Association of the Holy Childhood

Association of the Holy Childhood
Founded 1843 (173 years ago)
Founder Bishop Charles de Forbin-Janson
Type Pontifical Mission Society
Location
  • 70 West 36th Street, 8th Floor
    New York, NY 10018
Website www.onefamilyinmission.org/hca.html

The Pontifical Association of the Holy Childhood (Latin: Pontificium Opus a Sancta Infantia) is a Catholic children's association for the benefit of foreign missions.

Foundation

In 1843 Charles de Forbin-Janson, Bishop of Nancy, France, established the Association of the Holy Childhood (Association de la Sainte Enfance). Popes and other ecclesiastical dignitaries approved the association and recommended it to the Catholic faithful.

Pope Pius IX, by a brief of 18 July 1856, raised it to the rank of a canonical institution, gave it a Cardinal protector, and requested all bishops to introduce it in their dioceses. Pope Leo XIII, in the encyclical letter Sancta Dei civitas (3 December 1890), blessed it and recommended it again to the bishops.

The affairs of the association were managed by an international council at Paris, consisting of fifteen priests and as many laymen. This general council had an exclusive right of general direction and of the distribution of the society's funds.

Later history

The association was probably established in the United States by Bishop Forbin-Janson himself. Several agencies in the East and West managed its affairs for about fifty years. On 1 January 1893, the work was concentrated into one central agency and confided to the Holy Ghost Fathers, with headquarters in Pittsburgh. Father Anthony J. Zielenbach, C.S.Sp., was its first central director for about four years; he was succeeded by Father John Willms, C.S.Sp. The Annals of the Holy Childhood was published bi-monthly and issued in a number of languages.

Mission Together

In England and Wales, the Society is known today as Mission Together, and has been active in Catholic schools for over a hundred and sixty years.

The organization encourages children worldwide to pray and share, while also supporting both the spiritual and physical wellbeing of children through prayer and pastoral care. Through the financial contributions of children it carries out educational, medical and welfare projects in the poorest areas of the world.

References

    Attribution

     This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Association of the Holy Childhood". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton. 

    External links

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