Archive for the tag 'Stages in Formation'

Passionist Nuns Spring Newsletter 2013

April 17th, 2013

Greetings blog friends!  We still haven’t gotten the comment box situation fixed yet. We are very busy and so haven’t been able to give much time to fixing the problem. We’ve tried to no avail (!) several different things listed in troubleshooting for this problem with the comment spam blocker.

If you are interested in writing us to receive some brochures as I mentioned in an earlier post email us at vocations(at)passionistnuns(dot)org.  Thanks!

In case you haven’t noticed our latest newsletter is posted at our website. This newsletter featured Sr. Cecilia Maria’s First Profession of Vows.  Enjoy!

 

 

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.

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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.

Pictures of Profession of Vows are Here!

February 5th, 2013

I don’t have time to give you much text but here are the photos of the divine wedding day!

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Beautiful bouquet of flowers from our Passionist Nuns in Erlanger, KY!

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Bishop Medley incenses the altar and crucifix.

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Fr. Rodger Hunter-Hall gives the homily

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Sister makes her profession of Vows. Her mother looks on in the distance.

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Master of Ceremonies seminarian Will Thompson watches the masterful switching of the veils…

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Giving her dad the sign of peace

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A number of gals from Western Kentucky University in Bowling Green, KY joined us for the great occasion…perhaps a future Passionist candidate is somewhere in their midst???

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Sr. Cecilia Maria’s dear sister did a most excellent job playing during the Profession Mass. Here she is practicing the day before.

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The newly professed nun with her parents and dear grandmother. Really they aren’t wearing purple…

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Hats off to our wonderful photographer Larena who provided most of the pictures in this post! Shown here with our diocesan seminarian Michael Charles.

Another post will come giving credit to our dear Bishop, priests, deacons, seminarians, Passionist Oblates, photographers and videographers…special thanks also to the friends of Sr. Cecilia Maria who traveled so far to be with her on this very special day. It was a true joy to meet you all!

Soon to be a Bride of Christ!

February 1st, 2013

Ahhh…I have wanted to post all week but we have been busy little nuns getting ready for the divine espousals of the King of kings to his little handmaiden on the Feast of the Presentation of the Lord – February 2nd (tomorrow!). What exactly does all this mean?  Well, after 3 years of monastic formation (1 year as a postulant, 2 years as a novice) Sister will make her First Profession of Vows during Holy Mass on Saturday. These are the 5 vows Passionist Nuns make: To Promote Devotion to and Grateful Remembrance of the Passion of Jesus, Chastity, Poverty, Obedience and Enclosure.

Although it is 6 years before Sister will make her profession of vows perpetual her first profession of vows must be made from a heart that is giving her entire self as gift forever.

As I mentioned above we have been busy preparing for the wedding day. Invitations to her family and friends, preparing for the reception, decorations, music practice, many details of the sacred liturgy, contact with the Bishop who will preside, arranging servers, etc.

The Lord has also seen fit to give us opportunities for “offering it up”. Imagine flashing lights, horns and the MOST painful whistle you’ve ever heard. That was the communal penance the Lord gave us the other night when the fire alarm system went off at 1:40 a.m. No fire – thank God! But a smoke detector needed to be changed. Ahh…the blessed life of “modern conveniences…”

Sister Cecilia Maria has also been busy making new black veils, writing “thank you” notes and preparing her new cell that will be in the area where the professed sisters dwell. It is always bittersweet to move out of the novitiate (where a young woman lives during those initial years of formation) – moving from the comforting surroundings of where one’s Passionist vocation was born and nurtured to maturing in Passionist life and getting to join her “older sisters” but it is worth it!

Sister is someone who has spent her life moving, in her early years as an “army brat”, as she puts it, and then during her undergraduate and grad school years.  As she was putting her books on her shelf she made the remark, “It is so nice being a nun, you don’t have much to move.”

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Please keep Sister, her dear family and friends and all of us in your prayers as we celebrate this glorious moment in the Church – another young woman giving the total gift of self to God and His people.

I hope to have photos of the celebration and a beautiful meditation written by Sister posted this coming week…Notice, I wrote that I “hope” to do so…time will tell.

Come Divine Bridegroom to your Temple, you who are the light to the nations and the glory of your people Israel!

Saving the Best for Last

December 11th, 2012

Perhaps you are wondering what us nuns have been doing here in the monastery lately…well, I actually have some fantastic super-duper neat wonderful news to share with you but I shall save the best for last…now no rushing to the bottom of the post!

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That’s a LOT of leaves! and thanks to Anne Hagan and Joe Bland who rallied the troops we have lots of leaves to use for mulch in the garden, these will decay a bit during the winter and get plowed into the earth next spring. God bless you all for your generous help!

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Fall time also means that the days are shorter and it seems a bit harder to get up and get going in the morning…at least for some of the Sisters.

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Can you believe this REALLY happened to one of the Sisters last week (minus the mouse! – please Lord – keep the mice outside!) Yes, her cup was upside down when she began to pour. She couldn’t quite grasp how her cup could be over-flowing so quickly!

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And now for the excellent news: Shortly before our retreat in November the Chapter members met for a most auspicious occasion…we voted to admit our novice Sr. Cecilia Maria to make her First Profession of Passionist vows on Consecrated Life Day, February 2, 2013.  Please keep her in your prayers as she prepares for her wedding day.  Not only does she have her wedding veils to make but our Lord finds many ways to enlarge the capacity of His soon-to-be-bride to receive His love and give it away to her sisters in community AND to her spiritual children throughout the world.

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LASTLY…once Sister makes her First Profession of vows we will have 3 blessed junior professed sisters (meaning they have not yet made the Perpetual Profession)…this is wonderful…BUT that also means that our novitiate (where the aspirants, postulants and novices reside) needs some news members. We must keep the novice directress plenty busy…don’t want any sister here twiddling her thumbs. So please ask the Lord to send us new members that we may continue to form young women into Passionist brides fulfilling our mandate of Love in the Heart of the Church.

God love you!

News of our Passionist Fathers & Brothers

October 8th, 2012

Passionists in the news…

August 17 brought a four-fold blessing to the Holy Cross ProvinceFOUR new novices!  Alleluia!  Please do keep them in your prayers.

Four novices in front row: Glenn Bisquera, David Kojak,
Antonio Aquino and Juan Gonzalez.
May our Holy Founder intercede powerfully for them! 

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August also brought us the blessing of two new friends from afar – Fr. Gregor Lenzen, Passionist of Germany (at left), and Fr. Emery, diocesan priest of Austria but teaching at Mundelein Seminary.

We were glad to learn about the Church abroad and particularly our Passionists in Germany/Austria.

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September 28 brought a new Superior General to the Passionist Congregation, Fr. Joachim Rego, CP. Please pray for him and his Consulters as they begin their 6-year term in service of the Congregation.

Click here for a recap of the Passionist General Chapter which just concluded this past weekend October 7th.

A Passionist Heart Beet

August 9th, 2012

…Yes, I really do mean “beet”. :)   Have you ever seen such a beautiful beet?  Sr. Cecilia Maria’s mother sent this to us last week all the way from Washington State!

Last week also brought us a new aspirant Ruth. Join us in prayer as we discern over the next three months, if her heart beats to the Passionist rhythm.

Might some of you, looking at this blog , wonder if you also have a Passionist Heart?  Why don’t you make contact with us and go from wondering about it to doing something about it…

You can do as Elizabeth did…she visited our blog for some time and then made contact with us. We were able to quickly set up a live-in experience before she returns to college later this month. It was a delight to have her with us as she spent a week living in the cloister discerning God’s plan for her life. She also wowed us with her knitting skills…

May Our Lady, Queen of the Passionist Congregation, intercede powerfully for all those women who are feeling drawn to Passionist contemplative life!

A Wonderful Gift During Pentecost Novena!

May 22nd, 2012

Come Holy Spirit!

What a sacred time these days are. With the Church we are with our Lady in spirit, awaiting the coming of the Holy Spirit this Sunday, the great Solemnity of Pentecost!

This past Saturday brought us the return of  Anne…

Here she is seen with her delightful parents after a nice visit with the Sisters in the parlor.

Anne seeks to be admitted to the holy enclosure. The place where a young woman seeks the face of the Lord and is plunged into the ways of Passionist contemplative life.

“The Joy of the Lord is my strength!”
(The Lord gives strength to the parents as well!)

During 2nd Vespers of the Ascension of our Lord Anne received her postulant crucifix.

Mother Catherine Marie gave a very inspiring fervorino, encouraging Anne and all of us to be docile to the formation of the Holy Spirit in our lives. She stated that our novena prayer, which we are praying together each evening as a community, is a great prayer for a young woman beginning her formation.

So, I will say my adieu with this prayer…

Come, Holy Spirit, You who transformed the souls of the apostles on that first Pentecost. Come by your power, purify my heart from all harmful attachments, enlighten it by your truth, strengthen it to choose what the Father wills. Complete your work of sanctification in my soul, and in the souls of these for whom I now pray, especially….

Come Spirit of Divine Love, give me an increase of your grace and gifts that assure me of your presence in my soul. Give me an awareness of the divine indwelling, a realization of how much the Father loves me; and transform my soul – and those for whom I now pray – into the likeness of Jesus.

O Mary, Spouse of the Holy Spirit, Mediatrix of all Grace, since every grace that the Holy Spirit infuses into my soul comes from the Father and Son through you, beseech your Divine Son to grant the favors I ask in this Novena.

Veni Sancte Spiritus, Veni per Miriam!

World Day of Prayer for Vocations 2012

April 26th, 2012

The 49th World Day of Prayer for Vocations will be observed this Sunday, April 29th, which is also known as “Good Shepherd Sunday.”  The purpose of this day is to publicly fulfill the Lord’s instruction to, “Pray the Lord of the harvest to send laborers into his harvest” (Mt 9:38; Lk 10:2).

Please pray that young men and women hear and respond generously to the Lord’s call to the priesthood, diaconate, religious life, societies of apostolic life or secular institutes. You can find many resources to promote a culture of vocations on the USCCB Facebook page for vocations.

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We have some super great news on the vocation front:

Please keep up your prayers for aspirant Anne. She was recently accepted to enter the postulancy. She is home now tying up loose ends and please God, will enter the monastery on Saturday, May 19th!

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Below is Pope Benedict’s Message for the
49th World Day of Prayer for Vocations:

Theme: Vocations, the Gift of the Love of God

Dear Brothers and Sisters,

The 49th World Day of Prayer for Vocations, which will be celebrated on 29 April 2012, the Fourth Sunday of Easter, prompts us to meditate on the theme: Vocations, the Gift of the Love of God.

The source of every perfect gift is God who is Love – Deus caritas est: “Whoever remains in love remains in God and God in him” (1 Jn 4:16). Sacred Scripture tells the story of this original bond between God and man, which precedes creation itself. Writing to the Christians of the city of Ephesus, Saint Paul raises a hymn of gratitude and praise to the Father who, with infinite benevolence, in the course of the centuries accomplishes his universal plan of salvation, which is a plan of love. In his Son Jesus – Paul states – “he chose us, before the foundation of the world, to be holy and without blemish before him in love” (Eph 1:4). We are loved by God even “before” we come into existence! Moved solely by his unconditional love, he created us “not … out of existing things” (cf. 2 Macc 7:28), to bring us into full communion with Him.

In great wonderment before the work of God’s providence, the Psalmist exclaims: “When I see the heavens, the work of your hands, the moon and the stars which you arranged, what is man that you should keep him in mind, mortal man that you care for him?” (Ps 8:3-4). The profound truth of our existence is thus contained in this surprising mystery: every creature, and in particular every human person, is the fruit of God’s thought and an act of his love, a love that is boundless, faithful and everlasting (cf. Jer 31:3). The discovery of this reality is what truly and profoundly changes our lives.

In a famous page of the Confessions, Saint Augustine expresses with great force his discovery of God, supreme beauty and supreme love, a God who was always close to him, and to whom he at last opened his mind and heart to be transformed:

“Late have I loved you, O Beauty ever ancient, ever new, late have I loved you! You were within me, but I was outside, and it was there that I searched for you. In my unloveliness I plunged into the lovely things which you created. You were with me, but I was not with you. Created things kept me from you; yet if they had not been in you they would have not been at all. You called, you shouted, and you broke through my deafness. You flashed, you shone, and you dispelled my blindness. You breathed your fragrance on me; I drew in breath and now I pant for you. I have tasted you, now I hunger and thirst for more. You touched me, and I burned for your peace.”

(X, 27.38)

With these images, the Saint of Hippo seeks to describe the ineffable mystery of his encounter with God, with God’s love that transforms all of life.

It is a love that is limitless and that precedes us, sustains us and calls us along the path of life, a love rooted in an absolutely free gift of God. Speaking particularly of the ministerial priesthood, my predecessor, Blessed John Paul II, stated that “every ministerial action – while it leads to loving and serving the Church – provides an incentive to grow in ever greater love and service of Jesus Christ the head, shepherd and spouse of the Church, a love which is always a response to the free and unsolicited love of God in Christ” (Pastores Dabo Vobis, 25). Every specific vocation is in fact born of the initiative of God; it is a gift of the Love of God! He is the One who takes the “first step”, and not because he has found something good in us, but because of the presence of his own love “poured out into our hearts through the Holy Spirit” (Rom 5:5).

In every age, the source of the divine call is to be found in the initiative of the infinite love of God, who reveals himself fully in Jesus Christ. As I wrote in my first Encyclical, Deus Caritas Est,

“God is indeed visible in a number of ways. In the love-story recounted by the Bible, he comes towards us, he seeks to win our hearts, all the way to the Last Supper, to the piercing of his heart on the Cross, to his appearances after the Resurrection and to the great deeds by which, through the activity of the Apostles, he guided the nascent Church along its path. Nor has the Lord been absent from subsequent Church history: he encounters us ever anew, in the men and women who reflect his presence, in his word, in the sacraments, and especially in the Eucharist”

(No. 17)

The love of God is everlasting; he is faithful to himself, to the “word that he commanded for a thousand generations” (Ps 105:8). Yet the appealing beauty of this divine love, which precedes and accompanies us, needs to be proclaimed ever anew, especially to younger generations. This divine love is the hidden impulse, the motivation which never fails, even in the most difficult circumstances.

Dear brothers and sisters, we need to open our lives to this love. It is to the perfection of the Father’s love (cf. Mt 5:48) that Jesus Christ calls us every day! The high standard of the Christian life consists in loving “as” God loves; with a love that is shown in the total, faithful and fruitful gift of self. Saint John of the Cross, writing to the Prioress of the Monastery of Segovia who was pained by the terrible circumstances surrounding his suspension, responded by urging her to act as God does: “Think nothing else but that God ordains all, and where there is no love, put love, and there you will draw out love” (Letters, 26).

It is in this soil of self-offering and openness to the love of God, and as the fruit of that love, that all vocations are born and grow. By drawing from this wellspring through prayer, constant recourse to God’s word and to the sacraments, especially the Eucharist, it becomes possible to live a life of love for our neighbors, in whom we come to perceive the face of Christ the Lord (cf. Mt 25:31-46). To express the inseparable bond that links these “two loves” – love of God and love of neighbor – both of which flow from the same divine source and return to it, Pope Saint Gregory the Great uses the metaphor of the seedling: “In the soil of our heart God first planted the root of love for him; from this, like the leaf, sprouts love for one another.” (Moralium Libri, sive expositio in Librum B. Job, Lib. VII, Ch. 24, 28; PL 75, 780D).

These two expressions of the one divine love must be lived with a particular intensity and purity of heart by those who have decided to set out on the path of vocation discernment towards the ministerial priesthood and the consecrated life; they are its distinguishing mark. Love of God, which priests and consecrated persons are called to mirror, however imperfectly, is the motivation for answering the Lord’s call to special consecration through priestly ordination or the profession of the evangelical counsels. Saint Peter’s vehement reply to the Divine Master: “Yes, Lord, you know that I love you” (Jn 21:15) contains the secret of a life fully given and lived out, and thus one which is deeply joyful.

The other practical expression of love, that towards our neighbor, and especially those who suffer and are in greatest need, is the decisive impulse that leads the priest and the consecrated person to be a builder of communion between people and a sower of hope. The relationship of consecrated persons, and especially of the priest, to the Christian community is vital and becomes a fundamental dimension of their affectivity. The Curé of Ars was fond of saying: “Priests are not priests for themselves, but for you” (Le cure d’Ars. Sa penséeSon cœur, Foi Vivante, 1966, p. 100).

Dear brother bishops, dear priests, deacons, consecrated men and women, catechists, pastoral workers and all of you who are engaged in the field of educating young people: I fervently exhort you to pay close attention to those members of parish communities, associations and ecclesial movements who sense a call to the priesthood or to a special consecration. It is important for the Church to create the conditions that will permit many young people to say “yes” in generous response to God’s loving call.

The task of fostering vocations will be to provide helpful guidance and direction along the way. Central to this should be love of God’s word nourished by a growing familiarity with sacred Scripture, and attentive and unceasing prayer, both personal and in community; this will make it possible to hear God’s call amid all the voices of daily life. But above all, the Eucharist should be the heart of every vocational journey: it is here that the love of God touches us in Christ’s sacrifice, the perfect expression of love, and it is here that we learn ever anew how to live according to the “high standard” of God’s love. Scripture, prayer and the Eucharist are the precious treasure enabling us to grasp the beauty of a life spent fully in service of the Kingdom.

It is my hope that the local Churches and all the various groups within them, will become places where vocations are carefully discerned and their authenticity tested, places where young men and women are offered wise and strong spiritual direction. In this way, the Christian community itself becomes a manifestation of the Love of God in which every calling is contained.

As a response to the demands of the new commandment of Jesus, this can find eloquent and particular realization in Christian families, whose love is an expression of the love of Christ who gave himself for his Church (cf. Eph 5:32). Within the family, “a community of life and love” (Gaudium et Spes, 48), young people can have a wonderful experience of this self-giving love. Indeed, families are not only the privileged place for human and Christian formation; they can also be “the primary and most excellent seed-bed of vocations to a life of consecration to the Kingdom of God” (Familiaris Consortio, 53), by helping their members to see, precisely within the family, the beauty and the importance of the priesthood and the consecrated life. May pastors and all the lay faithful always cooperate so that in the Church these “homes and schools of communion” may multiply, modelled on the Holy Family of Nazareth, the harmonious reflection on earth of the life of the Most Holy Trinity.

With this prayerful hope, I cordially impart my Apostolic Blessing to all of you: my brother bishops, priests, deacons, religious men and women and all lay faithful, and especially those young men and women who strive to listen with a docile heart to God’s voice and are ready to respond generously and faithfully.

 From the Vatican, 18 October 2011

BENEDICTUS PP. XVI

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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