Society of Saint Paul

The Society of Saint Paul (Latin: Societas a Sancto Paulo Apostolo) abbreviated SSP and also known as the Paulines, is a Catholic clerical religious congregation of pontifical right for men founded on 20 August 1914 at Alba, Piedmont in Italy by Giacomo Alberione and officially approved by the Holy See on 27 June 1949. Its members add the nominal letters SSP. after their names to indicate membership in the congregation.[2]

Society of Saint Paul
Societas a Sancto Paulo Apostolo
AbbreviationSSP (post-nominals)
NicknamePaulines
Formation20 August 1914 (1914-08-20)
FounderGiacomo Alberione
Founded atAlba, Piedmont, Italy
TypeClerical Religious Congregation of Pontifical Right for Men
HeadquartersMotherhouse:
Via Alessandro Severo 58, 00145 Rome, Italy
Members
828 members (493 priests) as of 2020[1]
Superior General
Domenico Soliman[1]
Ministry
Social communication work
Parent organization
Roman Catholic Church
Websitepaulus.net

History

In 1912 Alberione began publication of the magazine Vita pastorale, and the following year assumed direction of the diocesan weekly Gazzetta d`Alba. In August 1914, he opened the “Little Workers” Typographical School, which would develop into the future Society of St Paul (SSP). In 1926, Alberione sent his associate, Giuseppe Giaccardo, to establish a house in Rome.[3] (Giaccardo was beatified in 1989.) The society was canonically erected in 1927 in Alba. Foundations were established in Brazil, Argentina and the United States in 1931.[4]

The constitutions were approved in 1941 and the society was approved officially by the Holy See on 27 June 1949, with the mission to "evangelize with the modern tools of communications".

In 1969, Pope Paul VI honoured Alberione and the Society of Saint Paul with the Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice award.[4]

Apostolate

Its members are known as the Paulinesa name also applied to the much older Order of Saint Paul the First Hermit. Faithful to the mission assigned them by their founder, they communicate the Christian message with the use of all means that technology puts at the disposition of modern man.

The society is based in Rome and is present in about 32 countries.[5] Members are active in several fields: editorial and bookstores, journalism, cinematography, television, radio, audiovisual, multimedia, telematics; centres of studies, research, formation, animation.[6]

In the USA, the congregation has a publishing house based in Staten Island, New York.[5] ST PAULS is the leading Catholic online bookstore in the Philippines, carrying bibles, books, religious statues, rosaries, etc.[7] In India, the congregation manages two media colleges – St Paul's Institute of Communication Education (SPICE) in Mumbai and St Paul's College in Bangalore.[8]

The society is one of ten religious and lay institutes founded by the priest Giacomo Alberione, who was proclaimed Blessed by Pope John Paul II on 20 December 2002. Members of the Pauline family included the Daughters of St. Paul and the Sisters of Jesus the Good Shepherd.

See also

References

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