The Sulpicians, Province of the United States (original) (raw)

Centuries of Service

In the Beginning (1641)

Fr, Jean-Jacques Olier

Fr. Jean-Jacques Olier

What would eventually become The Society of St. Sulpice began quietly in Paris. Founder Fr. Jean-Jacques Olier had established a seminary and a community of priests in 1641. When he became pastor of the Church of St. Sulpice in Paris in 1642, he moved the seminary to the parish—and The Society of the Priests of St. Sulpice was created.

After Fr. Olier described his model of a seminary to the Assembly of Clergy of France in 1651, bishops throughout the country asked the Sulpicians to oversee the operation of their seminaries. Fr. Olier died in 1657, but his ideas lived on.

Growing in Faith (1800s–1900s)
More than a century later, in 1791 the Sulpicians expanded from France to the United States. What would later be called St. Mary’s Seminary opened in Baltimore with four Sulpicians and five students, creating the first Catholic institution of higher learning to open in the U.S. Pope Pius VII gave St. Mary’s the right to grant ecclesiastical degrees in 1822, the first institution in the U.S. to be given that distinction.

The early 1800s marked a turning point for women and African-Americans in the Church. In 1808, the Sulpicians at St. Mary’s Seminary assisted Elizabeth Ann Seton in her founding of the Sisters of Charity. In 1829, Sulpician Fr. James Joubert worked with Mary Lange, a Haitian immigrant, to establish the first community of black sisters in the U.S., the Oblate Sisters of Providence. This period coincided with the founding of Mount St. Mary’s Seminary and College (now University) in Emmitsburg, Maryland, in 1808, which remained a Sulpician institution until 1826.

Throughout the 1800s and 1900s, the Sulpicians assumed direction of and established seminaries in the United States and abroad, including The Sulpician Seminary in Washington, DC, which would later become Theological College, The University Seminary at The Catholic University of America.

Twentieth Century and Beyond
U.S. Sulpicians began a collaborative approach to priestly formation with the bishops of Zambia in 1989. In 1995, the Sulpicians assumed direction of Emmaus. Spirituality Centre, a propaedeutic formation program in Lusaka, Zambia.

Today, the Sulpicians have much to celebrate. 2008 marked the 400th anniversary of the birth of our founder, Fr. Olier, and 2014 marks the 25th anniversary of the arrival of the Sulpicians in Zambia.

Timeline: Key Events in Sulpician History