Foundations André Coindre was a survivor of the chaos created in
French society by the
Reign of Terror at the end of the
French Revolution. Though only a child at the time, out of this experience, he became committed to providing the moral, intellectual and religious development of the many boys left orphaned by the upheavals of this era. As a young man, Coindre entered the
seminary of the
Diocese of Lyon,
France, and eventually was
ordained as a
secular priest of the diocese. During his period of preparation for his
ministry, he came to envision men and women trained to work with the poor through education. The first steps toward a concrete expression of this vision took place with his participation in the foundation in 1815 of the
Religious of Jesus and Mary by
Claudine Thévenet, the daughter of a merchant in the
silk trade, for which Lyon had become noted. Like Coindre, Thévenet had survived the horrors of the late Revolutionary period. Under the guidance of Coindre, whom she had taken as her
spiritual director, Thévenet gathered friends around her to offer shelter and basic education for poor girls, whom she considered the "weakest, the most shameful, the most deprived" of post-Revolutionary French society. As founder of her Congregation, she became known as Mary St. Ignatius, and was
canonized by Pope
John Paul II in 1983.
The establishment of the Brothers In 1818 Coindre established an orphanage and trade school for homeless boys. His vision finally became a reality with the admission of the first group of men to a new foundation of Brothers in 1821, with Coindre himself acting as the
Superior of the community, while remaining a
secular priest attached to the Diocese. The direct administration of the lives of the Brothers was left to Brother Borgia, who acted as the Director of the Institute. The early growth of the congregation was slow. At the period of its origin the social and political conditions in France, still undergoing huge upheavals from the Revolution, was very unfavorable to the growth of religious communities.
Lyon, the cradle of the congregation, suffered sorely in these tumultuous early revolutionary days. However, a greater impediment to its growth lay in the ill-defined system of government under which Coindre oversaw the Congregation. When the Brothers requested that he give them a definite rule, as he had done for the Sisters, his response was: Coindre's body was found on 20 May 1826 in
Blois, where he was assigned at the time as Senior
Vicar of the Diocese. For various reasons, there was long held some suspicion that his sudden and unexpected death might have been a
suicide. There is evidence, though, that he was one of a number of the local
clergy who were victims of an outbreak of
acute meningitis. One consequence of this shadow regarding his death was that the first Superior General of the Institute rarely referred to him or his teachings. Following his death, his brother, François Coindre, his cousin, succeeded him in the office of Superior.
The Congregation takes root In 1840, François Coindre assembled the first
General Chapter of the Congregation. During the discussions of the Chapter, opinion among the Brothers was unanimous that it was necessary for the success of the Congregation that its affairs be in the hands of the Brothers themselves, and that one of their number should be
Superior General. The question was referred to
de Bonald, the
Archbishop of Lyon, who, after an exhaustive examination, judged it advisable that Coindre should resign the office. On 13 September 1841, Polycarp was unanimously chosen by the Brothers as their first Superior General. Polycarp went on to reconstruct the government of the Institute and gave it stability and permanency. He is considered their second founder among the Brothers, and his cause for
canonization has been proceeding since 1902. In February 1984, Polycarp was declared
Venerable by Pope John Paul II. == Ideological Formation ==