Novice Appeal

Help Form New Friars

Support Our Novices

Your generosity helps form the next generation of Dominican friars. At the very beginning of their vocation, our novices take their first steps into religious life, learning to pray, study, and live in community as preachers of the Gospel.

We are blessed with many vocations, but the cost of formation is significant. It takes nearly $24,000 to support one novice in his first year alone. With your gift, you share directly in this mission, ensuring our novices and student brothers receive the spiritual and academic training they need to serve Christ and his Church as faithful Dominicans.

Will you help support their journey today?

2025 Novices

The novitiate is an intense, one year period of prayer, discernment, and formation for men seeking to join St. Dominic’s Order of Preachers.

The Life of a Novice

The new men receive religious names and white habits, which signify their devotion and their purity before God. The new name and the habit symbolize the interior change that awaits them: Soon these men will be totally transformed into preaching friars.

Novices spend much of their time learning. Vital topics include spiritual formation, how to chant the Liturgy of the Hours in common, and how to live Dominican life according to the Rule of St. Augustine and the Constitutions of the Order of Preachers. Crucially, they will learn how to share a life in common with the other men whom God has called–a life filled with sacrifices and blessings.

At the end of the year, novices may petition to profess simple vows. Once they are approved, the new brothers will vow to live a life of obedience, which also implies the evangelical counsels of poverty and chastity, for three years as the next step in their formation. Each year on the Solemnity of the Assumption of Mary, a new group of men takes this step and officially become Dominican friars.

Like St. Dominic, these men will “preach the Gospel to the whole creation” (Mark 16:15).

Thank you for your support as these novices begin their journey to become Dominican friars–please pray for them!

Growth of the Dominican Order

From the time of St. Dominic, the preaching of the Dominican friars was greatly aided by the fervent prayers of the cloistered Dominican nuns. In the following centuries, new modes of life have developed that share in the Dominican charism, including congregations of active Dominican sisters and the Lay and Clerical Fraternities of St. Dominic (sometimes known as the “Third Order”).

Throughout its history, the Order of Preachers has been blessed with men and women of great sanctity and wisdom—and in many cases by individuals marked with both qualities! In the thirteenth century, friars such as St. Albert the Great, St. Thomas Aquinas, St. Raymond of Penyafort, Bl. James of Voragine, Hugh of St. Cher and Vincent of Beauvais transformed the intellectual culture of their time, initiating intellectual traditions in areas as diverse as theology, philosophy, law, hagiography, and the natural sciences that have continued to bear fruit for centuries.

In the late Middle Ages, St. Catherine of Siena, St. Vincent Ferrer, and Bl. Raymund of Capua each contributed to the reform and renewal of the Church in the midst of crises such as the Great Western Schism.

In the early modern period, friars such as Thomas de Vio Cajetan, Francisco de Vitoria and Barthomé de las Casas contributed to the development of scriptural exegesis, Thomistic theology, international law, and the development of appropriate modes of treating indigenous peoples in the New World, where Dominican friars were sent as missionaries.

In the nineteenth century, friars such as Edward Dominic Fenwick and Henri-Dominique Lacordaire worked to establish and reestablish the life of the Order, in the United States and France respectively. In the twentieth century, friars continued to make significant contributions to the life of the Church in a variety of ways, such as through the biblical exegesis of Marie-Joseph Lagrange, the theological teaching of Reginald Garrigou-Lagrange, the ecumenical and ecclesiological work of Yves Congar, and the popularizations of Thomistic theology by Walter Farrell.

This is the Dominican Moment

The twenty-first century is an age of overwhelming information, communication, and confusion–not unlike the time of St. Dominic. In such an environment there is a desperate need for trustworthy guides who can clearly communicate the fullness of the truth and intelligently address the questions and problems of today.

It is providential that at such a time as this God has called an increasing number of young men to follow him as Dominican friars. Today, Dominicans engage in a variety of ministries, including serving as university chaplains, professors, parish priests, hospital chaplains, itinerant preachers, and digital evangelists. Supported by their Dominican life, community, and charism, the friars are bringing the light of Christ to the challenges of today’s world.

This is the Dominican moment.

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