Community of the Lamb
The Community of the Lamb is a Roman Catholic religious community consisting of the little sisters of the Lamb and the little brothers of the Lamb. Together they form a contemplative and missionary community dedicated to prayer, the Gospel, and the poor.
Origins
The Community of the Lamb was founded in France by little sister Marie, who was part of a Dominican teaching congregation in Paris. Moved by the poor she encountered on the streets and the overwhelming spiritual thirst during France’s cultural revolution in the late 1960s, little sister Marie was drawn to a life of more radical poverty and prayer. As this call matured and actualized in ministry to university students and friendship with the poor, her religious superior recognized the beginnings of a unique charism and encouraged her in 1979 to formally found a new community that could express and encompass what she and a group of sisters were discovering and experiencing. The Community’s spirituality, rooted in the Gospel, Church fathers, and mendicant orders, took shape as she and the first little sisters lived together in Vézelay.On December 17, 1981, Bishop Michel Kuehn of the Diocese of Chartres formally recognized its foundation. On July 16, 1983, Father Vincent de Couesnongle, then the [Master of the Order of Preachers|Master of the Dominican Order], recognized the Community of the Lamb as “a new branch on the tree of the Order of Preachers.” Archbishop Jean Chabbert of the Diocese of Perpignan later erected the little brothers of the Lamb on August 8, 1990. With the little sisters of the Lamb, they form the Community of the Lamb.
In 1996, the Community was placed under the responsibility of Cardinal Christoph Schönborn,O.P., now Archbishop Emeritus of Vienna, Austria. Today the Community is present in France, Spain, Italy, Austria, Poland, Argentina, Chile, and the United States, with around 170 little sisters and 40 little brothers. Their motherhouse is located in Plavilla, France, in the vicinity of Fanjeaux, the birthplace of the Dominican Order.