Teams of Our Lady

fisch

OFFICIAL NAME

Teams of Our Lady

 

ACRONYM

END (Équipes Notre-Dame)

 

ESTABLISHED

1947

 

HISTORY

The Teams of Our Lady movement came into being in France at the end of the 1930s through a number of married couples who began to meet every month in each other’s houses under the guidance of Fr Henri Caffarel. Their purpose was to explore the significance of the sacrament of marriage in depth, to hold it up against their own experiences, and then to try to work together to live coherently within society as Christian families and couples. As more couples sought to join them, the movement was formally established with the promulgation, on 8 December 1947, of the Équipes Notre-Dame Charter. The movement was created to meet a need felt by couples who realised that married life is a vocational pathway to salvation which is more than procreation; the Teams seek to enhance their experience in the light of the Word of God by reading the signs of the times, and by reflecting constantly on ways and means of implementing the founding charism in different circumstances of history. On 19 April 1992, the Pontifical Council for the Laity decreed recognition of the Équipes Notre-Dame as an international association of the faithful of Pontifical Right.

 

IDENTITY

As a movement of spirituality for married couples, the Teams comprise groups of married couples who wish to achieve holiness in and through marriage, gathered around Christ to help one another to progress in the love of God, to build themselves up in Christ and to place their love at the service of the Kingdom. The members follow a course of study that includes Scripture, the truths of the faith, and "apprenticeship in prayer". This pathway, which is a means of verifying their fidelity to the Lord, requires them to take a dynamic view of Christian life, and introduces them into a dimension of ongoing conversion through mutual spiritual assistance, group sharing, frequent attendance at Mass, family prayers, the Christian education of their children, the spirit of outreach and welcome, and giving testimony to the love of Christ. The Teams method is based on the rule of life, which accompanies the path of ongoing conversion through a sequence of specific goals to be achieved; the two-day annual spiritual retreat which the married couples make to ask for the help of the Spirit to discern and draw up new life projects; the duty to ’sit down’ once a month, to enable the couple to speak to one another "before God", as a special vocation to view each other through the eyes of the Father, and to allow themselves to be converted by what the Lord is asking of them through their spouse. The members of the Teams are actively committed to family apostolate pastoral programmes in the local Church, where they also cooperate with other ecclesial movements.

 

ORGANISATION

The Teams of our Lady are structured on a collegial basis. The International Team has overall responsibility for the movement, and comprises married couples from different countries assisted by a Spiritual Counsellor. Each of the member Teams is composed of between five and seven couples and a Spiritual Counsellor, and they remain in contact with one another through a liaison couple. Teams in the same town (or geographical area) make up one or more sectors, and the sectors make up regions. The life of the movement depends entirely upon the voluntary offering of time, effort and resources by the couples themselves. They work to develop the Teams movement particularly in the geographical areas where large distances and low incomes are likely to cause a serious obstacle.

 

MEMBERSHIP

Throughout the world there are some 8,600 Teams in 48 countries as follows: Africa (13), Asia (2), Europe (14), Middle East (2), North America (7), Oceania (2) and South America (8).

 

PUBLICATIONS

Lettre des Équipes Notre-Dame, a periodical publication in French, English, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish, German and Arabic.

 

WEB SITE

http://www.equipes-notre-dame.com

 

HEADQUARTERS

Équipes Notre-Dame

49, rue de la Glacière - 75013 Paris - France

Tel.             [+33]1.43319621       - Fax 1.45354712

Email: end-international@wanadoo.fr

Events


© Copyright 2011-2015  Pontifical Council for the Laity | Site Map | Links | Contact us

X

On 1 September 2016 the

Pontifical Council for the Laity
ceased its activities.
Its responsibilities and duties
have been taken over by the
Dicastery for Laity, Family and Life.

 

www.laityfamilylife.va


ALTHOUGH THE PCL WEBSITE WILL NO LONGER BE UPDATED,

ALL MATERIALS PUBLISHED TO DATE WILL CONTINUE TO BE AVAILABLE.