Archive for May, 2010

All ye creatures, bless the Lord!

May 31st, 2010

     It was recreation time and we were just sitting down to play a game of cards when Sister rushed in to tell us there was a “bug with really large antlers”. Or so we thought that’s what she said…we’ve seen plenty of bugs…but bugs don’t have antlers – she said a “buck”! So we ran to the door and sure enough there was a very large buck with a nice rack of antlers. Definitely worth getting up from the table to see!

 

      No picture of the buck…he’s camera-shy.

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 More beasts wild and tame!

    Danny Boy doesn’t mind getting his photo taken. Here he gets into the spirit of St. Patrick’s day! Yes, this photo is a wee bit outdated but better late than never!

 Remember those cool days of not so long ago?

    We have many “beasts, wild and tame” in our area…deer, geese, heron, wild turkey (once a Sister thought she was seeing an ostrich in the woods – just a huge turkey!) coyote, racoon and so forth. Thankfully there are no bear in our area of Kentucky, but there have been sightings of panther in a neighboring county.

 

Mary, Queen of May, ora pro nobis!

May 18th, 2010

     Thought you might enjoy a little peek at this year’s May procession. Our Lady is of UTMOST importance in the life of a Passionist Nun. She is our Mother of Mercy who teaches us how to be trusting brides of her Son – Crucified Love. 

      While outdoors we sang Marian hymns.

     The above photo is one of my favorites…symbolizing us with Our Lady at the Foot of the Cross – where, in what appeared an utter failure, love triumphed over evil and the New Adam redeemed his Bride.

     Sr. Rose Marie carried Our Lady’s crown

     Once inside our newest member Ane Kirstine crowned the statue of Our Lady of Sorrows in the back of our chapel. We then renewed our Consecration to the Immaculate Heart of Mary and prayed the Litany.

     Our Lady of Sorrows, Queen of the Passionist Congregation, ora pro nobis!

Little Site of Fr. Paul Francis Spencer, C.P.

May 14th, 2010

    A couple months ago I came across this website on things Passionist by our Passionist Fr. Paul Francis Spencer. Here is how he describes it.

This little site [Passio in Cordibus] is intended for anyone who is interested in Passionist Spirituality. It gathers together some articles and talks I have written over the years on Saint Paul of the Cross, Founder of the Passionists, and related topics.

     From what I have read it looks like a great resource and I am looking forward to reading more. I hope you will benefit from it as well!

    May the Passion of Christ be ever in our hearts!

 Pretty cool photo, eh?  To take this picture Sr. Rose Marie’s dad just lowered his camera into the water channel. The amazing thing is he wasn’t even looking through the viewer! Yet the crucifix just “happened” to line up perfectly inside the cross.

Passion of Christ…strengthen us! 

Our Lady leads us to Love

May 13th, 2010

   During these days we are united with our beloved papa – Pope Benedict XVI – during his pilgrimage to Fatima, Portugal. Today, May 13th is the Feast of Our Lady of Fatima. She first appeared to the 3 little shepherds on this day in 1917 with a message of prayer, penance, conversion, love and peace.

    Yesterday, to no avail, some Sisters and I searched and searched for the powerful homily Msgr Powers gave last week on St. Paul of the Cross and our Mother of Mercy which I was hoping to use for today’s post in honor of our Lady. The Lord always provides and in unexpected ways! Special thanks to our lay Passionist friend David who left this message of our Holy Father, given yesterday at Fatima to a group of priests and consecrated persons, as a comment here on the blog. It is such an inspiring quote I decided to make it today’s blog post.  This quote doesn’t specifically mention Our Lady, but as we know, she the role model for all priests and consecrated persons through her perfect fulfillment of the virtues of humility, purity and obedience.

    This life of special consecration was born to keep the Gospel always before the People of God, as a reminder which manifests, certifies and proclaims to the whole Church the radical nature of the Gospel and the coming of the Kingdom.  Dear consecrated men and women, by your dedication to prayer, asceticism and growth in the spiritual life, to apostolic action and mission, you are progressing towards the heavenly Jerusalem, you are a foretaste of the eschatological Church, solid in her possession and loving contemplation of God who is love. 

    How much we need this witness today!  Many of our brothers and sisters live as if there were nothing beyond this life, and without concern for their eternal salvation.  Men and women are called to know and love God, and the Church has the mission to assist them in this calling.  We know well that God is the master of his gifts and that conversion is a grace.  But we are responsible for proclaiming the faith, the whole faith, with all its demands.  Dear friends, let us imitate the Curé of Ars who prayed to the Lord in the following words: ‘Grant me the conversion of my parish, and I accept to suffer all that you wish for the rest of my life.’  And he did everything to pull people away from their own lukewarm attitude in order to lead them back to love.

~Pope Benedict XVI, Message to Priests, Religious, Seminarians, and Deacons, Fatima, 12 May 2010

    May Our Lady obtain the graces we all need to lead others “back to Love.”  She is our Mother! What will a Mother not do for her children!

A Mother’s Day Tribute

May 8th, 2010

    Mother’s Day is a big deal here in the monastery. Mass each year on this day is offered for our mothers living and deceased. Mother’s Day also reminds us of our privilege and duty of spiritual motherhood.  This year our community’s annual May procession will be held on Mother’s Day.

    Today I would like to share with you about our spiritual mother Mary and her presence in the life of our Founder and our Congregation.

    The following article was gleaned from Bread on the Waters website and was written by Father Columkille Regan – Passionist priest.

The Presence of Mary in the Life of Saint Paul of the Cross

There is a powerful and discreet presence of Mary in Scripture and Luturgy. We find it also in the history of the saints. Mary touched the life of St. Paul of the Cross from his early youth. Signs of her presence were many and clear, and all of them pointed toward her Son Jesus.

Paul was raised in a family of deep faith, where he learned to converse with Mary daily through the Rosary. As a young boy, he fell into the Olba River and was miraculously saved by Mary. During the intellectual visions of the summer of 1720, Mary showed Paul the habit of mourning and penance and the sign he and his companions were to wear, and explained the meaning of the habit in terms of their mourning for the Passion and Death of Jesus.

Paul had a very special devotion to the Mystery of Mary’s Presentation in the Temple. On that particular feastday “he said farewell to the world and desired to be clothed in the habit of the Passion, and thus offered himself in the flower of his years to the Divine Majesty, in imitation of that great queen, who, in offering herself in the temple, made of herself a sacrifice so agreeable to the heart of God.” (Strambi: Life of Paul of the Cross, p. 204)

On his first trip to Rome, the ship stopped at Monte Argentario, and Paul recalled the words he had heard in prayer before a statue of our Lady: “Paul come to Monte Argentario, for I am there alone.” On the feast of our Lady’s Presentation in 1721 or 1722, Paul received the gift of mystical marriage when Mary, holding the Divine Child, placed the ring (embossed with the signs of the Passion) on his finger.

In September, 1721 when he was refused audience with the Pope, Paul went immediately to the Church of St. Mary Major, and in the Borghese Chapel made a vow to promote devotion to the Passion of Christ in the hearts of the faithful.  

Throughout his whole life, Paul was deeply united to Mary because of her intimate association in the Mystery of Redemption. On his deathbed, Paul pointed to his crucifix and said, “There are all my hopes, in the Passion of Jesus Christ and the Dolors of the Blessed Virgin Mary.” St. Vincent Mary Stambi related that “Mary came at the moment of death to assist Paul and lead his soul to paradise.”

 

Presence of Mary in the Congregation

On his deathbed, Paul left the Congregation in the hands of Jesus Crucified and our Sorrowful Mother. Mary — always associated with the person and work of her Son – continued to give her maternal presence and intercession to the Congregation. This Marian presence was a ‘constant’ in the Congregation, and took on special intensity in the Passionist saints such as St. Vincent Mary Strambi, Blessed Dominic of the Mother of God, St. Gabriel of the Sorrowful Virgin, Venerable Mother Mary Crucified and St. Gemma Galgani.

When the Congregation was founded in the United States, that same, strong Marian presence was experienced. Many foundations bore her name. Devotion to our Mother of Sorrows was intimately linked to the memory of the Passion. Passionist missions, novenas and retreats all integrated the mystery of Mary with the mystery of Christ’s Passion and Death. The famous Monday Devotions always honored our Mother of Sorrows. The Confraternity of the Passion has done exceptional work in spreading devotion to our Sorrowful Mother. All our communication media have done the same. But the most powerful Marian experience goes on in the hearts of our men — known only to the Heart of God and His Mother.

The Passionist Constitutions (of the male branch) single out the Marian presence in prayer:

The Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of the Lord, is present in a special way in our life of prayer. Like her, we too ponder God’s Word in our hearts. We revere Mary as our Mother and seek to imitate her trustful, persevering prayer. In our love for her, we endeavor compassionately to share her sorrow in the mystery of the Cross, chiefly by contemplating the mysteries of the holy Rosary. Invoking her help, we are confident that her motherly intervention will win us the graces we need as sons making our way to the Father. (#53)

 

Prayer of Pope John Paul II

The Marian presence in our apostolate is perhaps best expressed by our Holy Father on the occasion of Brother Isidore’s beatification:  

“I cannot but conclude with a sincere wish, which I have taken from a letter addressed by your founder to his confreres in 1751:

‘May this small congregation, a work of divine mercy, develop throughout the world
so that . . . everywhere there may be holy workers who, like loud trumpets animated by the Holy Spirit, may awaken souls sleeping in sin through the holy preaching of the most holy sufferings of the Son of God, Christ Jesus; so that, contrite, they may shed salutary tears of repentance and with constant devout meditation on the same most holy sufferings, they may become ever more inflamed with the holy love of God, living devoutly according to their proper state.’ (Letter IV, 229)

“I entrust these wishes to the motherly heart of our Lady of Sorrows, Queen of your Congregation, and I commend to her each and every dear Passionist.” (Pope John Paul II, October 1, 1984)

Our Vocation Commercial – Be a Passionist Nun!

May 5th, 2010

     Things have been kind a quiet around here with half of the Sisters making their 8-day retreat. The other half of us are the “Marthas” and are keeping things running smoothly – or at least that is our aim! 

     Last fall we had a vocation commercial made in hopes that it would be aired on EWTN. Well, it takes a lot of time to get something aired on there but I thought YOU might enjoy it and would pass it on to some young women who are discerning a vocation to religious life.  We think Sister Rose Marie did a fantastic job!  

    I have some photos which I didn’t have time to post during Lent.  I’ll be sharing them in upcoming posts.  These photos were taken on the gaudeamus day of our Vicar Sr. Mary Agnes (3rd from right). 

 

 Sampling Sr. Rose Marie’s chocolate chip cookies. Is there anyone who doesn’t enjoy a chocolate chip cookie right out of the oven!?  Certainly a treat on a gaudeamus day!

 

Here Ane Kirstine gets into action making whole wheat bread. She told me the caption under this photo should be “beware of the leaven of the postulant!”  As you can tell, nuns do have a sense of humor.

     Don’t forget to check out the commercial!

Pope John Paul II – Be Not Afraid

May 1st, 2010

…to stand up for Truth and to follow God’s call.

    Our community is currently watching this week’s The World Over (a Catholic news program on EWTN). Raymond Arroyo is interviewing Newt and Callista Gingrich about their new movie Nine Days that Changed the World which examines Pope John Paul II’s 1979 trip to Poland and his role in the fall of communism. WOW - many of us were brought to tears. We pray this movie will touch many hearts and open the minds of all our citizens to see where the American elite are leading our beloved nation – to be a nation of people who are not free to practice our faith.

    Speaking of Pope John Paul II, I came across the following quote in some reading I did during our annual 8-day retreat and have been looking for an opportunity to share it with you. I think I just found that opportunity. This is an excerpt from a talk given by Fr. Thomas Rosica, C.S.B. during the Eucharistic Congress in Washington, DC last September.

     With the on-going purification the Church is going through right now and the need to keep focused on the necesity and importance of ministry and consecrated life in the Church today, I thought you would appreciate these stirring words of Pope John Paul the Great at the concluding Mass of World Youth Day 2002 in Toronto.

    Even a tiny flame lifts the heavy lid of night. How much more light will you make, all together, if you bond as one in the communion of the Church! If you love Jesus, love the Church! Do not be discouraged by the sins and failings of some of her members. The harm done by some priests and religious to the young and vulnerable fills us with a deep sense of sadness and shame.

    But think of the vast majority of dedicated and generous priests and religious whose only wish is to serve and do good! There are many priests, seminarians and consecrated persons here today; be close to them and support them! And if, in the depths of your hearts, you feel the same call to the priesthood or consecrated life, do not be afraid to follow Christ on the royal road of the Cross! At difficult moments in the Church’s life, the pursuit of holiness becomes even more urgent. And holiness is not a question of age; it is a matter of living in the Holy Spirit, just as Kateri Tekakwitha did here in America and so many other young people have done.

    …Do not let that hope die! Stake your lives on it! We are not the sum of our weakneses and failures; we are the sum of the Father’s love for us and our real capacity to become the image of his Son.”