Archive for the 'Passionist Saints' Category

Your Prayer Could Make a Nun!

February 19th, 2013

Yes, it’s that time of the year again…The patronal feast of our novitiate is just around the corner…that is the feast of St. Gabriel of our Lady of Sorrows on February 27th.

StGabrielCrucifix

A statue of St. Gabriel graces the entrance of our novitiate. The novitiate is the place in the monastery set aside for the use of the new members. It includes their private cells, recreation/class room/library and computer area. It also includes the office of the novice directress who is the little superior of these new lambs of Jesus and Mary.  It is the place of the “making of a nun”.

We began our novena to St. Gabriel and would like you to join us during these 8 days of prayer for an increase of members in our community.

Many women just need a bit more courage to give a greater “yes” to Jesus and try out Passionist life. Others feel they must be absolutely certain this is God’s will for their life before they will try it out. But that is almost an impossible frame of mind to achieve.

In my own journey all I was sure of was that God wanted me to try out Passionist life. It was a time of discernment. That is why one does not make vows within her first week of entry!  It takes time to get acclimated to monastic life and see if it is God’s call for her.  Rarely does God speak in an audible voice: Yes, enter here!  No, generally he inclines a woman’s heart toward or away from the life.  With the help of the novice directress, through fidelity to prayer and a getting a taste of monastic life, God’s will is made manifest.

Please pray for those women whom Jesus is calling to be his Passionist brides to give a generous YES. Your prayer might obtain the final grace they need to respond to God’s plan for their lives!  Your prayer might just make a nun!

   O good St. Gabriel of the Sorrowful Virgin, you were taught by God to love the Passion of Jesus and to remember the Sorrows of Mary His Mother. By her side, you stood by the Cross of Jesus and shared her compassion. Following her, you grew in love for God and all His people. O St. Gabriel of the Sorrowful Virgin, we humbly ask you to intercede before God on our behalf, especially for the intentions we now present before you.

  • For all the women whom God is calling to join our monastic family
  • For the spiritual and temporal needs of our novitiate members and the novice directress
  • For all who pass through this novitiate - this holy training ground – that they will respond generously to God’s graces poured out in their hearts during this time of intense formation

We place our trust in your prayers St. Gabriel and wish to follow your example. Remember us, and especially our youth, with compassion. Support us all our days by your holy prayers. And when this life is done, may we join you in heaven in the company of Jesus and Mary.  Amen.

No Greater Liberty…

October 16th, 2012

No Greater Liberty…

What is true liberty? I propose to you that true liberty is found in giving a complete gift of self to God.  True liberty is being a saint. There is a Universal Call to Holiness, as the documents of Vatican II state.

I am currently reading the autobiography of one of our valiant Passionist Nuns – Mother Maria Magdalena, CP. She is of Lucca, Italy and died in 1960 in Madrid, Spain after having founded a monastery of Passionist Nuns there.  She was, or rather I should say, IS quite a remarkable woman!  For she is very much alive and interceding powerfully for us!

Here is what she wrote about the day she entered the monastery after many difficulties.  Perhaps this will give courage and hope to those of you who are on this same journey she was on in 1906.  For those of you who are not discerning a religious vocation you too are called to this liberation from the world…of being “in the world but not of the world.”  Mother Maria Magdalena, ora pro nobis!

The Cloister at Last

It was almost seven o’clock in the evening when we arrived at the convent. The nuns had delayed their dinner one hour to wait for us. So, when they knew we were there, they wanted us to come in immediately. We stopped at the door of the cloister, which was opened at once. On our knees we asked for a last blessing from our confessor and from mother, while the nuns formed two rows on the inside…They were as eager to receive us as we were impatient to enter. As soon as they opened the door I ran, as if I were a bird, to the garden to enjoy, at last, the longed-for freedom.

People of the world call the convent a prison; but, for me, the world was a prison; it is now and it always will be, although those who live as slaves of its maxims, do not recognize it. There is no greater liberty than that of a soul within the sacred walls of the cloister…far from the illusions and deceptions the world offers to those who love it. The soul that dedicates itself entirely to the service of the Lord can repeat with the Prophet: ‘Lord, you have broken my bonds, I offer you in sacrifice a host of praise.’ This is the sentiment of my poor heart, which will be a holocaust consumed in the fire of your love all the days of my life.

 

A couple weeks ago we opened our door and hearts to three wonderful gals who spent a day of their fall break with us learning about Passionist life. Do come again!

We also welcomed 30 1-6 graders and their chaperones/teachers from Maximilian Montessori AcademyToo bad we didn’t get a photo. They will have to come again so we can get a photo next time!

Prayer for the Cloistered Life

Lord Jesus, we thank you for the silent witness of cloistered and monastic communities within the life and mission of the Church. May the prayers and sacrifices of these women and men “hidden with Christ” spark the spiritual renewal of the Mystical Body of Christ. Bless this special form of consecrated life with an abundance of vocations as they embrace lives of enclosure in anticipation of Your Kingdom. Amen.

- Prayer from Institute on Religious Life

Passionist Articles

May 2nd, 2012

Well…I can hardly believe it!

I created a widget in the side bar of this blog OVER A YEAR AGO called “Interesting Passionist Articles”, featuring PDF articles written by or about Passionist life in the Institute on Religious Life Magazine of September/October 2010.

Just last week it came to my knowledge that I linked to every one of those articles incorrectly! (Yes, I can believe I made this mistake) But I can’t believe that none of you, my dear friends, caught my mistake!

Please let me know if you find any other broken links on this blog site. I’ll gladly correct them if I can.

And I hope you’ll check out the articles in the side bar.

The Prefaces for Easter pray that we be “overcome with Paschal joy”…that is our prayer for you during this Eastertide!

Passionists ~ St. Gabriel and Fr. Foley

February 28th, 2012

Special thanks are due to my Passionist friend in New Jersey, Fr. Victor Hoagland, C.P. who gave his permission (last year!) to feature the following article. An inspiring article about a canonized Italian Passionist and an American Passionist whose canonization process is underway…I am excited to introduce you to a great Passionist Fr. Theodore Foley.

By the way, Fr. Victor has a book out entitled, A Lenten Journey with Jesus Christ and St. Paul of the Cross…a good Lenten read!

Painting over a tintype picture of St. Gabriel...
Painting over a tintype picture of St. Gabriel of Our Lady of Sorrows

Yesterday was the feastday of St. Gabriel Possenti, the young Italian Passionist who died in 1862 and was canonized in 1920. I’m interested in his connection with Fr. Theodore Foley (1913-1974), an American Passionist whose cause for canonization was recently introduced in Rome. After reading about St. Gabriel, Theodore decided to become a Passionist as a young boy of 14; other young men joined the community in the early 1920s and 30s also influenced by the young Italian saint.

What appeal did St. Gabriel have for him and others like him?

Born into a prominent family at Assisi in Italy in 1838, Gabriel Possenti was a lively, intelligent young man given all the advantages his father, an official in the papal government, could give him. Then, in a surprising move, he left the bright, social world he loved so much to enter the Passionists at 18. He died in 1862 and was canonized in 1920. He was 24 years old.

Gabriel was first honored by people in mountainous region of the Abruzzi in east central Italy and from there devotion to him spread through Italy and other parts of the world. His rise to sainthood as World War I ended, coincided with a decade in America known as “The Roaring Twenties.”

In the 1920s a new consumer society, spawned by the country’s giant new industries and mass media, was hastily accumulating material goods of all kind. Young people especially, intoxicated by dreams of pleasure and success, rebelled against traditional institutions and morality. The 1920s was a “green light to an orgiastic future,” the writer F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote. “America was going on the greatest, gaudiest spree in history.”

Catholic religious leaders then, anxious about the young, saw Gabriel Possenti as an answer to the rebellious heroes of the age. He had flirted with a lifestyle like the “Roaring Twenties.” As a youth, glamorous parties and entertainments and dreams of success absorbed him. Then, hearing God’s call, he turned away and embraced a life without glamor or style.

In his preface to Saint Gabriel, Passionist, a popular biography by Fr. Camillus, CP published in 1926, the powerful archbishop of Boston William Cardinal O’Connell, denounced the “flood of putrid literature which, for the past ten years of more, has deluged the bookshelves and libraries of our great cities, fueling disappointment and emptiness in a false romanticism.” Young Catholics should reject this falseness and live in the real world, like St. Gabriel:

“To live a normal life dedicated to God’s glory, that is the lesson we need most in these days of spectacular posing and movie heroes. And that normal life, lived only for God, quite simply, quite undramatically, but very seriously, each little task done with a happy supernaturalism, – that such a life means sainthood, surely St. Gabriel teaches us; and it is a lesson well worth learning by all of us.”

Young Theodore Foley took Gabriel’s path. He followed the saint into the undramatic life of the Passionists.

Gabriel Possenti’s decision to enter the Passionists has always been something of a mystery, even to his biographers. Did he choose religious life because he got tired of the fast track of his day? And why didn’t he enter a religious community better known to him, like the Jesuits, who could use his considerable talents as a teacher or a scholar? Why the Passionists?

Gabriel–and Theodore Foley after him– was attracted to the Passionists because of the mystery of the Passion of Christ. It was at the heart of God’s call.

The Passionists were founded in Italy a little more than a century before Gabriel’s death by St. Paul of the Cross, who was convinced that the world was “falling into a forgetfulness of the Passion of Jesus” and needed to be reminded of that mystery again. Paul chose the Tuscan Maremma, then the poorest part of Italy, as the place to preach this mystery, and there he established his first religious houses for those who followed him. He chose the Tuscan Maremma, not as a way of turning his back on the world of his day, but because the mystery of the Passion of Jesus was found and perhaps more easily forgotten there.

When Gabriel became a member, the Passionists, along with other religious communities, were recovering from their suppression by Napoleon at the beginning of the century. In one sense, they had come back from the dead . The congregation was now alive with new missionary enthusiasm. Not only were its preachers in demand in Italy, but it had begun new ventures in England (1842) and America (1852).

Dominic Barbari, the founder of the congregation in England, received John Henry Newman into the church in 1865; the English nobleman, Ignatius Spencer, who became a Passionist in 1847, began a campaign through Europe in the cause of ecumenism. New communities of Passionist women were being formed. Paul of the Cross, the founder, was beatified in 1853. Ten years earlier, the cause of St. Vincent Strambi, a Passionist bishop, was introduced.

Respected for their zeal and austerity, the Passionists were a growing Catholic community, and their growth in the western world continued up to the years when Theodore Foley became their superior general and saw its sharp decline.

But success was not what drew Gabriel–and Theodore Foley after him–to the Passionists. Their charism–the mystery of the Passion of Christ– was at the heart of God’s call.

As boy growing up, Gabriel Possenti understood this mystery, even as he danced away the evening with his school friends. Twice he fell seriously ill and, aware that he might die, promised in prayer to serve God as a religious and take life more seriously. Both times he got better and forgot his promises. Then, in the spring of 1856, the city of Spoleto where he lived at the time was hit by an epidemic of cholera, which took many lives in the city. Few families escaped the scourge. Gabriel’s oldest sister died in the plague.

Overwhelmed by the tragedy, the people of Spoleto gathered for a solemn procession through the city streets carrying the ancient image of Mary, the Mother of Jesus, who stood by the Cross. They prayed that she intercede for them and stop the plague, and they also prayed that she stand by them as they bore the heavy suffering.

It was a transforming experience for Gabriel. Mysteriously, the young man felt drawn into the presence of the Sorrowing Woman whose image was carried in procession. Passing the familiar mansions where he partied many nights and the theater and opera that entertained him so often, he realized they had no wisdom to offer now. He took his place at Mary’s side. At her urging, he resolved to enter the Passionists.

We don’t know precisely how the life of the Italian St. Gabriel drew the young American Theodore Foley to the Passionists. What similarity was there between them? What grace led him on?

Brought up in a good family and a strong religious environment , Theodore Foley still felt “dangers and temptations” around him. No, he didn’t experience the social life that tempted Gabriel Possenti a century before. But he did experience the new mass media then sweeping the country. By 1922 movies, and to a lesser extent the radio, became powerful influences in people’s lives, and Hollywood’s heroes preached a new gospel of fun and success. Through the new media, the “Roaring Twenties” came to Springfield as it did to other prosperous parts of America when Theodore Foley was growing up. Did it bring the “the dangers and temptations” he feared?

Theodore Foley must have sensed the selfishness, the carelessness about others, the failure to appreciate suffering and weakness and sin in this new gospel. It promised life without the mystery of the Cross, but that was not real life at all. Only 14, he entered the Passionists.

Fr. Victor Hoagland, CP is the Director of Passionist Press and a member of the Passionist Community in Union City, NJ.

Novena to St Gabriel of our Sorrowful Mother

February 18th, 2012

After Scripture class today I joined the novitiate for their rosary. I was startled to learn I had forgotten that today is the first day of the Novena to St. Gabriel! He is the patron of our novitiate and one of our most well-known Passionist saints.

Here is the prayer we pray during these 9 days of preparation for his Feast celebrated on February 27.

O good St. Gabriel of the Sorrowful Virgin, you were taught by God to love the Passion of Jesus and to remember the Sorrows of Mary His Mother. By her side, you stood by the Cross of Jesus and shared her compassion.  Following her, you grew in love for God and all His people. O St. Gabriel of the Sorrowful Virgin, we humbly ask you to intercede before God on our behalf, especially for the intentions we now present before you.

  • For our vocation promotion endeavors
  • For all the women whom God is calling to join our monastic family
  • For the spiritual and temporal needs of our novitiate members, the novice directress and her assistant
  • for all who pass through this novitiate - this holy training ground – that they will respond generously to God’s graces poured out in their hearts during this time of intense formation

We place our trust in your prayers St. Gabriel and wish to follow your example. Remember us, and especially our youth, with compassion. Support us all our days by your holy prayers. And when this life is done, may we join you in heaven in the company of Jesus and Mary.  Amen!


A Day in the Life of a Passionist Aspirant

February 10th, 2012

What must it be like to live in a monastery?

Praying, living, working, recreating, studying, thriving, growing and wondering…am I going to be a Passionist Nun?  Will I get to wear that holy habit one day?  Will I, one day, be bound to Jesus Crucified FOREVER by the five Passionist vows?

I thought you might find it interesting to see life from the perspective of an aspirant.   According to our Rule and Constitutions (#91)…

 The better to discern God’s Will in their lives, the aspirants live in community for a definite period of time, not beyond three months, as arranged by the Superior, having heard her Council.

The attitude of the aspirant to contemplative life in a Passionist community, her character, health, psychological balance and sociability are evaluated. Meanwhile they familiarize themselves with the scope and mission of the Passionist contemplative life, the poverty, simplicity and detachment from everything which must characterize their life.

As contemplative nuns we are deputed to pray the Liturgy of the Hours. This perfect prayer of worship, praise, intercession and reparation brings the graces of redemption to all times, people and places.

Various forms of work, manual labor and study
- good for body and soul

Typing a supplement to our Passionist Proper Offices

One does not need to be a mystic to enter the monastery
nor does she need to know how to sew…all things in due time!

Scripture sharing on Sunday mornings

Time for the Rosary, Stations of the Cross and other devotional prayers throughout the day

Our aspirants use a book on St. Gabriel by John Joseph Schweska followed by a class on our Passionist charism and Passionist saints. 

During the aspirancy there is also a video course by Fr. Timothy Gallagher on the Rules for Discernment of Spirits. This class has been a great grace for a number of women who have come here discerning God’s plan for their life.

Next week Anne and Sr. Cecilia Marie will begin the scripture class from Genesis to Jesus generously made available through the St. Paul Center for Biblical Theology (whose President is Dr. Scott Hahn)

Darning socks?
be careful not to darn too thick or you’ll have sore heels!

One is encouraged to grow in her natural talents

Well, I hope you enjoyed this short day in our life. Please pray for us as we seek to live out #90 of our Constitutions:

The Passionist Nuns, being cooperators with God who chooses and calls whom He wills, strive to encourage vocations by making known the value of the consecrated life and the challenge involved in the following of Christ Crucified, as also through the example of their lives, their prayer and the spoken and written word.

We have several young women who have expressed interest in coming for a visit in the spring and one who hopes to return this summer for the aspirancy.  Please pray for them and for all whom God is giving the gift of being radically consecrated to Him. To love Him and make Him loved!

Hymn to Passionist St Vincent Strambi

September 24th, 2011

Today is the feast of our Passionist Bishop – Saint Vincent Strambi. Saint Vincent entered the newly founded Passionist Congregation in 1768. He knew our Founder Paul of the Cross personally.

This hymn from our Passionist breviary is a lovely summation of his long life devoted to the Church.

This man whom joyfully we revere as blessed,
was a faithful servant of Christ,
so he merited to bear the name,
a sign of his future fame,
of Vincent, the one who conquers.

Rejecting the alluring call of the world,
he preferred to be near Jesus crucified;
and as a fellow-citizen of Golgotha,
to proclaim Mary as the bride of his life.

Afterwards, when in holy orders
he went forth as Vincent, the one who conquers;
he himself, as it were, crucified,
through the Word of the Cross.

His travels brought him through foreign cities
as the herald of salvation.
Then called to rule over the flock of Christ,
he increased in every virtue.
He brought a shepherd’s love to all

He stood firmly against the decree
of a demanding emperor.
He was a noble hero, patiently suffering many rebuffs.
He was banished as an exile and had to leave his native land.

Already blessed in the great joy of heaven,
he himself reigns constantly mindful of us.
May he kindly grant the prayers
of a suppliant people.

Let us give glory in song to the mighty Triune God,
who governs all creatures of the world.
and who desires to bestow salvation upon mankind
through his saints.  Amen.

Well, the translation from the Italian doesn’t rhyme. But it is a far better job than I could do!

St. Vincent Strambi and St. Paul of the Cross, ora pro nobis!

An American Passionist Hero…

April 20th, 2011

   

Missionary of the Passion: James Kent Stone

    A rich life of sacrifice, praise, sorrow, and joy is lived under the crucifix, and focused on the Passion of Christ.

    As Christians celebrate Jesus’ Passion, death, and Resurrection, Pat McNamara focuses this week’s column on a religious community dedicated to proclaiming “Christ’s crucified love.” During the Passionists’ early years in America, one of their preeminent figures was James Kent Stone (1840-1921). Before age 30, he had been a Harvard graduate, Civil War veteran, minister, professor, and president of two colleges. One Passionist historian refers to him as “this illustrious man.” Read the rest of the story…

   God bless you Mr. McNamara for featuring such a great American Passionist!

Annual Novena to St. Gabriel, Passionist

February 17th, 2011

 For all those young women out there who are visiting our blog and thinking about religious life but who have not contacted us yet - I give you a holy dare to contact us during this mighty novena!

    Friday begins our annual novena to Saint Gabriel of our Sorrowful Mother, Passionist seminarian who died of tuberculosis at the age of 24. St. Gabriel is the patron saint of our novitiate (the area of the monastery where the new members reside).

    Perhaps you would like to join us in prayer? The novena is February 18 – 26 with his Feast being on February 27th – this year it falls on a Sunday.

   O good St. Gabriel of the Sorrowful Virgin, you were taught by God to love the Passion of Jesus and to remember the Sorrows of Mary His Mother. By her side, you stood by the Cross of Jesus and shared her compassion. Following her, you grew in love for God and all His people. O St. Gabriel of the Sorrowful Virgin, we humbly ask you to intercede before God on our behalf, especially for the intentions we now present before you.

  • For all the women whom God is calling to join our monastic family
  • For the spiritual and temporal needs of our novitiate members and the novice directress
  • For all who pass through this novitiate - this holy training ground – that they will respond generously to God’s graces poured out in their hearts during this time of intense formation

    We place our trust in your prayers St. Gabriel and wish to follow your example. Remember us, and especially our youth, with compassion. Support us all our days by your holy prayers. And when this life is done, may we join you in heaven in the company of Jesus and Mary.  Amen.

 

“Mary was the very soul of Gabriel’s life, the source and model of the sanctity to which he attained; so that it may be truly said that in his devotion to the great Mother of God he has scarcely been equalled by any, even of the greatest saints.”

~ Cardinal Parocchi to Pope Leo III

Passionist Nuns Featured in Magazine

December 19th, 2010

    Woe is me…lots of ideas but no time to post articles as the Christmas Mystery draws near! 

    But here is something of great interest.  The Passionist Nuns were featured in the September/October issue of the Institute on Religious Life‘s magazine Religious LifeHere is a link to the PDF file. I hope you enjoy the articles. Special thanks to IRL for permitting us to link to this issue.

    Blessings upon you as we enter into the sacred mysteries about to be renewed.  We are keeping each of you in our prayers.

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