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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: BRI-BUN |
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BROTHERS OF COMMON LIFE , a religious community formerly existing in the Catholic Church. Towards the end of his career Gerhard Groot (q.v.) retired to his native town of Deventer, in the province of Overyssel and the diocese of Utrecht, and gathered around him a number of those who had been " converted " by his preaching or wished to place them-selves under his spiritual guidance. With the assistance of Florentius Radewyn, who resigned for the purpose a canonry at Utrecht, he was able to carry out a long-cherished idea of establishing a house
house
" They humbly imitated the manner of the Apostolic life, and having one heart and mind in God, brought every man what was his own into the common stock, and receiving simple food and clothing avoided taking thought for the morrow. Of their own will they devoted themselves to God, and all busied them-selves in obeying their rector or his vicar. . . . They laboured care-fully in copying books, being instant continually in sacred study and devout meditation. In the morning having said Matins, they went to the church (for Mass). . . . Some who were priests and were learned in the divine law preached earnestly in the church."Other houses of the Brothers of Common Life, otherwise called the " Modern Devotion," were in rapid succession established in the chief
forty
The ground-idea was to reproduce the life of the first Christians as described in Acts iv. The members took no vows and were free to leave when they chose; but so long as they remained they were bound to observe chastity, to practise personal poverty, putting all their money and earnings into the common fund, to obey the rules of the house and the commands of the rector , and to exercise themselves in self-denial, humility and piety. The rector was chosen by the community and was not necessarily a priest, though in each house there were a few priests and clerics. The majority, however, were laymen, of all kinds and degreesnobles, artisans, scholars, students, labouring men. The clerics preached and instructed the people, working chiefly among the poor; they also devoted themselves to the copying of manuscripts, in order thereby to earn something for the common fund; and some of them taught in the schools. Of the laymen, the educated copied manuscripts, the others worked at various handicrafts or at agriculture. After the religious services of the morning the Brothers scattered for the day's work
work
Protestant
Protestant
body
AUTHORITIEs.The chief
Mount
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