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Saint Vincent of St.
Vincent, a Deacon of the Spanish Church, was born at Saragossa, and martyred at Valencia, 303 A.D. during
the Diocletian persecution, the tenth and last, at about the same time that
St. Alban, the first martyr of the In art, he is
young, mild and handsome: is vested as a Deacon in traditional dalmatic, bearing a palm
branch (of victory) and a smoking thurible. The instrument of his torture is a
grid-iron on which his salt-besprinkled body was burned,
and broken pottery over which his body was dragged. Usually near him is perched a crow or
raven, symbolic of the restlessness of the saints in the world. His relics are at Valencia
Spain. |
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Our Long History and Tradition…
The Order dates
back to 1877, when the first local Guild of St. Clement's Church in The Order was
officially founded on the Feast of Vincent of The Order of St. Vincent’s 1915 original
logo is on the right. In 1939, the OSV
affiliated with the Scottish and British acolyte guilds. This affiliation
brought acolytes throughout the Anglican Communion into fellowship with and
prayer for one another. In 1970, the Order opened membership to girls and
women, and to all lay ministers involved in sacred service in 1979. The
Governors voted in 1984 to continue affiliation with the newly formed
"continuing" Anglican bodies and to, by word and example, call all
Catholic Communions to visible and comprehensive unity. We are now truly a trans-Catholic order. |
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Today…
There are parish Chapters in almost every The OSV teaches the concept of
a "stairway of lay ministry" which can begin as early as
ten years old and extends throughout our lives. Children can start as candle
or boat bearers with simple sanctuary duties, and as they learn and mature,
grow into more complicated and responsible roles such as sacristans, readers,
chalice bearers, trainers, teachers, or other important positions.
Involvement in church liturgies and activities need not end with high-school
graduation. |
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