Scripture Reflection for 5th Sunday of Lent

April 13th, 2012

Well, I just found that I did not publish this last Thursday as I had thought! bummer!  Well, perhaps it will still be an inspiration to some…

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As we begin the Sacred Triduum this evening I am bringing you the Formation Sisters reflections on the readings from the 5th Sunday of Lent.  Be blessed!

Scripture Reflection for the 5th Sunday of Lent

Jeremiah 31:31-34

Psalm 51:3-4, 12-15

Hebrews 5:7-9

John 12:20-33

 

This week we were all captivated by – as Sr. Mary Veronica eloquently put it – the pathos of the heart of Christ, expressed not only in the Gospel but in all the readings. They all take us deep into the mystery of God’s covenantal love for us, a love which reaches its climactic fulfillment in Jesus Christ, Love Incarnate.

Sr. Mary Andrea highlighted Jeremiah’s narrative of God’s poignant and tender promise of His new covenant, in which He will heal the very roots of our infidelities and make it possible for us to truly be in intimacy with Him. “I will be their God, and they shall be my people…. All, from the least to the greatest shall know me!”

The psalmist fervently prays for Him to accomplish this work: “A clean heart create for me, O God; renew in me a steadfast spirit!” But it is St. John and the author of Hebrews who really paint for us the stunning portrait of Jesus Christ upon the eve of consummating this new covenant.

According to Hebrews, Jesus “offered prayers and supplications with loud cries and tears to the one who was able to save him from death, and he was heard because of his reverence.” The “loud cries and tears” of the Lord have always captivated Sr. Mary Veronica. How rich is the heart of Christ! The full spectrum of His human virtues and passions includes fervent intercession, profound reverence, unstinting obedience…and heart-wrenching grief and majestic joy.

Sr. Cecilia Maria pointed out that in the original Greek, when Jesus says, “I am troubled now… Father, save me from this hour,” He is actually quoting the Greek text of Psalm 6:4-5: “In utter terror is my soul…Lord, save my life!” What a mystery of suffering! Sr. Rose Marie was similarly intrigued by the seeming contradiction of Jesus’ fear and confidence in the Gospel.

We found an answer to the contradiction in the eternal reality of God’s covenantal love. Anne and Sr. Cecilia Maria focused upon Jesus’ words, “It was for this purpose that I came to this hour…. When I am lifted up from the earth, I will draw all to myself.” Jesus trembles from fear, yes, as the time of His Passion draws nigh, but He trembles also from the strength of His loving longing for union with His beloved people…a union which will finally be accomplished at “this hour.”

Since the dawn of creation, God has yearned to gather His people to Himself, into the embrace of His love. Jesus gave voice to this elsewhere in the Gospels when He cried, “Jerusalem, Jerusalem…how often have I yearned to gather your children as a hen gathers her chicks under her wings…but you would not!” This hour of Jesus Passion will finally accomplish His purpose: upon the Cross, Christ Jesus will gather all of us to Himself.

It is consummated!

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An Awesome Easter Story

April 12th, 2012

Blessed Easter greetings during these eight holy days of Easter!

I have a nice romance story for you…a “monastery romance” that is!  I shall let Sister Rose Marie of the Merciful Heart of Jesus tell you about it…

“What was lost has been found!”

 I have an awesome Easter story about how Jesus answered one of my most special prayers today.  (Thanks be to God, Alleluia!)

One month ago, I lost my wedding ring (my ring with the Passionist sign on it, which I received on the day of my first profession of vows).  I lost it when I was working outside one afternoon.  I was devastated and didn’t think I would ever find it again without a miracle.  (I had already prayed to God, my Guardian Angel and St. Anthony asking them to help me find it.)  Can you imagine what it would be like looking for a tiny silver ring in an area of about 5 acres of lawn and woods!?!  That’s what I was doing.

The ring is loose on my finger during cool months of the year.  I was wearing a pair of gardening gloves.  The ring slipped off of my finger inside the glove without me realizing it.  Then sometime when I was outside I took the glove off.  (I did not remember where I was when I did).  While I was carrying the gloves, the ring fell out of the glove…somewhere.

I did not realize the ring was gone until I came back inside and couldn’t find it.  My first thought was to go look inside the glove because it had come off in there before several months ago, and I found it there.  However, this time when I looked, I didn’t find it there.  My heart sank.  At that point, I knew it was lost outside somewhere.

I couldn’t pray very well that night.  I kept thinking of the ring, knowing that it was outside somewhere.  I wanted to go look for it and find it before the grass grew or it got buried or something.  I spent a lot of my spare time over a span of about two weeks walking around looking in the grass, digging through dead leaves and retracing all my steps from the afternoon when I had lost it.  Then when I still had not found it at the end of those two weeks, I told myself that I would have to accept that I would probably not find it.  I felt really depressed.  That ring was a special sign to me of my relationship and my commitment to Jesus and His love for me.  It couldn’t have been more precious to me if it were made of diamonds and gold.  (For me, the name of Jesus and the sign of His Passion are the diamonds on my wedding ring).

So I knew it was time to tell Mother Catherine Marie.  She was very understanding and told me that Jesus also understood.  A couple weeks later (a few days ago) she told me, “Jesus knows where your ring is.  Ask Him by the love He bears you to show you where it is.”  I felt a little like Peter being told to “go out into deep waters and lower my nets for a catch” after working “all night” and catching nothing.  However, I took this as an invitation from Jesus to keep looking.  And I immediately pleaded with Jesus in my heart, “Jesus, for the sake of Your love for Your bride, please show me where it is!”

This afternoon, I decided to go outside and look again.  I had planned on writing Easter letters in order to get them sent on time.  But I put this aside in order to go out to search again, wondering if perhaps I would be sacrificing my time once again without anything to show for it.

This time, I decided to go out and look for the ring in a pile of dirt where I had been filling in a hole in the ground on the afternoon that I lost it.  After about ten minutes of combing through the dirt with a shovel, all of a sudden these words came into my mind, like someone had said them to me (even through I didn’t hear anything):  “Go look by the barn again.”  The words were so clear in my mind, and I immediately thought of my Guardian Angel and felt like it was a message from him.  So I said to myself, “Okay.”  And I left the dirt to go look by the barn again.  Because of how clear those words had been in my mind, I felt a new sense of hope.  Even so, I don’t know if I really ‘expected’ to find my ring.  I had already combed through the leaves by the barn about three or four times, and I had not found anything.

“the barn” in the dead of winter

By the way, the reason why I had spent so much time looking there before was because I vaguely remembered that when I was working over there on the afternoon that I lost the ring I took my gloves off for a little bit.  I also remembered (at one point) hearing a clinking sound (like a screw or washer hitting the ground).  When I looked to see what it was, I did not see anything.  My mind made no connection between the ring, my gloves, and the clinking sound at the time, so I went on with my work.

After I had realized later that I had lost my ring I wondered if the clinking sound could have been the ring falling and hitting the dirt (which was solid and hard enough in that place to make a clinking sound).  Like I said, I dug through all of the dead leaves there and scraped the ground several different times, and I had found nothing.

So here I was again by the barn, right on the edge of the woods in the cloister.  I got my shovel and started to scrape again in the few bits of leaves left over in between the concrete base of the building and the dirt.  I got half way down the length of the barn.  Then… all of a sudden, as I was scraping out the leaves and tossing them aside I heard it: a light “clink.” (!)

I froze and turned to where I had let the leaves drop out of the shovel.  I looked on the ground.  I saw nothing shiny like a silver ring should look.  I began to scrape the shovel over the ground right where I had heard the ‘clink.’  I heard several ‘clinks’ as the shovel hit little rocks on the ground.  I thought to myself, “It must have only been a rock.”  But I kept looking there anyway.  I turned my gaze a little to the left to look on the ground.  Then I saw it!  There it was—a Passion ring, barely visible there on top of the dirt!  (Because the woods were so shady, there was no bright light to make the silver shine.)

I just looked at it there for a few moments hardly able to believe my eyes.  My heart must have skipped a beat, and by breath had caught in my surprise.  I bent down and picked it up, still amazed that I had actually found it.  Then I thought of the prayer I had prayed earlier in the morning:  “Jesus, for the sake of Your love for Your bride, please show me where it is!”  I knelt down with tears in my eyes, kissed the ring and just began saying over and over again, “Thank You so much, Jesus!  Thank You!”  It was a little after 3 o’clock (the hour of Divine Mercy)!

I just knelt there in the trees by the barn for a little bit overcome with joy and gratitude, knowing that it was no coincidence that I had found it again, on that day, in that precise moment.  I knew that Jesus had heard my prayer and had answered it “for the sake of His love for me as His bride.”  And I knew that He wanted me to know that it was because He loves me as His bride that He showed me where it was.  My heart was so happy!

Isn’t that an awesome Easter story?  Jesus let me find the ring just in time for the Holy Triduum and Easter.  If it had been just a day later, I would not have been able to go out and look for it because I would not have had time.  I had my wedding ring for Easter this year.  And every time I look at it on my finger now I think even more of how much Jesus loves me and of how thankful I am for such a special sign of His love.  Truly, nothing is impossible for God!

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Christ is Risen!

April 8th, 2012

Blessed and Holy Easter to you – all our dear friends and family! What unspeakable spiritual joy to be counted among those who are redeemed, loved, saved, purified by the risen Lord!

May our good God be ever praised and glorified for he has been pleased to let us reach this solemn day of his glorious Resurrection. Let us sing “Alleluia” which means “Praise the Lord!” To sing it properly, we must strip our hearts of our old selves and put on our new self which is Jesus Christ. To him let us sing forever, “Alleluia!”

~ Saint Paul of the Cross

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Our Stations of the Cross Trail

April 3rd, 2012

I thought this Holy Week a good time to bring you the story of our outdoor Stations of the Cross…

About 15 years ago we received a set of bronze (?) Stations of the Cross from one of our Passionist mens’ retreat houses out in California. They had some pot marks and had lost their luster but they were still meaningful.  Over the years the pot marks got much worse.

Last fall two of Sr. Mary Therese’s brothers, a nephew and cousin came and helped beautify our Stations of the Cross trail by constructing and installing a cover over each Station.

When Lawrence (above left) saw the shape that the stations themselves were in he was determined to do something about it. He did some research and found a way to clean them.

The contrast is just amazing!

God bless Lawrence and Robert for installing all the Stations!

 We (or rather professionals we hired) continue to remove dangerous trees from this area. This trail has been hit badly by tornado-type winds on about 3 occasions over the years and had a lot of damage.

We have a number of guests and retreatants who come and walk this trail and now we feel they can have a much more prayerful and safer walk!

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Holy Week Meditations

April 2nd, 2012

Here are some EXCELLENT meditations
on the spirituality and history of Holy Week.

These were posted on the blog last year.

Holy Week

Palm Sunday of the Lord’s Passion

Evening Mass of the Lord’s Supper

Friday of the Lord’s Passion

Easter Vigil Mass

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Holiest Week of the Year

April 1st, 2012

Holy Week is upon us! I hope you are ready for this week so full of grace and mercy.

One of the Sisters shared with me a bit of her Easter letter that she is sending to her family…

“We are looking forward to Holy Week… I feel truly blessed to be living here at the Monastery and able to enter more fully into the mystery of this week. On Palm Sunday evening at supper, we set up a place at our table for Our Lord to join us, as we recall Martha, Mary, & Lazarus giving Him a place to rest away from the noise and pressures of the crowds who were divided for and against Him.

Some of the Sisters gather around our Lord’s image.
(How did the tall ones end up in the front?!)
You see we have a young woman here for a 4 day visit.
Keep her in your prayers as she discerns Passionist life!

“Wednesday of Holy Week (Spy Wednesday) we remember the day that Judas went to the chief priests to arrange to betray Jesus.

“Then, beginning on Holy Thursday morning, we enter into like a “mini-retreat” (the Sacred Triduum) as we are free to spend the whole day in prayer, with a nice meal at lunch to remember the Last Supper. Most of Good Friday we spend in prayer, although we do have some free time in the afternoon after the Liturgy to work quietly, etc…

“Holy Saturday is busy with an air of expectation in preparation for the great Vigil of Easter (setting up flowers, etc… in Chapel, preparing our meals for Easter, some cleaning etc…). Then on Holy Saturday evening, we begin the great Vigil, oh, what a glorious celebration this is!

“I am looking forward to these days, & I hope you, too, are able to enter into them at your own parishes or elsewhere.”

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All Encompassing Prayer

March 24th, 2012

One evening I was chatting with a Sister during our recreation about  the power that flows from being a spouse of Christ and how fidelity to this holy relationship penetrates the world and makes us spiritual mothers.

She then shared the following grace with me and I asked her to share it with you!

In prayer before Jesus, I started thinking of all the prayer requests that come in to the monastery and how important each and every one of them is. I was also thinking of all the needs in our Church, in the country and in the world. I wanted to encompass them all and was feeling a little overwhelmed at how to do this.

I asked Jesus, “Jesus, how did you pray for every single person in history while you were here on this earth?”

What came to my mind was something like this: “The best thing you can do for your spiritual children is to love your Divine Spouse and to be faithful. This is what they need to see, and everything will come from this love.”

What simplicity and peace this brought to my heart. Even though those I pray for can’t see this devotion and faithfulness with their bodily eyes, I believe in some way by God’s mercy, they will see with their heart and soul and grace will be present to them.

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Scripture Reflection for 4th Sunday of Lent

March 20th, 2012

Can you believe we just passed the mid-point of Lent? Laetare Sunday brought us organ and violin prelude, rose-colored vestments, flowers by the tabernacle and images of our Lady, St. Joseph and St. Paul of the Cross. The smell of the jonquils by the Pieta statue (statue of our Blessed Mother holding Jesus after he was taken down from the cross) was a foretaste of resurrection glory!

Scripture Reflection for the 4th Sunday of Lent

2 Chronicles 36:14-16, 19-23

Psalm 137:1-6

Ephesians 2:4-10

John 3:14-21

 

The readings this week call us to a deeper understanding of God. We all have heard that God is our Creator and Redeemer, but the terms are so familiar that we can forget what that means in our lives – in your life and in my life. This Sunday we are challenged to open our eyes to see God as He wants us to see Him.

St. Paul in our epistle beautifully sums up our relationship with God: “We are His handiwork, created in Christ Jesus for the good works that God has prepared in advance, that we should live in them.” Wow! Anne and Sr. Cecilia Maria found great consolation in this second reading. God continually creates us in His Son! Not only did He create us “once upon a time,” but through our whole lives He forms us, teaches us, guides us, admonishes us, calls us back when we wander, and heals us when we hurt ourselves. Why? Because He has prepared good works for us to live in, and He just can’t stand it until we are able to live fully in that goodness! Everything that exists, everything that happens is a gift of God for you. He had you personally in mind when He created it, so that it would help you grow into the good works He has prepared for you.

Our first reading relates to us how this beautiful providence looked at the time of the Babylonian exile of the Hebrew people. “Early and often did the Lord … send His messengers to them, for He had compassion on His people,” the Chronicler tells us. God wants not only to give us His gifts, but to have us keep them always! He seeks to teach us how to live in those good works; when we are unfaithful, in compassion He cries out to us to return. Sr. Rose Marie highlighted for us how the justice of God is always related to His mercy, and that when we think God’s justice is “punishment,” we are forgetting who God really is. God does admonish us, in the hopes that we will hear and return to the good works He created us for, but His justice is not punishment. He knows that on our own we cannot live in His good works. How could He punish us for not doing something we are incapable of doing? No, He has mercy and gives us His own justice, His own strength, His own Son.

Yes! “God so loved the world that He gave His only Son, so that everyone who believes in Him might not perish but might have eternal life.” This Sunday’s gospel sings once again that well-loved verse and celebrates the largess of our tremendous Gift-Giver. God created us in Christ Jesus for His good works! He loves us so much that He gives us everything we need to live in His goodness; we have only to open our hearts to receive His gift. Sr. Mary Veronica kept returning to this mind-blowing reality. He GAVE His only begotten Son! He did not just send, He GAVE His Son to us!

Have you received Him? Do you live in Him?

Sr. Mary Andrea brought our attention to a message common to all the readings this week: God gives us all these gifts so that He might be our abiding companion. “May his God be with him,” acclaims the first reading about every Hebrew. “May thus and so happen to me if ever I forget you!” cries the psalmist in exile from his land and his God. God creates us “that we should live in [His good works],” teaches St. Paul. And finally, the gospel reminds us that God gave us His own Son so that we might have “eternal life” with Him.

Did you know that eternal life can start now?

It starts as soon as you begin living in the goodness God created you for!

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Scripture Reflection for 3rd Sunday of Lent

March 18th, 2012

I’m going to try something new. For a while we have been posting the novitiate scripture sharings in the Novitiate Corner on our website. Now I’ll be posting them here too.

I hope you find them a source of inspiration!

Scripture Reflection for the 3rd Sunday of Lent

Exodus 20:1-17

Psalm 19:8-11

1 Corinthians 1:22-25

John 2:13-25

 

“Wouldn’t it be wonderful to have a piece of fine art depicting the cleansing of the Temple?” we asked ourselves this Sunday. How powerful it would be to see the anger, grief, holiness, and majesty of Jesus Christ as He confronts the people who have been making His Father’s house a marketplace! Our whole discussion centered upon the Gospel passage and its meaning, both in the context of Jesus’ earthly existence and of our own lives.

Sr. Rose Marie brought a reflection from the opening pages of Pope Benedict’s Jesus of Nazareth, which called our attention to Jesus’ “going up to Jerusalem” for the feast of Passover, which is the context of His cleansing of the Temple. Much more than being simply a physical ascent (which it is), it symbolizes the Christ’s ascent to the Father through the course of His life, His ascent to “loving to the end.” As Jesus goes up to Jerusalem and drives the vendors out of the Temple courts, He is illustrating in symbol what He does with His life and passion. Through the Cross, Jesus “goes up” to the true Temple, not made by human hands – His glorified body – and cleanses us to be part of it.

Sr. Mary Andrea brought a similar insight: Jesus tells us, “Destroy this temple and in three days I will raise it up.” How shocking! Of course we know that He is speaking of His body, but not merely His physical body which rose again on that first Easter morning. He speaks too of His mystical body, the Church; He raises her with Him into the glory of His Father’s love. But He is also speaking of you and me individually. He can and He does transform us into that Temple not made by human hands. But we each have a part to play. Even as He cleansed the earthly Temple, Jesus asked for help from the dove-sellers, “Take these out of here!” He asks us to help Him cleanse our Temple courts of all that keeps us from being true and living tabernacles of the Holy Spirit.

Sr. Cecilia Maria was intrigued at how the Gospel story illustrates St. Paul’s beautiful verse from the second reading, “The foolishness of God is wiser than human wisdom, and the weakness of God is stronger than human strength.” As Jesus drives out the vendors, He is using human strength and is actually acting like the powerful Messiah so many awaited, but His human power is useless to convince anyone that He is the Christ. This is true not only of the cleansing, but also of His miracles and even His transfiguration. People still asked for a sign, and they saw folly and instigation, or at best wonder-working, in His actions. However, Jesus points to His Passion and Resurrection as the sign which will be given. The Crucifixion, Death, and Resurrection are certainly foolish and weak by human measures! Yet through the ages, they have been stronger than all human strength and wiser than all human wisdom.

Anne and Sr. Mary Veronica expounded upon the poignant last paragraph of our Gospel. “Jesus would not trust Himself to them because He knew them all….” Alas for our fickle human nature, that renders the same souls who begin to believe in the Son of God to turn upon Him three years later and to condemn Him to death! Christ comes to me every day, every hour, and He longs to give Himself to me. Can He trust Himself to me? Am I open enough to receive Him? Do I welcome Him as King of my heart no matter what; do I cling to Him, no matter what that means and no matter where He leads me?

Let us each love Him to the end, that He may abide in us and us in Him forever!

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Our Passionist Sign

March 16th, 2012

Last month I shared with you a bit about the life of an aspirant in our community. (In case you have forgotten our monastic terminology – an aspirant is a woman who lives in the monastery for 3 months to discern our way of life.)

I forgot to mention that a special point in this stage of discernment is the reception of the small Passion sign pin at the beginning of her aspirancy.

Mother Catherine Marie places this pin near the Tabernacle, asking for our Lord’s blessing upon our aspirant. During Vespers she takes the pin and gives it to the novice directress to pin it on the aspirant, asking our Lord to bless her and that if it be his will one day she receive the large Passion sign of a professed Passionist Nun.

If the woman is so blessed to enter the monastery she will continue to wear the passion sign pin along with a crucifix.

In the Sourcebook on St. Paul of the Cross by Fr. Jude Mead, CP, Fr. Jude gives this explanation of the Passion sign:

Among the intellectual visions that preceded the foundation of the Congregation of the Passion, St. Paul of the Cross received one of the “sign” or emblem: a white heart, surmounted by a cross, bearing the title of the Passion of Jesus Christ. It was formed in his mind in successive phases: first the Cross and the name of Jesus, then the rest. He always considered it as a sublime gift that came to him through the hand of the angels, and he referred to it as holy, most holy and the terror of Hell, the sign of salvation.

The signs worn by the saint himself had a special, even miraculous power. He had no difficulty in giving away those signs which he no longer wore…

The seal of the whole Congregation is composed of this sign, which he had encircled with the devices of victory and peace: the palm and the olive branch. It is a compendium of his charism.

St. Paul himself explained the white color of the heart as meaning that the heart which had the Passion imprinted on it ought to be pure. He further affirmed that this public and visible glorification of the Passion caused all Hell to tremble in a special way…

Please keep up those prayers for Anne during this important time. We recently admitted another young woman to the aspirancy – praise the Lord! She hopes to come this summer after graduating from college. Please pray for these two and for the other two women who hope to visit us this spring.

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