Herman Lombaerts, FSC, Ph.D.
ABSTRACT
This article explores the renewal lay people initiated at decisive moments of Church history. In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, with the development of the modern school, lay people were given the responsibility for teaching religion and for guaranteeing Christian education in schools. A new type of religious congregation, with exclusively lay members, emerged. They had an impressive impact, worldwide, over the past three centuries. However, as the members of these congregations declined dramatically over the past decades, one wonders whether new generations will succeed in guaranteeing continuity in the near future. Or will ordinary, secular but baptized lay people create new forms of association while taking on responsibility for school education?
Michel Sauvage (1923-2001), a French member of the religious order Brothers of the Christian Schools, studied the theological identity of the lay “teaching-brother” as initiated by John Baptist de La Salle at the end of the seventeenth century. The present situation, with 1.9 % brothers left and 97.6 % ordinary lay teachers in the order’s educational institutions worldwide, seems to suggest that once more a historical transformation is occurring in the church.
KEYWORDS
De La Salle; Lasallian; Christian Brothers; Lay Educators;
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About the Author
Herman Lombaerts, FSC, Ph.D.
Herman Lombaerts, FSC, Ph.D., is Professor Emeritus at Catholic University of Leuven, Belgium, where he served as a member of the Faculty of Theology and Religious Studies until 2000. He holds the Ph.D. in Educational Sciences (Catholic University of Leuven) and a Diploma from the International Institute Lumen Vitae (Brussels). His hermeneutic-communicative model of religious education is widely recognized and used in his fields of pastoral theology and religious education.