On
July 7, 1858, Servant of God Isaac Hecker and three companions, Fr.
Augustine Hewitt, Fr. George Deshon, and Fr. Francis Baker (like
Hecker, themselves also all converts to Roman Catholicism and until recently also
Redemptorist priests) signed the Programme of Rule and Constitution of the
Congregation of Missionary Priests of St. Paul the Apostle, thus creating
the religious community commonly known ever since as The Paulist Fathers
– the first men’s religious community to be founded in the United States. In a
circular letter printed in Catholic newspapers around the country, the new
community announced that they “had organized themselves as a religious
congregation for the vigorous prosecution of the missions and other works of
apostolic ministry.”
Fr. Hecker, in the words of the 2018 Paulist Fathers’ General Assembly, “provides a way to think about the
search for God, the experience of conversion, the giving of oneself heroically
in service, serving the Church’s mission, and attentiveness to the direction of
the Holy Spirit. These are elements not only for the Paulists themselves but
also for the spirituality of the wider Church.”
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