To enroll in the Dominican Rosary Confraternity, please do all of the following:
Remember: if you are also enrolling your children, please complete a separate form for each child.
A signature makes it official, and without which we cannot enroll you. Any person above the age of reason needs to sign his own form (for example, even a seven year old should sign it).
Rosary Confraternity Secretary
PO BOX 134
ST. MARYS, KS 66536
God bless and reward you, and Our Lady protect you and yours!
- The Dominican Fathers of Avrille
You can view the form directly by clicking here.
A constant tradition, which, on several occasions, the Popes have solemnly endorsed, tells us that Saint Dominic (+ 1221) instituted the Rosary.
For instance, in the Bull Consueverunt of September 17, 1569, inaugurating the great movement in promotion of the Rosary which, two years later, was to lead to the famous victory of Lepanto, Pope Saint Piux V wrote:
The Blessed Dominic (…) himself lived in times similar to our own, when the Alibigensian heresy was ravaging France and Italy, casting a great number of the laity into the blindness of impiety and raging with fury against the clergy and priests of Our Lord. Guided by the example of those who had preceded him in the service of God, and filled with the Holy Ghost, Dominic raised his eyes to Heaven and fixed his gaze on that holy mountain, that is to say on the glorious Virgin Mary, the sublime Mother of God. In begetting Christ, she crushed the head of the Infernal serpent. She alone has destroyed all heresies. By the fruit of her womb, she saved the world from the damnation which the fall of our first parents had merited for us. From this holy mountain without human aid, the stone which is Christ was detached; and the Son of Mary, immolated on the tree of the Cross, let abundant streams of grace flow from His wounds.
Full of these thoughts, Saint Dominic then discovered and easy method, accessible to all, a method of imcomparable piety and an excellent way of praying to God and making our supplications to Him. This method is called the Rosary, or the Psalter of the Blessed Virgin Mary. It consists in honoring the Mother of God by offering her the recitation of the Angelic salutation a hundred and fifty times, corresponding to the hundred and fifty psalms of David. Each decade (of ten Hail Marys) is preceded by an Our Father and the decades are accompanied by meditations in the course of which we pass in spirit through the whole life of Our Lord Jesus Christ.
Such is the rite in which Saint Dominic created and which propagated in every part of the Roman Church through the intermediacy of his children, the religious of the Order of Friar Preachers.
This devotion was gladly received by the faithful. Soon, in the midst of these meditations and these prayers, hearts were inflamed with the ardour of charity; one saw a multitude of people transformed by this devotion; the darkness of heresy vanished, and the light of faith shone forth anew in the world. In order to establish this veneration of Mary in a lasting manner, Confraternities were founded in various places, set up by the religious of the Order of Friar Preachers, who were given authority by their superiors for this purpose, and many people were received as members of these Confraternities.
This passage from the Bull Consueverunt is particularly noteworthy. By itself, it amounts to a whole treatise on the Rosary, because it defines its essential elements with perfect clarity. It tells us:
Through this last point we see that the Rosary has a double efficacy:
What the Rosary has been and has done in the past, it should continue to be and to do in our own day. This depends on each and every one of us.
In this time of apostasy in which we live, it is necessary for us also to fix our gaze on the Mother of God – the holy mountain – and to be filled with the thoughts which inspired Saint Dominic and Saint Pius V. Our Lady, through Jesus, the Fruit of her womb, has received eternally the power to crush the head of the Serpent, the Prince of this world. In consequence of this, it her wish that what she accomplished in the 13th century in exterminating the Albigensian heresy through the intermediacy of Saint Dominic, and what she did in the 16th century in restraining Protestantism and destroying the Turkish threat through the agency of Saint Pius V, she still desires to continue, so as to annihilate the heresy of neo-modernism and the paganism of our time. She wishes to do this and she certainly will do this – through the same one and only means of the holy Rosary.
One must be profoundly convinced of this fundamental truth because it determines all our faith in the Rosary.
The Rosary Confraternity is an association intended to spread widely the devotion of the Rosary. It is very old – one of the first confraternities was established in Valencia in 1221, the year of Saint Dominic’s death. It is very rich in spiritual favors, and in various privileges which the Popes have constantly granted to it.
Leo XIII in the Constitution Ubi Primum, published on October 2, 1898, which constituted the “charter” of the Rosary Confraternity, determined its object and its nature:
The Confraternity of the Most Holy Rosary was instituted with the object of encouraging a great number of men, united through fraternal charity, to praise and to pray to the Blessed Virgin Mary, and to obtain her protection through praying with one accord, using the very pious prayer formula from which the association has taken its name. And that is why, without seeking any gain, without asking payment, the Confraternity accepts men of every condition and establishes no other bond between them than that of the recitation of Mary’s Rosary. That is how it comes about that everyone, through bringing only a little to the common treasury, draws much from it… Every member who follows the rules of the Confraternity, and who accomplishes the recitation of the Rosary, joins in the intention all the members of the society, who render to him, many times over, the same charitable office.
The Rosary Confraternity is thus a real mutuality of prayers and good works.
In order to be part of the Confraternity, it is necessary:
It is essential that the applicant should provide his baptismal name (the forename) and (for reasons of practical convenience) his legal identity.
Everyone (so long as they are baptized) can be admitted, even children if they have attained the age of reason and are capable of reciting the Rosary.
However, one cannot enroll somebody against his will, nor can one enroll a person who is dead.
Obviously, one can divide up the Rosary by reciting five decades at a time, or one can even say one decade at a time. It is strongly recommended that one should follow the custom of reciting the Joyful Mysteries on Mondays and Thursdays; the Sorrowful Mysteries on Tuesdays and Fridays; and the Glorious mysteries on Wednesdays, Saturdays, and Sundays.
This obligation of praying the full fifteen decades each week certainly does not prevent us from praying the full fifteen decades of the Rosary each day. This practice of praying the fifteen decades daily is even the ideal, and is recommended that we should aim for this, little by little, so far as it is possible.
In this respect, the advice of Our Lady of Fatima will be remembered: Six times, at each of her apparitions, she said to the children: “I want you to recite the Rosary every day.”
In fulfilling this obligation it is not necessary to add it to any other obligations one may have contracted (the living Rosary, perpetual Rosary, Rosary Crusades, etc.);
The recitation of the Rosary with beads blessed in this way (and it is desirable to carry them with one always) adds special graces and privileges granted by the Popes since Benedict XIII.
However, if this last point cannot be adhered to, membership in the Confraternity and the gaining of indulgences associated with it (except for those attached the Rosary beads with Dominican blessing) are not prevented.
To these three principal conditions some optional matters may be added:
None of the rules of the Confraternity obliges anyone under pain of sin. Anyone who, in spite of his promise, fails to observe them, is deprived of only the corresponding advantages and graces. (He may, nevertheless, commit a fault if this failure is caused by something which is in itself a fault: laziness, carelessness, etc.)
By belonging to the Rosary Confraternity, one obtains three sorts of advantages:
As Saint Bernard says: “He who is devoted to Mary will not perish.” Likewise Saint Louis-Marie Grignion de Montfort, in his Treatise on the True Devotion to the Blessed Virgin and in his little work The Secret of Mary, has explained how the true devotion to the Blessed Virgin is a very quick, easy, direct and sure means of being saved, of being sanctified, and of bringing back many souls. Thus, membership in the Rosary Confraternity, through the obligations that one undertakes, through the presence of other members and the graces that are obtained, encourages that true devotion and causes the love of Mary to grow stronger.
As we read above in the words of Leo XIII, each member “though only bringing a little to the common treasury, draws much from it.” Why? Because this treasury is immensely rich and is common to all by virtue of the mystery of the communion of the saints. The Rosary and the merits of each thus become the treasury of all.
Moreover, the members of the Rosary Confraternity, during their lives and after their deaths, enjoy a special participation in the prayers, Masses, penances and good works of all the past and present members of the great Dominican family. In this way they benefit equally from a multitude of saintly protectors.
Father Faber called the Rosary “the queen of indulgenced devotions.” This ought especially to be understood and applying to the Rosary Confraternity which more than thirty Popes have endowed with indulgences. These indulgences can be gained for oneself, or for the souls in Purgatory.
The plenary indulgence, if it is gained in full (which depends on the dispositions of our soul, according to whether we are, or are not, purified from all venial sin and completely free of all attachment to sin), remits all temporal punishment still owed by a soul in the state of grace, whether living on this earth or detained in Purgatory. The partial indulgence (and the plenary indulgence which is not gained in full) remits only a part of this punishment.
The main list of indulgences of the Rosary Confraternity is found in Pope Leo XIII’s Constitution Diuturni temporis, published on September 5, 1898. Since then, a few more indulgences have been added by the Popes.
Here are some examples of plenary indulgences attached to the Rosary and to the Rosary Confraternity:
Note:
It should be noted that it is not necessary to know the details of all these graces and indulgences in order to benefit from them.
In conclusion, we will recall these words, spoken by Sister Lucy of Fatima to Father Fuentes in 1959 (Messagero del Cuore di Maria, nos. 8-9, August-September, 1961):
She told me this three times:
Here are the terms in which Leo XIII addressed the Master of the Order of Friar Preachers on September 15, 1883 (fifteen days after the publication of the Encyclical Supremi Apostolatus on the Rosary and on the institution of the month of the Rosary). He exhorted the Dominicans to “make the devotion of the Rosary known and propagate it with all their might”:
The Rosary is yours, it is your own property, a sacred and inalienable heritage; consequently you have a special mission to share this boon with others, to make all the world participants in this treasure entrusted to your care.
In the present evils of the Church [ what could we say today! –Editor ] I consider nothing better nor more opportune than to recommend and to promote this manner of prayer.
In consequence, in order to restore the faith and revive the spirit of prayer and holiness,
Let all the children of Saint Dominic rise up for the fight and let them, like mighty warriors, be prepared to use in the battle the weapons with which their blessed Father, with so much foresight, armed them. This is what they have to do: Let them plant everywhere the Rosary of the Blessed Virgin Mary; let them propagate and cultivate it with fervor; through their assiduous care may the nations be enrolled in these holy militias where the ensigns of the Rosary shine; may the faithful learn to avail themselves of this weapon, to use it frequently; may they be instructed in the benefits, graces, privileges of this devotion.
Tags:
Views: 204
Thank you for putting this on for all to enroll. What a blessing to have the Rosary Confraternity.
Does anyone know of a Traditional Dominican priest to whom one can mail a rosary (along with return postage, of course) to have it blessed according to the Dominican blessing?
Thanks!
Just the Dominicans of Avrille. If you follow the link posted above you can send them an email. Maybe they know of a Dominican here in the U.S. I had the same question, so if you get a response from them, maybe you could share it. :)
David Kaftal said:
Does anyone know of a Traditional Dominican priest to whom one can mail a rosary (along with return postage, of course) to have it blessed according to the Dominican blessing?
Thanks!
I emailed them a month or two ago and never got a response. However, I know a traditional Carmelite who I think is authorized to do the Dominican blessing, and I intend to ask him the next time I see him, but that probably won't be for a few months. I will post his address if he is in fact authorized and says it's okay to post it, or else maybe offer to PM it if he prefers that to having his address out on the internet.
How strange. Maybe it went to their spam. I never saw their response back to me until well over a week later because it was sitting in my spam. I'm certain they would answer you if they got it.
© 2025 Created by Dawn Marie. Powered by