Oblates of St Gilbert In 1983, following celebrations of the 900th anniversary of Gilbert's birth, a number of lay people in the
East Midlands undertook to sustain the memory and work of Gilbert and the Gilbertine Order by establishing a new
secular order. The Oblates of St Gilbert exist to promote the Gilbertine contemplative spirit and to foster interest in the study of Gilbert and his Order. They are supported by the Cistercian monastery of
Mount St Bernard Abbey in Leicestershire. In about 1998, Carlos Aparecido Marchesani, a Catholic priest of the
Archdiocese of São Paulo in Brazil, visited the Gilbertine Oblates as he had had a devotion to Saint Gilbert since his time as a seminarian in the United States. He obtained permission from his bishop to found a small religious community, the Fraternidade São Gilbert,
ad experimentum, which was set up near
São Paulo. This experimental community was dissolved in 2012.
The Companions of St Gilbert of Sempringham A Catholic Gilbertine community, The Canons Regular of St Gilbert of Sempringham (GSmp), began in 2017 in Canada within the
Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of Saint Peter. In August 2019 members discerned that a full restoration could not take place as was desired. The Companions of St Gilbert of Sempringham, which existed alongside the canons regular, not unlike a
third order in structure and purpose, will now be the main expression of Gilbertine spirituality resulting from this attempt at a restoration; it had begun as a
de facto association of the faithful. ==In popular fiction==