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Oblates at Saint Meinrad
The affiliation of lay men and women as oblates of Saint Meinrad Archabbey dates to March 21, 1879, the silver jubilee of the founding of the monastery. On that occasion, Abbot Martin Marty, OSB, Saint Meinrad's first abbot [1870-1880], solemnly introduced the Oblate Movement at Saint Meinrad.
Shortly thereafter, on March 31, he wrote to Abbot Boniface Wimmer, OSB, of St. Vincent Abbey in Pennsylvania, that promoting that movement was to be one of the main objectives of the next 25 years. What was done thereafter to further this movement is not known. Whatever records there may have been probably perished in the great fire of 1887, which left only the sandstone walls of the monastery standing.
Abbot Athanasius Schmitt, OSB, Saint Meinrad's third abbot [1898-1930], revived interest in the oblates. On November 18, 1906, he received permission from the Holy See to allow students of the major and minor seminaries to be received as oblates when they had completed their 14th year of age. Records of this movement begin with December 8, 1906, with the enrollment of 21 students. It is only since 1924, under Fr. Henry Brenner, OSB, that men and women outside the monastery and schools at Saint Meinrad were also enrolled as oblates.
Today, nearly 1,000 men and women are oblates of Saint Meinrad. They strive to seek God and the glory of God in all things. Through their witness to the benefits of oblation, they extend the spirit of the Saint Meinrad monastic community into areas where the monastic community cannot reach or be present.
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