Novice master

In the
The direction of the novices is reserved solely to the master of novices, under the authority of the major superiors.[1] The master of novices must be a member of the institute; he must have taken perpetual vows and be legally appointed.[2] The novice master is often assisted by a zelator (second or deputy novice master).
The novice master's duty is to see that the time devoted to the period of the novitiate be passed in
The Rule of Saint Benedict does not contain a separate chapter on the master of novices. In addition to general monastic maturity, the gift of winning souls is mentioned as a special qualification for the monk who takes care of the novices.[3] A source of 1827 states that the novice master "should be a completely reliable, purely moral and true religious, who is able to familiarize the novices theoretically and practically with the purpose of the order and with the spirit of the statutes".[4]
References
- ^ CIC, § 650 2
- ^ CIC, § 651 1
- ^ "Novizenmeister".
- ^ Ferdinand Maaß: Lockerung und Aufhebung des Josephinismus, 1820-1850, Herold, Wien, 1961