Dictionary Definition
conventual adj : of communal life sequestered
from the world under religious vows [syn: cloistered, cloistral, monastic, monastical]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Adjective
- of, or relating to a convent or convent life; cloistered, monastic
Noun
- a member of a convent
Extensive Definition
The Order of Friars Minor Conventual (OFM Conv),
commonly known as the Conventual Franciscans, is a branch of the
order of Roman
Catholic Friars founded by
Francis
of Assisi in 1209.
History
Seeking to permeate the new urban social order
with the ideals of Saint
Francis, some friars settled in the urban slums, the suburbs. For the medievals, the
suburbs were those neighbourhoods where the huts and shacks of the
poorest were built outside the safety of the city walls. In
London, the
first settlement of the friars was on "Stinking Lane," clearly not
named for a fashionable quarter.
Since the suburbs were also the place where
hospitals were set up,
the friars were often commissioned by the city government to
facilitate the care of the sick. The friars eventually replaced
huts with more solid buildings and constructed churches. From the time of
Anthony of
Padua, friars preached not only on Sundays and holidays -
preaching was not common practice at the time - but also during the
rainy seasons. Robert
Grosseteste, then Bishop of
Lincoln, marvelled that the people "run to the friars for
instruction as well as for confession and direction.
They are transforming the world."
But even with its positive developments, this
movement into the cities was controversial and split the Order into
two factions: those who desired a life of solitary meditation in
rural areas, and those who desired to live together in friaries and
work among the urban poor. This latter group was first known as the
"Friars
of the Community." By 1250 they were also
referred to as Fratres
Conventuales ("Conventual Friars") - a generic designation for
those religious who lived in a stable house (conventus in Latin).
However, the official title remained Fratres
Minores until the division of 1517, when these
followers of Saint Francis became definitively known as Fratres
Minores Conventuales - "Friars Minor Conventual".
Generally, the Conventuals did not remain at the
sites associated with Francis' actual presence. The caves where he prayed, the
hermitages built near the well water that turned into wine, the
trees where he preached to birds, all became smaller sanctuaries
that attracted the temporary structures of the eremetical friars.
The Friars of the Community sought to take Francis' spirit beyond
the confinement of the time and space that he had occupied on
earth, and bring it into the far reaches of a universal Church. As
with the apostles
after the
Ascension of Christ, the Friars
of the Community could not stand gazing heavenward. After the
founder's death, they began the task of transforming Francis'
earthly existence into something that would endure the passing
elements of history, creating anew for each generation a message as
fresh as when they stood so close beside him.
Therefore, at a time when vast tracts of land
were understood as power, the minority of the Conventuals led them
to nestle their large houses into small plots where Lady Poverty
could dwell with her handmaid Community. There, the concentration
of talented men living a regularized life steeped in prayer, study
and work, became like a well-armed garrison that fought against the
power of darkness and despondency on the battleground of urban and
suburban life. The friary acted as a fortress of faith where
disciplined austerity, focused generosity, and harmonized prayer
grounded the friars in stability, while their itinerant hearts were
missioned into the farthest corners of earthly possibilities.
Due to their international sharing of vocations
and talent, the friars had news to tell from different lands, and
various perspectives to propagate. As church attendance among the
laity continued to increase, the friars were pumping new faith,
sentiment and poetry into the heart of an invigorated Church.
Academics
The medieval university was the pinnacle
of human dignity; it sought to glorify God by participating in
Creation. Faith always preceded
science; it fixed its
boundaries and prescribed its traditions. The seven liberal arts
- the trivium of grammar, logic and rhetoric, and the quadrivium of
arithmetic, music, geometry and astronomy - were the sacred
categorizing of God's universe and the channelling of
knowledge which was always directed toward theology, the Queen
of the Sciences.
Initially afraid that learning would distance the
friars from the ordinary people, Francis became more concerned
about what the lack of learning was producing - a distancing from
authentic Catholic teaching. Before Francis' death in 1226, not
only were great numbers of intellectuals joining the Order, but a
house of studies was established at the University
of Paris (1219). Francis had first resisted and then accepted
the pope's encouragement to
build a house of studies at the University
of Bologna (l220), where Anthony of Padua opened the first
school of theology. When commissioning Anthony to teach, Francis
only stipulated that in pursuing academic endeavours the spirit of
prayer and devotion should not be extinguished.
Bonaventure
himself confessed that he was drawn to Saint Francis because, just
as the Church had made scholars and doctors out of lowly fishermen,
so likewise in the sacred reversal of things, the Friars Minor were
transforming men of culture and science into simple men of
humility. Even though the Zelanti and Spirituals complained that
learning was against the ideals of Saint Francis ("Ok, Paris, you
have ruined Assisi!"), the Minister
General John of
Parma (1247-1257), a Spiritual himself, asserted that the
structure of the Order rested on two pillars: virtue and
learning.
The Franciscans soon came to agree with the
Dominicans
that study was a form of prayer. To further maintain this precept,
at the initiative of Pope
Innocent IV, the people of Bologna built the
friars another house near the university, strictly for the purpose
of contemplation. Earlier, the papal decree Quia
Populares Tumultus (1224), also encouraged religious to
remember the importance of a retired life amidst the
activity.
And there was plenty of activity. These large
academic friaries were also centres of charity that ministered to
all classes of society. The nursing of common ailments and serious
diseases involved the friars in studying and developing the
medical
sciences. They practiced what was known as observed science, an
observation of behavioural patterns that led to a scientific
discovery. At a time when germs were unknown, the friars
significantly improved basic hygiene by teaching people to
wash their clothing in one fountain and to drink out of another
fountain. In fact, the friars' concern about clean water
prompted them to build aqueducts and conduits that transported water
over long distances into the towns and into their friaries.
Although among the most learned men of their day,
the friars always strove for simplicity in their lifestyle and
clarity in their presentation. They became well known for
compiling, condensing and simplifying a great many books which came
to be used as resources for an active clergy. The mostly uneducated
population also depended on the graces of the educated to help
them improve their lot and to negotiate the dilemmas of daily life.
Like other religious, the friars taught the peasantry basic logic
of cause and effect regarding agricultural and celestial cycles for
the planting of crops
and the pruning of vines.
They also acted as arbitrators for endless
quarrels which could arise from any minor or major injury or
dispute and lead to a volatile confrontation. Similarly, the ruling
classes depended on the religious professors of the universities
to debate and resolve curia1 and courtly litigations.
After 1250, the number of friars studying at the
University of Paris had increased to such an extent that their
friary became the largest house in the university. The Franciscan
theological faculty enjoyed the highest respect of the university
itself, and Paris remained the
academic centre for the whole Order until the French
Revolution. Oxford came after
Paris in importance, and soon became its rival. It was
pre-eminently the friars of Oxford who shed lustre over the whole
Order, and who in turn made Oxford famous throughout the entire
Christian world. By 1450, beyond Paris and Oxford, the Franciscan
faculties had expanded to major academic centres throughout Europe.
To list but a few: Bologna, Cambridge,
Cologne,
Cracow,
Dublin,
Frankfurt,
Lisbon,
Lund, Naples, Parma, Pisa, Prague, Rome, Salamanca,
Siena,
Toulouse
and Vienna.
Interestingly enough, the association of the
Conventuals with the universities also influenced the cut of their
habit.
Because the external garment was such an important sign of
identity, the capuce eventually lengthened in the tradition of the
other teaching friars - Augustinians,
Carmelites and
Dominicans
- distinguishing them as academic and orthodox authorities. In an
age of rampant heresy, the friars were sent as true apostles
against false prophets. Centuries later, the various
Friars of the Reform would shorten their capuce as a sign of
their renunciation of learning.
Sources
External links
- Order of Friars Minor Conventuals Article from the Catholic Encyclopedia
conventual in Czech: Řád menších bratří
konventuálů
conventual in German: Minoriten
conventual in Spanish: Franciscanos
conventuales
conventual in French: Cordeliers
conventual in Croatian: Konventualci
conventual in Italian: Ordine dei Frati Minori
Conventuali
conventual in Dutch: Minorieten
conventual in Japanese: コンベンツァル聖フランシスコ修道会
conventual in Slovak: Rád menších bratov
konventuálov