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In Christian theology, a sodality, also known as a syndiakonia, is a form of the Universal Church organized in a specialized, task-oriented society, as opposed to a local, body (a modality). In English, the term sodality is most commonly used by groups in the Anglican Communion, , Eastern Orthodox Church, and , where they are also referred to as . Sodalities are expressed among Protestant Churches through the multitude of mission organizations, societies, and specialized ministries that have proliferated, particularly since the advent of the modern missions movement, usually attributed to Englishman William Carey in 1792.

In many Christian denominations, "modality" refers to the structure and organization of the local or universal church, composed of pastors or priests. By contrast, parachurch organizations are termed sodalities. These include missionary organizations and Christian charities or fraternities not linked to specific churches. Some theologians would include denominations, schools of theology, and other multi-congregational efforts in the sodality category. Sodalities can also include religious orders, monasteries, and convents.


Origins of sodalities
The word sodalis means "companion", a sodality being an organization of companions or friends. The sodalities of the Church are pious associations and are included among the confraternities and archconfraternities. , writing in the Catholic Encyclopedia, states that it would not be possible to give a definition making a clear distinction between the sodalities and other . Confraternities and sodalities had their beginnings after the rise of the confraternities of prayer in the early Middle Ages (around 400–1000 AD), and developed rapidly from the end of the 12th century, with the rise of the great ecclesiastical orders, such as the Dominicans, the , and the . Other associations of this kind soon appeared under the jurisdiction of the local ordinary and had no particular connection with a religious order. Hilgers, Joseph. "Sodality." The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol. 14. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1912. 28 November 2016

During the , many of these pious associations placed themselves under the special protection of the and chose her as their patron. The main object and duty of these societies were, above all, the practice of piety and works of charity. By the end of the (around 1400 AD), the Church experienced a crisis and lost power and influence. Two hundred years later, in the 16th century, the Church rose to renewed prosperity and the many new religious congregations and associations gave birth to numerous new confraternities and sodalities which worked with great success and, in some cases, still exist.


Classes of sodalities
A useful way to understand sodalities, and their place in the Christian Church, is to divide the sodalities, pious associations and confraternities into three broad types:

This group includes the confraternities which seek mainly to attain piety, devotion and the increase of love of God by special devotion to God, the Blessed Virgin, the , or the . In the first half of the twentieth century, such sodalities were the mainstay of Catholic parish life in many countries.


A simplified definition
According to Rene Metz, [Canon canon law]] provides for and favours pious associations of lay people...The best-known of the confraternities is that of the Most Blessed Sacrament". What Is Canon Law? Rene Metz, p. 93, translated by Michael Derrick


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