated that the mission of the laity is urgent and is critical to the mission of the whole Church The mission of the laity is ordered to the World, so that, by remaining fully incorporated into Christ and filled with the Holy Spirit, they may transform her and begin to bring about the Kingdom of God on Earth. In other words, they are called to make Earth more like Heaven! [Apostolic Exhortation, Pope John Paul II, Christifideles Laici, The Lay Members of Christ’s Faithful, 1988]
Over the years, the Dominican Order has recognized the equal importance of all the types of vocations and have opted to change the designation of ”third order seculars” to Lay Dominicans, to avoid the possible implications of levels of importance of “first, second, and third orders.”
Among the greatest saints of Lay Dominicans are Catherine of Siena and Rose of Lima, who both lived ascetic lives in their family homes, and whose spiritual influence was great in their societies. Other well-known Lay Dominicans are Saint Martin de Porres, Saint Louis de Montfort, Blessed Pier Giorgio, Fulton J. Sheen, and many others!
The Lay Dominican Order is truly an Order; Lay Dominicans are truly religious in the medieval sense. They have their origin in the desire of the laity for a radical, evangelical style of life.
* Albegensians – a heretical group that believed that the soul is good and the body is evil and that man must be purified and must not indulge in any physical pleasures.
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St. Martin de Porres Province
The St. Martin de Porres Province of the Dominican Order consists of the southern United States including the states of Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Texas.
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