Category Archives: Women’s Communities

Sisters of Mary Morning Star’s New Addition Blessed

Catholic Herald photo/Kevin Wondrash

The Sisters of Mary Morning Star in the Diocese of Madison recently had their new addition, comprised of guest rooms, cells, a library and workroom, blessed by Msgr. James Bartylla, diocesan administrator.   With the addition, there is now enough room for 10 sisters to live at the convent.

For those who have grown up in Catholic parishes and schools without having seen a religious sister, the parish community where the sisters reside has been particularly blessed.  Monsignor Bartylla said thar there is a “sense of something that we didn’t know we needed, particularly, but know the blessing of it when it arrives.”  He also noted that the Church is Petrine and Marian, and with the sisters arrival, it helps to provide “fullness” to the Church.

The four main aspects of the charism of the Sisters of Mary Morning Star are prayer, fraternal charity, search for truth, and manual work. There are currently 250 sisters of the community throughout the world welcomed into 14  dioceses by bishops, with priories in Europe, the Americas, Asia, and Africa.

The second phase of the project is the building of a chapel ($400,000 or so in cost). For more information, please contact the sisters at 608-224-0251 or mariastella.madison@gmail.com

Little Sisters of the Poor Receive the IRL’s Pro Fidelitate et Virtute Award

This is the speech given by Sr. Constance Carolyn, l.s.p., on behalf of the Little Sisters of the Poor, who received the IRL’s Pro Fidelitate et Virtute Award. Given on April 27, 2019, at the University of St. Mary of the Lake.

On behalf of all the Little Sisters of the Poor around the country, I’m very happy to thank you for this beautiful Pro Fidelitate et Virtute award. I understand that the award was designed to honor those “who manifest a strong love for the Church and a zealous commitment to the consecrated life.” I am sure that there are countless individuals and groups who would have been worthy awardees this year, no doubt worthier than ourselves, and yet here we are. Divine Providence chose us Little Sisters to receive the Pro Fidelitate et Virtute Award this year, during the sesquicentennial of our presence in America.

Providence is a word that easily rolls off the tongue of every Little Sister of the Poor, but what do we really mean when we talk about Divine Providence? I have to admit that for many years I thought of Providence more or less like a heavenly version of amazon.com, or an ATM machine — whenever we need something we just utter a prayer or, better yet, put a note under St. Joseph’s statue, and bingo, the need is met! The word “provide” is found in “Providence,” but is that all that Providence means, that God is the great heavenly provider? In studying our history the last couple of years, I’ve come to understand Divine Providence as so much more than that.

I’d like to begin with a story, a moment in our Congregation’s history that profoundly impacted my understanding of Providence. It’s not a story about our coming to America, although I will speak about that before I finish, but a story about our Congregation’s experiences during World War II. As early as 1940 the Germans occupied half of France. On December 6, 1940, 72 Little Sisters of British nationality were taken into exile and imprisoned by the Germans along with other women religious. American Little Sisters in France were imprisoned later, and they were all held in captivity until they were liberated by Allied forces in October 1944.

Also, during the War our motherhouse in Brittany was transformed into a vast but rather primitive home for the aged as Little Sisters and residents were evacuated from more dangerous areas of France. At the height of the War over 950 people were living at the motherhouse. These included Little Sisters, the elderly, benefactors and Little Sisters’ family members who had fled the dangers of the war.

In addition, La Tour was used as a 500-bed military hospital. A total of 7,984 wounded soldiers were treated there during the war years. The German military also visited the motherhouse several times in view of taking it over for use as a hospital or training grounds. Fortunately for us, they were afraid of the old people and the communicable diseases they were presumed to carry, and found La Tour too primitive, so they never took it over.

Finally, a number of our houses were damaged or destroyed by bombings, including our novitiate in Marino, Italy, and our home for the elderly in Lisieux, France, both of which were destroyed during the Allied invasion. A total of 32 Little Sisters and 70 Residents were killed in these two bombings. Yet throughout all of these trials the Little Sisters never doubted God’s loving solicitude.

In 1944 Mother General wrote these remarkable words in a letter to the Congregation: “Someone recently remarked, with great emotion, ‘Your Congregation is truly privileged.’ Surely this is not obvious today, but at the time of our centennial (in 1939) the Princes of the Church were unanimous in proclaiming that our Congregation of Little Sisters of the Poor is a perpetual miracle, a glorification of Divine Providence. We realize this truth even more in light of our present trials: the bombings to which our homes in several regions have been exposed, the difficulties of the forced evacuations, the challenges involved in providing for everyone demonstrate the daily protection of our heavenly Father. We can repeat with Father LeLièvre, ‘Divine Providence never lets us down; in the measure that our religious family grows, Providence doubles its portion.’ What life-saving graces, what efficacious assistance! Despite the uncertainties of the morrow we feel ourselves now more than ever, the children of God’s delicate Providence!”

“The children of God’s delicate Providence!” Despite everything the Congregation had just gone through, Mother General had enough faith to call us the children of his delicate Providence! In fact at the beginning of the hostilities, she had made a vow to the Heart of Jesus to erect, at the completion of the War, a monument in thanksgiving for God’s protection — the divine protection she was sure he would grant the Congregation. This monument to Christ the King, bearing the words Glory, Thanksgiving and Love, was erected on the outside of the motherhouse chapel in 1947. Since then, generations of Little Sisters have passed by it multiple times every day.

What really struck me about this scenario is the way that our Sisters maintained their faith in God’s providential care even in extremely difficult circumstances. It is hard to imagine how such pressing, serious difficulties — not merely the solutions to these challenges, in which anyone might be able to see God’s intervention, but the challenges themselves — could be seen as demonstrations of God’s protection. Yet this is what our Mother General wrote.

I was also struck by Mother General’s vow at the beginning of the War to construct a monument to Christ the King once peace was restored. This was her way of thanking God ahead of time for the protection she was absolutely sure he would provide. Now that is confidence!

These same attitudes can be found in the stories of our first years in America. Father Ernest LeLièvre, whom Mother General referred to in her 1944 letter, was a diocesan priest who dedicated his life to our Congregation. Wealthy, well-educated and multilingual, he was largely responsible for our expansion beyond the boundaries of France. He arrived in America on June 10, 1868 and remained here for four straight years — even while the Franco-Prussian War raged back home in France — helping the Little Sisters to establish our first 13 homes in this country. He was also a spiritual father to both the Little Sisters and the elderly.

In all the challenges and obstacles he encountered Father LeLièvre would repeat, “I know in whom I have believed … I know that I serve a Master who values the will of a sincere heart beyond any talent” and “I know and am perfectly certain that of all the calculations I could make, the wisest is to abandon myself to Him.” At the end of his four years in America he wrote, “Here is my theology. When I return to Europe, I am going to do a thesis. The proposition that I will state and that I will prove by the whole history of the Little Sisters of the Poor is this: ‘We must believe in God, the Father Almighty.’”

Our first Little Sisters in America shared Father LeLièvre’s convictions about the Providence and universal fatherhood of God. The annals of each home are filled with stories of how God manifested his goodness by providing all kinds of necessities, always at just the right moment, through the generosity of good people in the community — all sorts of people from every walk of life.

Among our early benefactors were the founder of the first American men’s religious community, women religious from other European communities who had preceded the Little Sisters as missionaries in America, diocesan seminarians, bishops, archbishops and parish priests, school children and their parents, the richest woman in Boston and a couple of Irish maids who donated the shawls off their backs, farmers, butchers, fish mongers and a young heiress from Philadelphia who went on to establish a religious community to serve Native and African Americans.

Although the Little Sisters’ trust in Providence has most often been expressed in terms of material needs, it was not limited to the idea of God as provider. Like our foundress, St. Jeanne Jugan, our pioneering Little Sisters lived their faith with the simplicity of the “little ones,” the anawim. Their formation had taught them to look on events and persons with a living faith, which arouses hope and works through charity. The Sisters had a down-to-earth attitude toward ordinary events — with a very nitty-gritty apostolate among the sick and infirm they had to — but they also saw the action of God in those ordinary events.

During the very years when our first American foundations were being made, the Fathers of the first Vatican Council wrote these words: “God in His providence watches over and governs all the things that He made, reaching from end to end with might and disposing all things with gentleness.” In this definition, which is still widely used, we find the two aspects of Divine Providence — God both watches over and governs. To quote the great Jesuit Father Hardon, God “not only knows what is going on, he is directing what is going on…. God, who made the world out of nothing, not only keeps it in existence, but directs this world, God’s world, down to the smallest and most minute detail. God is active in every atom, in every proton, in every neutron. God is active in every thought we think, in every desire we have. All, all is part of his providence.”

“The Church tells us, God’s almighty providence, God’s almighty power governs the world with gentleness. God is mild. God is not loud or boisterous; he governs the world with gentleness. Our only danger is to not see his hand, to be deceived by his mildness to not realize that behind that mildness is omnipotence; in other words, it is divine power tempered by love. My favorite definition of gentleness,” Father Hardon wrote, is “power tempered by love.”

I’m sorry that it has taken me so long to get to the point this evening, but here is the point I wanted to make for all of us, members of the consecrated life and committed lay Catholics alike: As Father Hardon said in 1988, I think our society today often succumbs to the danger of not seeing God’s hand, of being deaf or inattentive to his voice because it is so gentle. At the same time, there is so much fear all around us. Shortly before the 2016 election I was at a conference in Washington and encountered a gentleman who was a fervent Catholic and a highly respected Washington insider. As we were leaving a panel discussion he said, “The way things are going in our country, this is the moment to believe in Providence; what else is there?”

Yes, this is the moment to believe in Providence! Now is the time to believe in a merciful and Provident God who is intimately involved in our daily lives. And so I think as believers we need to witness to those in our sphere of influence in a way that will inspire faith in God, our Father Almighty. We need to help others believe that we are ALL the children of God’s delicate Providence. We need to be able to say, each in our own way, “I know in whom I have believed … I know and am perfectly certain that of all the calculations I could make, the wisest is to abandon myself to Him.”

In our various spiritualities or religious families we might express this trust in God in different ways, but however we express it, we need to share this good news with our contemporaries! Our world is in such need of it!

Along with St. Jeanne Jugan, who said, “My Jesus, I have only you; come to my aid … If God is with us it will be accomplished,” I am thinking of St. Therese’s little way of confidence and love; and of the quote of St. Josephine Bakhita made famous by Pope Benedict: “I am definitively loved and whatever happens to me — I am awaited by this Love. And so my life is good.”

I recall the suscipe of Venerable Catherine McAuley: “My God, I am yours for all eternity. Teach me to cast my whole self into the arms of your Providence with the most lively, unlimited confidence in your compassionate, tender pity. Take from my heart all painful anxiety…”

On this eve of the Divine Mercy Sunday I am also thinking of St. Faustina, who taught us to trust in Jesus, and who prayed: “O God, how much I desire to be a small child. You are my Father, and You know how little and weak I am. So I beg You, keep me close by Your side all my life and especially at the hour of my death. Jesus, I know that Your goodness surpasses the goodness of a most tender mother.”

Finally, I am reminded of a passage from Pope Francis’ Gaudete et Exsultate: “We need to live humbly in his presence, cloaked in his glory; we need to walk in union with him, recognizing his constant love in our lives. We need to lose our fear before that presence which can only be for our good. God is the Father who gave us life and loves us greatly. Once we accept him, and stop trying to live our lives without him, the anguish of loneliness will disappear (cf. Ps 139:23-24). In this way we will know the pleasing and perfect will of the Lord (cf. Rom 12:1-2) and allow him to mold us like a potter (cf. Is 29:16). So often we say that God dwells in us, but it is better to say that we dwell in him, that he enables us to dwell in his light and love.”

As I conclude I would like to thank you once again on behalf of all the Little Sisters of the Poor for this beautiful Pro Fidelitate et Virtute award. I pledge to you that we will strive to pay it forward by witnessing more convincingly than ever that God is the Father who gave us life and loves us greatly. We will strive to express our gratitude by being faithful daughters of the Church and faithful daughters of St. Jeanne Jugan, icons of mercy as Cardinal George once called us.

Please join us in praying for a new flourishing of vocations to our Congregation so that we can continue our mission in America for another 150 years! Thank you!

 

Oblate Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus Celebrate the 125th Anniversary of their Foundation

On February 2, 2019, the Feast of the Presentation of the Lord, the Oblate Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus celebrated the 125th anniversary of their foundation. The year 2019 has special significance for all involved for it marks the 70th anniversary of the sisters’ arrival in America and the 75th anniversary of the diocese itself. In honor of the occasion, Holy Mass was celebrated by Most Rev. George V. Murry, S.J., in Our Lady of Mount Carmel Basilica in Youngstown, Ohio. Carried in the Procession was a Mercy Cross, one of 33 pilgrim crosses blessed by Pope Francis for the Jubilee Year of Mercy.

Mercy Cross

The Oblates Sisters were founded on February 2, 1894 by Bl. Mother Maria Teresa Casini in Grottaferrata, Italy. Their foundress, when she was only 18 years old, experienced Jesus showing her His pierced heart “and asked me to share in His suffering.” Originally a cloistered community dedicated to prayer and sacrifice in atonement to the heart of Jesus for the human failings of priests, they eventually established schools for young people to help them spiritually and to cultivate vocations to the priesthood.

The charism of the Oblate Sisters is to console the Pierced Heart of Jesus through prayer and reparation. They live this through the daily offering of themselves, by caring for elderly priests and by collaborating with pastors in parish ministry, schools, and religious education programs, instilling in those they serve a love of God and an openness to God’s vocational call. Two hundred Oblate Sisters serve in six countries (Italy, United States, Brazil, India, Guinea-Bissau, Peru) on five continents.  Ministry in the United States began in 1949 in the Diocese of Youngstown and in 2015 in the Diocese of Joliet in Illinois.

Mother Maria Teresa was beatified in 2015 in the piazza in front of the Cathedral of St. Peter the Apostle in Frascati, Italy, where she was baptized. Pope Francis declared, “She was a contemplative woman and missionary; she made her life an offering of prayer and concrete charity in support of priests. Let us thank the Lord for her witness.”

Reflecting on this anniversary, their General Superior, Mother M. Arcangela Martino, said: “Remembering does not mean simply to remember facts from the past, but actualizing, today, the events that ‘happened’ at the origin of our history in order to continue to live the charism given by the Spirit to our Blessed Mother Teresa.”

The thought and the desire of consoling the pierced Heart of Jesus should always be alive in the Oblate…love and sorrow drove Jesus to make His voice heard in the depths of our heart, and this love and sorrow cause Him to desire and to want holiness in the priests dear to Him. He wants the Oblate to sacrifice herself, to pray, to supplicate, to work and grow weary for the sanctification of these dear people…He loves these souls with an immense love…His Heart seeks out people who will pray, suffer and make reparation for them. ―Bl. Maria Teresa Cassini

Villa Maria Teresa, 50 Warner Road, Hubbard, OH 44425

E-Mail: vmtoblate@aol.com

 

 

New IRL Affiliate Alert: Marian Sisters of Santa Rosa!

“What earlier generations held as sacred, remains sacred and great for us too… It behooves all of us to preserve the riches which have developed in the Church’s Faith and prayer, and to give them their proper place.”  ​
​- Pope Benedict XVI, concerning the venerable liturgical rites of the Church

We at the IRL are happy to announce a new community added to our roster: Marian Sisters of Santa Rosa!

The Superiors of the Marian Sisters previously belonged to another religious Traditional order, however at the gracious invitation of Robert F. Vasa, Bishop of Santa Rosa, California, they founded a new community “to make visible the invisible reality of God’s love in the Diocese of Santa Rosa.”

As Marian Sisters, they live and love at the heart of the Church.  Their spirituality can be described as Ecclesial, Eucharistic, and Marian.  This is, in part, lived out through their charism of living the fullness of the liturgical life of the Roman Catholic Church – they participate in both the Ordinary Form (Novus Ordo) and also the Extraordinary Form (traditional Latin) in their chapel several times a week and provide the choir for the Extraordinary Form High Mass at the Cathedral each Sunday.

Since their founding, the community has grown and its active apostolates have expanded.  Committed to the spread of the faith in the Diocese, every Sister teaches the Faith in some manner.  While some are formal classroom teachers, most of the Sisters exercise the charism more broadly through children’s catechesis, faith formation groups, retreats and camps, and any other way in which God’s will is made manifest.

Called to a life of total consecration to Christ and His Church, the Sisters take the Blessed Virgin Mary as their inspiration and model and dedicate their time and talents completely to the service of God and neighbor.

The Constitutions of the Marian Sisters of Santa Rosa  were approved and canonically erected the community on January 4, 2012.

 

 

Mother Clelia Merloni, Foundress of the Apostles of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, Pronounced Blessed by the Church

The Apostles of the Sacred Heart of Jesus joyfully celebrated the Mass of Beatification of their foundress, Blessed Clelia Merloni, on Saturday, November 3, 2018, at the Basilica of St. John Lateran in Rome, Italy. The mass marked an historic event anticipated by the Apostles and by thousands of lay faithful throughout the world. Mother Clelia gives us a tremendous example of one who suffered from false accusations, misunderstandings and even exile from her sisters, yet she responded with forgiveness, humility and charity. Her deep understanding of God’s love for her enabled her to unite herself with her crucified Spouse.

Cardinal Giovanni Angelo Becciu, Prefect of the Congregation for the Causes of the Saints, and representative of Pope Francis at the Mass of Beatification, said of Mother Clelia in his homily: “She shared the wound in the Heart of Jesus, responding to hostility and contempt with love. She placed all opposition before the Tabernacle. This is what sustained her. Before the Heart of Jesus, she recognized that His will was to be reconciled with everyone.”

In her words of gratitude to Cardinal Becciu, Mother Miriam Cunha Sobrinha, the Superior General of the Apostles of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, proclaimed: “This moment confirms the timeliness of Mother Clelia in the Church and opens for us a new era of hope, because Mother’s life, lived in hiddenness and as an offering to God, shows us that suffering, pain, misunderstanding, slander and persecution are not the last word. The last word belongs to the merciful love of God who loves us and forgives us always!”

While 15 sisters from the United States Province of the Apostles of the Sacred Heart of Jesus traveled to Rome to join the thousands of pilgrims gathered for this long-awaited gift, the remainder of the sisters in the United States gathered either in Hamden, Connecticut at the Provincial House or in St. Louis, Missouri. With inexpressible joy, the sisters watched the live coverage on EWTN, complete with the English commentary by their own Junior Professed, Sr. Elizabeth Doyle. Regional celebrations are scheduled in the spring at the cathedral of each diocese where the Apostles now serve in the United States. For information about the dates of these liturgies, please visit www.ascjus.org.

Mother Clelia, the humble servant who pronounced her “Fiat” with so much love and trust, was born in Italy on March 10, 1861. In 1892, Clelia entered the Congregation of the Daughters of Our Lady of Providence in Como where she became ill with tuberculosis. When she made a sudden recovery at the end of a novena to the Sacred Heart of Jesus and the Immaculate Heart of Mary, she felt that she was mercifully given another chance at life. She developed a clear and precise vision of what she had to do: to dedicate herself to the good of the poor, orphans and the abandoned, to offer her life of good works for the conversion of her atheist father, and to become a spiritual mother of souls by founding a religious congregation of sisters consecrated to the Sacred Heart of Jesus.

On May 30, 1894, at the age of 33, she fulfilled her dream. During a ceremony attended by her first two companions and “a great host of the faithful” (as described by witnesses), the first three Apostles were presented to the parish and the Congregation of the Apostles of the Sacred Heart of Jesus was born.

The Institute blossomed without delay. Clelia immediately opened a school, which soon outgrew itself. A nursery school, a home for the elderly, and a sheltered workshop followed. Then, thanks to the generous support of her father, Clelia acquired the Palazzo Montecatini, where she was able to welcome orphans and the elderly. In addition, the Sisters taught catechism to the parish children.

The number of Sisters in the Congregation quickly grew. To add to the heavenly graces that were blessing the new Congregation, Clelia became the sole beneficiary of her father’s substantial patrimony upon his death in 1895, whose conversion on his deathbed was aided by her many prayers and sacrifices. But the resultant expansion of her works ended abruptly after only three years when the dishonesty of the priest who administered her father’s inheritance led to complete bankruptcy. This forced the Apostles to abandon their numerous missions.

Divine Providence was watching over them and so the Congregation did not fail. On the contrary, it received new impetus from the Bishop of Piacenza who accepted the floundering group into his diocese and, in 1900, launched the Apostles in mission to Italian immigrants who had settled in Brazil, and then to the Italians in Boston two years later. By 1903, the Congregation numbered 196 Sisters in 30 houses worldwide.

Mother Clelia, however, became a victim of calumny after the bankruptcy and subsequent law suits. Not wanting to accuse the priest publicly, she took the blame on herself, which led to untold misunderstanding. She was no longer consulted on matters regarding the Congregation’s governance and in 1904, by Vatican decree, Mother Clelia lost her title of Superior General, and the passage of authority went to another sister.

Even though Mother Clelia was reinstated the following year, three Apostolic investigations followed, at the end of which Mother Clelia was once again removed from office with a decree from the Sacred Congregation of Religious in 1911. Numerous requests by Mother Clelia to review her case were left unanswered. Alone and considering herself an obstacle to the peace of the community, Clelia decided to leave the Institute she had founded rather than to see it torn apart by discord.

In 1916, she received a dispensation from her religious vows. Thus, began a most difficult period of exile. Her name became unknown to successive generations of Apostles; it was prohibited to correspond with her or send any means of support, and sisters who had been loyal to her were expelled from the Congregation.

In 1920, Mother Clelia wrote to the Pope, begging to be allowed to reenter the Congregation that she had founded. Many years passed before she was finally allowed to return to the Generalate in Rome in 1928.  Aging and quite weak, and deprived of any association with the other Sisters, Mother Clelia spent the last two years of her life in solitude and prayer before the Blessed Sacrament and in self-offering to the Heart of Jesus. The hallmark of her charity was the unconditional forgiveness she gave to all who had been the cause of her sufferings over the years.

Mother Clelia Merloni died in Rome on November 21, 1930 and was buried in nearby Campo Verano Cemetery, which was heavily bombed during World War II. On May 20, 1945, after a painstaking search, her body was found incorrupt and was transported to the main chapel at the Generalate. On April 23, 2018, the seal on her tomb was opened in the presence of medical authorities from the Congregation for the Causes of Saints. Now her body has been prepared to be viewed in a new glass tomb in the Chapel at the Generalate of the Apostles of the Sacred Heart of Jesus in Rome.

Her sisters today number over 1,000 members and serve in 15 countries: Italy, Brazil, the United States, Switzerland, Argentina, Chile, Albania Mozambique, Uruguay, Paraguay, Benin, the Philippines, Haiti, Ireland and Portugal. The Congregation’s presence in the United States dates from 1902, when six Apostles journeyed from Italy to Boston to serve the Italian immigrants. The Apostles left Boston and arrived in New Haven, Connecticut, in 1906. The provincialate was transferred to Mount Sacred Heart in Hamden, Connecticut in 1953. The ministries of the Apostles of the Sacred Heart of Jesus include education, healthcare, social work, parish ministry, legal services and prison ministry.

In 1988, the cause of beatification of Mother Clelia Merloni was opened. On January 27, 2018, Pope Francis signed the approval of the miracle of Mother Clelia Merloni. Blessed Clelia Merloni’s feast day will be celebrated in the Church on November 20, which is the eve of the anniversary of Clelia’s death―November 21, 1930.

Mother Clelia once said: “Throw yourself with complete trust in the Heart of Jesus, hoping for and expecting every advantage, support, and victory from Him alone.”

Blessed Clelia, pray for us!

Contact:  Sr. Colleen Therese Smith, ASC

Email: advancement@ascjus.org

Phone: 203-281-2562

PS> There are Regional celebrations of Bl. Mother Clelia’s life taking place all throughout the spring in the following states: Florida, Pennsylvania, New York, Missouri and Connecticut.  Please see their website for locations and times.

 

First Federation of the Order of the Visitation Launches New Website

On November 9, 2018 the First Federation of Visitation nuns launched a new website. Designed by Vocation Promotion, the website, VisitationSistersFirstFederation.org, provides links to the six monasteries in the Federation, which include: Mobile, AL; Rockville, VA; Philadelphia, PA; Snellville, GA; Toledo, OH; and Tyringham, MA.

This was one of the steps taken to comply with the requirements of the recent Vatican document Vultum Dei Quaerere and its implementing instruction Cor Orans.  They will also, said Sr. Sharon Gworek, Federation President, be revising the “Constitutions and related documents to bring them in line with those two documents. A committee has been formed to undertake this task and it is being accompanied by the prayer of all the sisters.”

The First Federation is one of two federations of Visitation nuns in the United States. The federations serve as a source of communion and mutual support for the monasteries especially since each monastery is autonomous. The federations help them to strengthen the bond of love that unites them to one another.

The question is often asked: is contemplative life still relevant today?

 The answer can be found in Vultum Dei Quaerere, No. 6:

 “Dear contemplative sisters, without you what would the Church be like, or without all those others living on the fringes of humanity and ministering in the outposts of evangelization?

 The Church greatly esteems your life of complete self-giving. The Church counts on your prayers and on your self-sacrifice to bring today’s men and women to the good news of the Gospel.

 The Church needs you! It is not easy for the world, or at least that large part of it dominated by the mindset of power, wealth and consumerism, to understand your particular vocation and your hidden mission; and yet it needs them immensely.  

The world needs you every bit as much as a sailor on the high seas needs a beacon to guide him to a safe haven. Be beacons to those near to you and, above all, to those far away. 

 Be torches to guide men and women along their journey through the dark night of time. Be sentinels of the morning (cf. Is 21:11-12), heralding the dawn (cf. Lk 1:78).  

By your transfigured life, and with simple words pondered in silence, shows us the One who is the way, and the truth and the life (cf. Jn 14:6)….”

 

Sisters of the Holy Cross in Opus Angelorum Elevated to Pontifical Status

The Sisters of the Holy Cross in Opus Angelorum, an IRL affiliate community since 2004, was elevated this year from an Institute of Diocesan Right to an Institute of Pontifical Right. With the authorization of the Holy Father, Pope Francis, the Congregation for Religious promulgated the decree of pontifical recognition on the Feast of St. Mark, April 25, 2018, which was communicated to the Mother General on June 1, 2018. With this step, the governance of the Sisters no longer stands under the Bishop of Innsbruck, Austria but reports directly to Rome and the Congregation for Religious. It is a confirmation of their way of life and mission in the Church, and more firmly anchors them to the rock of Peter, to whom they pledge their fidelity.

History of the Sisters

The first Sisters were lay women who joined priests and other lay persons in a group gathered around Mother Gabriel already in the 1950’s in order to live a closer bond with the Holy Angels in their role in the economy of salvation, and to spiritually assist priests, both spiritually and materially, in their vocation. This was the beginning of the spiritual movement, Opus Angelorum. The first canonical institution of Opus Angelorum to be erected in the Church was the Confraternity of the Holy Guardian Angels in 1961 in the diocese of Innsbruck, Austria, which also has a branch in the US today. The Sisters received a house in the diocese of Salzburg, which they named the “House of Adoration”. There they held their first novitiate for a newly formed “pious union,” which was erected in 1964. Along with the Opus Angelorum and the brother community of priests, the Canons Regular of the Holy Cross, the community of the Sisters quickly spread to other countries, including Germany, Switzerland, Portugal, Brazil and the Netherlands. Today, they are present and active in 10 countries with 170 perpetually professed Sisters. They were erected in the Diocese of Innsbruck as a Diocesan Institute in 2002.

The Sisters first came to the US in 1998 and lived for over 10 years at an inner-city parish in Detroit. In 2015, they moved to a residential home in Ohio, as they wait for the completion (hopefully this fall!) of their first convent in the United States.

Spirituality of the Sisters

Beginning from their own total surrender to God, seeking the glorification of the Triune God through a life in imitation of Christ and of sharing in His salvific mission, the Sisters devote themselves by prayer, Eucharistic Adoration, sacrifice and service, to the sanctification of the priesthood and religious state. They are particularly devoted to the Passion of Christ, which they commemorate weekly. They live their life in communion with the Holy Angels, consecrating themselves to them and collaborating with them in the spiritual battle for souls. The Sisters are aggregated to the Order of Canons Regular of the Holy Cross, share the same spirituality and assist the priests in the apostolate, Opus Angelorum.

Mother John Marie Stewart (1926-2018), Foundress of the Disciples of the Lord Jesus Christ

On May 26, 2018, Mother John Marie Stewart, DLJC, the foundress of the Disciples of the Lord Jesus Christ, a Franciscan charismatic religious community, passed into eternal life. Her funeral Mass was celebrated by Most Reverend Patrick J. Zurek, Bishop of Amarillo. He was joined by Most Rev. Samuel Jacobs, Bishop Emeritus of Houma, LA, as well as other priests.

Mother John Marie was born in Arkansas in 1926 to a family of Methodist ministers, elders and missionaries. She graduated from Vanderbilt University with a degree in nursing. While working towards a Ph.D. in English Literature at Columbia University, Mother John Marie, a Catholic convert who gradually became a secular humanist, was brought back to the Catholic faith after a long absence by the quiet evangelization of a Catholic sister.

In February 1969, two years after the beginning of the Catholic Charismatic Renewal in the United States, Mother received the Baptism in the Holy Spirit. In the ensuing years she participated in street evangelization and attended many Charismatic Conferences.

On January 22, 1972, while on retreat at a Poor Clare Monastery, the Lord gave her the community’s Founding Document which along with the Franciscan Third Order Regular Rule and Constitutions are the framework of their way of life. The Disciples of the Lord Jesus Christ were erected as an Institute of Diocesan Rite on April 7, 1991 in the Diocese of Amarillo, Texas

By her untiring love for souls, Mother John Marie taught her spiritual daughters to “go after the lost sheep” and then help them receive the fullness of the Holy Spirit through the Charismatic Renewal. She traveled the world where she was never afraid to openly declare that “Jesus is Lord” and to remind people that Jesus loved them.

Mother John Marie leaves behind thirty-eight spiritual daughters―thirty sisters in Perpetual Profession; three in Temporarily Profession; and one Novice and three Postulants. Their Motherhouse is in Prayer Town, Texas and they also have local houses in Texas, New Mexico, Pennsylvania and Mexico.

For more information, please visit: www.dljc.org

 

Bethany House: A New House of Discernment For Women

Bethany House is a women’s discernment house, sponsored by the Office of Vocations in the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis. Located in Minneapolis, it opened in September of 2017 and is a home for women ages 20-27 who live in community and discern whether they are called to consecrated life

This is a new initiative of the Office of Vocations in partnership with the Handmaids of the Heart of Jesus, a religious community based in New Ulm, Minnesota. The women may work or go to school, but the objective is the same – to sit at the feet of Jesus like Mary of Bethany, listening. “This is about discerning God’s will, and that’s the goal … wherever God may lead them,” said Father David Blume, vocations director for the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis.

Father Blume was inspired to found Bethany House after a young woman told him: “Our men have a path, but for us women, we don’t have a path — we have 500 paths, and it’s kind of confusing.” The Vocations Office takes care of the house’s administration while the Handmaids oversee the formation and pastoral aspects.

Handmaid Sister Mary Joseph Evans makes it clear that this is not a Handmaid discernment house. “They have total freedom to discern any community. … Because we’re diocesan sisters, part of our role in our service of the diocese is to walk with young women in general, in helping them know and discern and embrace the Lord’s will, just like a diocesan priest would for the men.”

Residents at Bethany House commit to nine months of common living as well as a weekday schedule that includes a 5:45 a.m. Holy Hour with morning prayer in the parish’s Adoration chapel. The women then attend daily Mass before heading to classes or work. They share three evening meals each week, and pray night prayer together each night. Then they observe “grand silence” until after Mass the following day. A 2-month summer program is also an option.

One resident described the experience as a retreat. “And that’s how they really set it up to be,” she said. “We’re retreating to Jesus, and Jesus is really retreating to us more, I feel like, because He wants to be in our hearts.”

For more information, please visit: 10000vocations.org/bethany-house

 

Contemplatives of St. Joseph Add Women’s Branch

The Contemplatives of St. Joseph, a monastery for men founded in 2010, now have a women’s branch. Over the years, founder Fr. Vito Perrone had to turn women away seeking to join them in their contemplative yet active life. But now, there are 3 women in formation with more to surely come because they seem to be experiencing a boom of sort in vocations and interest!

The COSJs are a Public Clerical Association of the Christian Faithful as decreed by Most Reverend Salvatore Cordileone, Archbishop of San Francisco. They take Saint Joseph as their model for his silent, contemplative witness. “He keeps his eyes on Jesus and Mary, as we do,” says Father Perrone. “He is steady, loving, is manly and has a huge influence. That is our model of the contemplative life.”

The community of priests, brothers and sisters commits to eight hours of community and individual prayer. They celebrate the Extraordinary Form of the Mass “to enter into the deep and profound spirituality preserved by the Church and handed down from our western fathers to us today.” Their First Friday Healing Mass draws many. Those in attendance are blessed with the oil of St. Joseph that was used by St. Andre Bessette, the humble servant of St. Joseph.

They also offer retreats; spiritual direction for priests, seminarians, and nuns; parish missions; and will be offering The Catholic Spiritual Life Academy to teach families how they can live a modified contemplative life.

On May 1, Archbishop Cordileone was the principal celebrant at a Solemn High Mass on the Feast of St. Joseph the Worker where the Missa Sancti Joseph was premiered, composed by Frank La Rocca. In addition to receiving professions, investitures and bestowing blessings on candidates and postulants, the Archbishop also bestowed a special blessing for the beginning a COSJ Third Order.

“We feel the contemplative life is a very powerful witness within the life of the church,” Father Perrone said. “Basically, you have to die to yourself in order to understand the riches of life with Christ,” He adds: “Religious life, especially with the COSJ, is not for the faint of heart.”  But it is for those with a heart for Jesus and the Church in imitation of the Guardian of the Redeemer―Saint Joseph!

See article in Catholic San Francisco or visit their website: cosjmonastery.com