Opus Dei
- Latin:
- “Work of God”
- In full:
- Prelature of the Holy Cross and Opus Dei
- Date:
- 1928 - present
- Related People:
- St. Josemaría Escrivá de Balaguer
Opus Dei, Roman Catholic lay and clerical organization whose members seek personal Christian perfection and strive to implement Christian ideals and values in their occupations and in society as a whole. Its name, which means “Work of God” in Latin, stems from the organization’s emphasis on holiness being achieved through mundane everyday work rather than through prayer or spiritual discipline alone. Theologically conservative, Opus Dei accepts the teaching authority of the Catholic Church without question and has long been the subject of controversy; it has been accused of secrecy, cultlike practices, and political ambitions. However, it is neither a sect nor a religious order (i.e., a group in which all members take formal vows). In the early 21st century it remained in good standing with the Holy See.
History and organization
Opus Dei was founded in 1928 in Spain by St. Josemaría Escrivá de Balaguer y Albás (canonized in 2002), a priest trained in law. Believing that daily life can be sanctifying, Escrivá sought to encourage Catholic laymen in their pursuit of holiness through their chosen professions. A women’s branch was created in 1930, and a body for priests (the Priestly Society of the Holy Cross) was formed in 1943. Opus Dei was formally approved by the Holy See in 1950 as a secular institute (i.e., a new form of religious association whose members “profess the evangelical counsels in secular life”).
A personal prelature is a Roman Catholic organization of clergy and laypeople who are governed by a prelate. The prelate is assisted in his pastoral role by priests and deacons. Personal prelatures were promulgated in canon law in 1983. By the early 21st century, however, Opus Dei remained the only established personal prelature.
On November 28, 1982, Pope John Paul II, a staunch supporter of Opus Dei, established it as the first personal prelature in the church, with jurisdiction over people rather than a geographic area. The organization has been headed since 1982 by a prelate elected by its members and approved by the pope. The prelate can establish seminaries and promote students to holy orders, but the organization remains subject to some oversight by local bishops.
In 2022 Pope Francis issued a motu proprio that transferred Opus Dei’s oversight from the Roman Curia’s Congregation for Bishops to the Dicastery for the Clergy. He also decreed that the head of the organization cannot be made a bishop, explaining that this change is intended “to strengthen the conviction that, for the protection of the particular gift of the [Holy] Spirit [i.e., its charism], a form of government based on charism more than on hierarchical authority is needed.” Opus Dei must also submit an annual report to the Vatican rather than one every five years as was the previous rule. The following year Francis formalized these changes in the Code of Canon Law. His actions were criticized by some as being antagonistic toward the organization, but Opus Dei’s prelate, Monsignor Fernando Ocáriz, released a statement assuring that the society had accepted these changes “with sincere filial obedience” and that its leadership was working with the Vatican on implementing them.
Membership and activities
Opus Dei originally encouraged new members to take a privately recognized vow of obedience, poverty, and chastity. Since the organization became a prelature, however, it has required only a contractual commitment to receive spiritual formation, which includes weekly classes (“circles”) and an annual religious retreat, among other activities. Some members practice self-sacrifice, which can include fasting and abstinence from certain pleasures. Self-mortification, such as the wearing of a cilice (which often takes the form of a spiked chain worn around the upper thigh), is not discouraged. New members serve a period of probation, which lasts at least five years, before they are fully admitted.
One of the symbols of Opus Dei is a cross within a circle, which signifies the organization’s mission to achieve the sanctification of the world from within—that is, through daily work as well as prayer and spiritual discipline.
Some members of Opus Dei, called numeraries, devote much of their time to the organization. Like priests, they are required to remain unmarried and celibate, but they live in the world and pursue secular occupations. The majority of members, however, are the supernumeraries, who are free to marry, contribute financially to Opus Dei, and demonstrate Christian virtue in their daily activities. The group is also financially assisted by cooperators, who are not members and, by permission of the Holy See, need not be Christians. Ordained priests constitute only a tiny percentage of the organization; in 2021 they numbered some 2,000 of the almost 94,000 members worldwide.
The organization has established vocational, trade, home-arts, and agricultural centers in various parts of the world, numerous high schools, schools of business administration, and charitable activities. Opus Dei also founded and endowed (with government assistance) the University of Navarra, which is regarded by many as Spain’s finest university, and operates the Pontifical University of the Holy Cross in Rome and the University of Piura in Peru.
Controversies
Because Opus Dei included many highly educated people, Spain’s leader Generalissimo Francisco Franco involved several of its members in instituting economic reform in 1956, and among his ministers were members of Opus Dei. This led many to speculate that the group had political and economic ambitions, though Opus Dei’s influence waned in Spain as other groups entered the political arena after Franco’s death in 1975.
Among the charges often leveled against the organization are aggressive recruiting practices, the brainwashing of new recruits, and the isolation of members from their families. Membership is usually kept secret, which has fueled allegations that the group operates as a cult or elite secret society. This view was also fueled in part by the popularity of novelist Dan Brown’s mystery The Da Vinci Code (2003), which portrays the organization as a society rife with ultraconservative members promoting arcane and dangerous beliefs. Pointing to its continued growth and membership that has included people of various social classes, Opus Dei denies these accusations and has the continued support of the Vatican.