Skip to main content

Vision & Mission

The Lay Centre

Our Vision

Ispirare e preparare i futuri leader a servire la Chiesa e il mondo.
The Lay Centre

Our Mission

Offriamo a donne e uomini laici una significativa esperienza di vita comunitaria e programmi efficaci per lo sviluppo umano, spirituale, intellettuale e professionale.
The Lay Centre

Our Core Values

Fede, Ospitalità, Dialogo e Cura della Casa Comune sono i valori fondamentali che ci ispirano in tutto ciò che facciamo.

1 - Vita comunitaria a Roma

2 - Dialogo con il mondo

3 - Studiosi in visita

1 - Ritiri per i laici

2 - Nutrire la preghiera

3 - Incoraggiare il discernimento

Fr Agnello Stoia with Lay Centre community Sept 2024
The Lay Centre

1 - Serate comunitarie

2 - Borse di studio attraverso il Lay Leadership Program:

3 - Conferenze

1 - Rome Seminars for Church Leaders

2 - Summer Lay Leadership Program:

3 - Mentorship Network

The Lay Centre first opened its doors October 1, 1986, as a “college” for lay students enrolled at the pontifical universities, institutes and athenae in Rome. The first student community included nine young adults from three countries and four Christian denominations.

 

Donna Orsuto and Riekie van Velzen founded the international Catholic Christian community. They were committed to continuing the charism of ecumenical hospitality and dialogue fostered by the Ladies of Bethany, an order of Dutch nuns, who carried out this charism for decades from their guesthouse in Rome, called the Casa Foyer Unitas.

The Casa Foyer Unitas, located in the Collegio Innocenziano in Piazza Navona, played in important role during the Second Vatican Council, hosting ecumenical observers who met weekly in the neighbouring Centro Pro Unione for debriefings with Council Fathers and special consultors.

 

The Ladies of Bethany continued their mission until the mid-1980s, when age and changes to the Roman municipal codes prompted them to downsize their efforts. This opened the way for their two student assistants to come up with a new initiative to keep the spirit of Foyer Unitas alive. They called it The Lay Centre at Foyer Unitas.

The Lay Centre
The Lay Centre
The Lay Centre
The Lay Centre
The Lay Centre

For the next 15 years, The Lay Centre operated in a space on the fourth floor of the Collegio Innocenziano.

In 1992, when the Ladies of Bethany retired from Rome entirely, a formal board of directors was established and The Lay Centre came out from under the Foyer Unitas umbrella, incorporating in Italy and in the United States as a nonprofit organization.

In 2001, The Lay Centre was called upon to relocate, and the community found a home on the grounds of the Pontifical Irish College in what is now the Villa Irlanda guesthouse.

In 2009, The Lay Centre moved to its current location in the centre of historic Rome, within the Passionist Monastery of San Giovanni e Paolo, on the Caelian Hill.

Over a 30-year span, more than 270 students and scholars have lived and been formed at The Lay Centre. They have come from 64 countries, with the largest contingent – about 37 per cent – from the United States.

As well, people of 13 religious traditions have been welcomed among its student community, including Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist, Unitarian Universalist, and T’ienti Teachings. Among the Christians, the majority have been Roman Catholic (85 per cent of the Christians; 63 per cent of the total). Other Christians have included Anglican, Coptic, Lutheran, Methodist, Orthodox, Reformed, Syro-Malabar and Chaldean Catholic.

Most Lay Centre alumni live out their ecclesial vocation as laity, developing careers in education and the nonprofit sector. Others serve the Church in different capacities, such as in ecumenical relations, in diocesan curia or bishops’ conferences. A few have discerned calls to consecrated life or ordained ministry.

Though few in number, the impact of The Lay Centre alumni has been far-reaching and worldwide.

The Lay Centre
The Lay Centre
The Lay Centre

Donna Orsuto

Co-founder and Senior Advisor

Donna Orsuto è professore di spiritualità alla Pontificia Università Gregoriana di Roma. Originaria degli Stati Uniti, tiene anche conferenze e ritiri in tutto il mondo. Ha scritto due libri e numerosi articoli nell’ambito della spiritualità. La dott.ssa Orsuto è attiva nel dialogo ecumenico e interreligioso. Papa Benedetto XVI l’ha nominata Dama dell’Ordine Equestre Pontificio di San Gregorio Magno nel 2011.
The Lay Centre

Riekie van Velzen

Consultant

Henrica (Riekie) van Velzen è un’artista, il cui lavoro spazia dall’iconografia e le tecniche di pittura antica al digitale. Le sue opere sono esposte in collezioni private in tutto il mondo e quelle a soggetto sacro sono state commissionate per diverse chiese italiane. Attraverso l’arte, Riekie van Velzen sensibilizza anche sui temi dell’ecologia. Nativa dei Paesi Bassi, è fiera di essere nonna e madre di due figli. Lei e suo marito si sono recentemente trasferiti “a contatto con la natura”, fuori Roma, dove coltivano alberi da frutto e un orto. Papa Benedetto XVI l’ha nominata Dama dell’Ordine Equestre Pontificio di San Silvestro nel 2011.

Filipe Domingues

Director

Filipe Domingues, giornalista brasiliano, è il direttore di The Lay Centre. Ha conseguito il dottorato e la licenza in Scienze Sociali presso la Pontificia Università Gregoriana, dove è docente di Comunicazione. È autore di “L’altruismo nell’era dei selfie: cosa i giovani possono insegnarci sulla cultura dell’usa e getta dei social media” (G&B Press). Nel 2018 ha partecipato al Sinodo sui giovani come esperto di etica dei media. Come giornalista, collabora da Roma con il quotidiano “O São Paulo”, in Brasile, e “America Magazine”, negli Stati Uniti.
The Lay Centre
The Lay Centre
The Lay Centre
The Lay Centre
The Lay Centre
The Lay Centre
Robert J. Gorman
Sara E. Dysart