Archive for December, 2011

Ringing in the New Year – Monastery Style

December 31st, 2011

How grateful I am to have a monastic vocation!

Not that it is an EASY vocation – no way!  No one’s life on earth is easy.

Nor is our life full of pious thoughts and spiritual highs…no, often our day is busy and we struggle to maintain recollection and to live the virtues…can you imagine living with 13 other women 24/7 and never having a judgmental thought or a cross word?  No, our life is no utopia. We are daughters of Adam and Eve.

BUT our life IS consecrated…consecrated to God for His glory and the salvation of souls. As we ring in this New Year…or rather “pray in” this New Year I am filled with gratitude for the monastic life and it’s power – hidden in weakness. God chooses the week, those who account for nothing! So that His power and Love may show forth. It is a tremendous blessing to live with 13 other consecrated women, being of one heart and mind…a blessing of which I am not worthy and am so grateful.

We just chanted our Solemn Office of Night Prayer. The monastery is stilled in silence. The silence of Nuns being with the Beloved in prayer, stillness, waiting and expectation.

At 11:20 p.m. our bell with toll to call us to pray in the New Year. At midnight the bell will toll again and with that the chantress will take up the “O Lord open my lips…” and the choir will respond, “and my mouth will proclaim your praise.” Then we will proceed with the solemn sung Office of Readings.

We greet the New Year with prayer and praise, thanksgiving, supplication and reparation. Reparation for our sins and the sins of the world. Thanksgiving for the graces of 2011 and the graces to come in 2012. Supplication for blessings upon our monastic community and the gift of new members, for our little town of Whitesville, our diocese of Owensboro KY, our relatives, benefactors, friends, nation and world… especially begging God to intervene in our national elections in November 2012.

We are spiritual mothers, co-redeemers…not because of anything we have done or merited. But because God has called us. And when God calls he gives the grace to fulfill the call. Pray we respond most generously to His grace! As we pray in this New Year we will be praying for you and all your needs and intentions.

Blessed Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God! We leave you with this prayer from the pen of our Holy Founder:

 I am praying the Sovereign Divine Infant and the divine Immaculate Mother to have you reborn to a new life of holy love. This Divine Birth will take place in the interior temple of your soul if you continue, as I hope, to be faithful to God, a lover of virtue, with a continual exercise of humility of heart, patience, silence, meekness, most fervent charity, and, above all, remaining solitary in the holy desert of your soul, taking your rest on the bosom of God in a sacred silence of faith and holy love.

May 2012 be overflowing with a deep knowledge and acceptance of God’s merciful love for you personally.  Blessed New Year!

 Special thanks to Mark Schoppe (Sr. Rose Marie’s father)
for the monastery night photo

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Passionist Father General’s Christmas Letter 2011

December 25th, 2011

“Nails, Spear shall pierce Him through
The Cross be borne for me, for you
Hail, Hail the Word Made Flesh
The Babe, the Son of Mary…”

-From the Christmas Carol, What Child is This?, written in 1865

Dear brothers and sisters of the Congregation and the Passionist Family,

When we celebrate Christmas we celebrate the coming of God among us: He is a Child that is born into a family of the spouses Mary and Joseph, who will love him with simplicity and faithfully care for him in silence with the dedication of ones who know that God is in their home. At the Annunciation the Angel said to Mary: Behold, you will conceive in your womb and bear a son, and you shall name him Jesus. He will be great and will be called Son of the Most High (Lk.1:31-32). His birth is so human! He is immersed in the fullness of humanity: sent from the perfect communion of the Trinity, he entered into a world of conflict.

Jesus is born as a man in the context of contemporary history:

In those days a decree went out from Caesar Augustus that the whole world should be enrolled. This was the first enrollment, when Quirinius was governor of Syria… And Joseph too went up from… the town of Nazareth…to Bethlehem… to be enrolled with Mary, his betrothed, who was with child. While they were there, the time came for her to have her child, and she gave birth to her firstborn son. She wrapped him in swaddling clothes and laid him in a manger, because there was no room for them in the inn (Lk. 2:1-7).

Respectfully and reverently we almost always skip over the words of the angel: you will conceive in your womb – even if we recite them in the Hail Mary; and also: Mary, his betrothed, who was with child…the time came for her to have her child. She was a pregnant woman like so many others in the world who was expecting the birth of her child and the time arrived for her to give birth to Jesus.

God is born like all the children of the world and Mary is his mother and gives birth, although immaculate, like every other mother who gives birth to a child and feeds him at her breast. Mary, according to the accounts of the nativity, gives birth to the One who was foretold, in poverty and in the solitude of a courageous journey. She would not receive the glorious announcement of the angels: I proclaim to you good news of great joy…a savior has been born for you (Lk.2:10-11); rather it would be the shepherds who would bring her the message and she would accept it in a spirit of faith.

Mary meditates on these events, trying to understand their meaning. (Lk.2:19) It is by the power of faith that she struggles to enter into the mystery of God. The relationship between this human maternity and the challenge to accept the reality of Jesus in faith will achieve its fulfillment when a woman in the crowd called out and said to him, blessed is the womb that carried you and the breasts at which you nursed.” But Jesus said:“Rather, blessed are those who hear the word of God and observe it (Lk. 11:27-28).

In addition to bearing him in her womb and nursing the Son of God at her breast, Mary was situated in her mission by the prophetic words of the old man Simeon: And you yourself a sword will pierce (Lk. 2:35). If Jesus would be a sign that will be contradicted, i.e. he would encounter challenges, confrontations and rejection by the people that he came to save, then Mary would have to participate in the sorrowful mission of her Son. Here, too, Mary is presented as a mother, but above all as a “believer” who hears the word of God and observes it. She must walk along the dark road of danger and suffering.

Whoever believes in and loves God shares in His mission and if God calls him, he allows himself to be found and he accepts his plans even without knowing the details, as did Mary. And all of us, religious and laity, are challenged, each according to his or her own status in life.

And we may ask ourselves, filled with wonder and surprise at such great simplicity: Is the Baby that is wrapped in swaddling clothes and lying in a manger with animals really Him, the God announced by the prophets and the long-awaited Messiah who will free his people from oppression? This is the same question that would be posed to John the Baptist when Jesus, now an adult, was about to begin his mission: Are you the one who is to come, or should we look for another? (Mt. 11:3)

Jesus is not confused by this question. He understands John’s perplexity and he opens his mind and his heart: Go and tell John what you hear and see: the blind regain their sight, the lame walk, lepers are cleansed, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, and the poor have the good news proclaimed to them. And blessed is the one who takes no offense at me (Mt. 11:4-6). At times we too are blind and we don’t want to see or hear. And many times and in different ways, whether on a personal level or the level of the Congregation, we refuse to accept new things as did the citizens of Nazareth when Jesus entered their synagogue one Sabbath to read the prophecy of Isaiah:

The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to bring glad tidings to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim liberty to captives and recovery of sight to the blind, to let the oppressed go free, and to proclaim a year acceptable to the Lord. Rolling up the scroll, he handed it back to the attendant and sat down, and the eyes of all in the synagogue looked intently at him. He said to them, “Today this scripture passage is fulfilled in your hearing” (Lk. 4:18-21).

But he was rejected: to free the oppressed and to bring good news to the poor was at the very heart of his mission and because of this mission conversion and a change of heart from those things that have been irrefutable for so many years were needed.

And in profound agreement with the response he gave to John’s disciples and what he read in the synagogue of Nazareth, in Matthew 25, Jesus invites us to recognize him in the sick, in the hungry, in the imprisoned, in the poor and in the powerless of this world. But we need eyes and evangelical wisdom to recognize him and a change of heart to understand and study the signs that God is sending us.

And at Christmas the sign that is also given by the angels is a Child wrapped in swaddling clothes. Word and sign, simplicity and poverty, the gift and the glory of God come together in Him: the Word was made flesh and came to dwell among us. The Child Jesus is the language of God that reveals to us that not only man is in God, but primarily, that God is in man.

And this helps us to understand that perfection is not about self-realization, but is found in one another; that greatness is not about being served, but serving; that the fullness of liberty is to be free from oneself, free for others and for God; that freedom is about total and serene abandonment to God especially in suffering and in sickness; that the fullness of love is not about being loved, but about loving. Thus it is for man and thus it is for God: The Child of Bethlehem and the Crucified One on Golgotha is the sign and the gift of the one, same love. May St. Paul of the Cross open our hearts to understand this great love!

Merry Christmas! May the New Year 2012 be a year of peace for our communities, for the Passionist nuns and Sisters, for our families and for the world! May there be work for the unemployed and a peaceful future for the young.

Together with the General Council and the religious of the Community of Sts. John and Paul, I particularly wish to remember the sick and those who are alone and suffering in spirit.

Fr. Ottaviano D’Egidio

Superior General

Retreat of Sts. John and Paul

Rome, 20 December 2011

from Passionist Generalate website

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Warm Your Heart at the Crib

December 25th, 2011

We hope this finds each of you having a blessed Christmas. Perhaps today was too hectic to spend much time in prayer and reflection on this great mystery – have no remorse! The Church celebrates an entire Octave of Christmas!

Let us pray for one another, that we may enter fully into such a great mystery. God become man for our sake, that we might become divinized. How awesome is that! There is truly no greater love…let us give thanks, let us worship, let us bow down in silence and adore…

Who would not shed tears of tenderness from the heart, seeing a God, for our sakes become a Babe in swaddling bands, for our sakes placed on the hay of a manger, for our sakes in need of the breath of two beasts of burden! What a misfortune it would be if I would not let myself be consumed by holy love and would prefer to remain tepid and cold as I was before.

~ Saint Paul of the Cross

Lord, help me to gaze on the crib and hear your love in sending your Son to become so little and needy for me. May I be one of your little ones, docile to every breath of your Spirit.

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Blessed Christmas Eve!

December 24th, 2011

What a glorious day of waiting!  God, the All Holy One, come from heaven to be born for us…given for us…this Holy Night.

He Who is Almighty sets the bar very high for us – total self-giving love!  THIS is the grace He desires to give us on this Holy Night and all throughout the Christmas Octave. Let us give a generous “Yes” like Mary and Joseph did.

YES…come Lord Jesus! Be born in me, in my community, in our world!

Getting ready for the Christmas Carols

Sr. Marie Michael takes loving care of the poinsettias.

The cave-dwelling is awaiting the arrival of the Holy Family…

Come Lord Jesus!

In the name of Mother Catherine Marie I wish you and yours a very Blessed Christmas and grace-filled 2012. You all are in our prayers in a special way during the Mass on this Holy Night.

And please do pray for us!

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Be Childlike With the Child Jesus

December 23rd, 2011

Wow!? Have I some catching up to do! I have only posted once since Advent began!

Several months ago, our Bishop shared with the diocese the directive of not displaying the nativity scene under the altar. Thus ours will now be off to the cloistered side. Our figures were small to begin with and we realized that having them off to the cloister side would make it difficult for the guests to see them. Therefore, thanks to a donor, larger crib figures were ordered. We were told they would be 6-8 months for delivery. They arrived in less than a month!

Well, you might guess what happened next, larger statuary requires a larger crèche. Soooo we (mainly Mother Catherine Marie, Sr. Rose Marie and maintenance man Steve—with the entire community cutting loads and loads of newspaper!) have been crafting a new larger cave-dwelling for the Holy Family.

It is made of wood and insulation and covered with papier mâché.  The papier mâché of the crèche is completed and we’ve added snow and glitter and tube lighting. It looks like a cave in the side of a hill.  We hope this crèche will be a precious offering of love to our Savior at a time when in many places in our nation, all mention of the true meaning of Christmas is being removed. Our previous nativity statuary is from when our foundresses made the foundation in 1946. We hope this nativity set will last at least twice as long!

As I am writing this post some Sisters are in chapel putting the final touches on the crib. More pictures to come!

Until then I leave you with these words of our Founder…

With Christmas coming, I will ask the Lord to make you a saint, but with the secret sanctity of the Cross. You will see that you must become more childlike, otherwise you would not be pleasing to a Spouse who became a little child for you.

Concerning the Most Holy Night of Christmas Eve, I do not give you any practices of devotion. But often caress the Holy Babe. Be little and humble, so that Mary Most Holy, when she sees your heart so little and childlike through humility, will let you embrace the Divine Infant.

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Advent is a Time of Retreat

December 2nd, 2011

Are you making a good retreat?  I hope so. We pray that you are.  Our Holy Founder wrote some beautiful things about this holy Season of Advent…

The blessing of our Advent wreath
and the lighting of its first candle

The sacred time of Advent is approaching. In it Holy Mother Church celebrates the memory of that Divine Espousal which the Eternal Word entered into with human nature in his Most Holy Incarnation. Contemplate this mystery of infinite love and give your soul the freedom to plunge into its Sea of Good. Desire and pray for that same Espousal of love between Jesus and your soul.

 

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